substandard wrote: ↑Sat Jan 30, 2021 7:21 pm
It’s funny seeing that again! I once did a 10 mile road time trial on my fatbike..... average 23mph and didn’t finish last!
Closest I got to feeling like a road cyclist was during the last stage of a multi day stage race I was invited to. Drafting at >30 km/h.
I had a beard. Some gravel rider feelings too.
Was on groomed snow, riding the fatbike...
lune ranger wrote: ↑Fri Jan 29, 2021 1:34 pm
It’ll also be a while until anyone’s seriously bikepacking on a DH bike.
Alpinium - feel free to disagree
Since 2017 I've been working on a route in the eastern parts of Switzerland (goes into Italy a tiny little bit). The route takes you down the 2005 DH world champs track at Livigno. Last two times I rode it, it was early morning since there's a lovely bivy spot ontop of a prior pass. There you go. Downhillbikepacking.
No drop bar seen there, but there's always a first. I won't be it.
A while ago the only bikes I had were a Kona Coilair and a Devinci Wilson, which was soon 'swapped' with a Mondraker Summum.
I was well into bikepacking, but called it bivybiking, since the term "bikepacking" hadn't yet arrived in my cave. Mostly I'd use the Coilair - as so often with Kona - truly a bike ahead of it's time (unlike the Stooge gravel bike/monster cross thing shown here), but on a couple of occasions my friend and I would go to a bivy spot with a view, deposit the gear for a day of mostly assisted (think cable cars as public transport to villages and then some more climbing under own power) riding.
Horses for courses obviously.
And repeatedly.
As a mountainbiker at heart, I consider this as a gravel bike from Stooge:
When I'm old, this will be my do it all.
Now I have something worth living for. Sometimes it just takes two wheels and a flat/riser bar.