
This morning's Bikes Outside features a Mongoose MGX locked up in front of an apartment building across the street from the Broad Street Community Garden. It was just accumulating snow last Tuesday, but the owner could have been having all sorts of fun riding around a snowy park instead. I have a hardtail Mongoose mountain bike frame that I started making into a ghetto 96er snow bike for that very purpose, but it has been a low priority. That has already been named Snowgoose, but mine is an open nomenclature and I'm willing to share.

I spent the first half of yesterday at the Dudley bike swap meet sharing a table with Erik. The booth next to us specialized in vintage BMX bikes, so in among the Hutches, GTs and Thrusters were a few of the looptail Mongoose frames I would have liked to own as a kid (not as much as I wanted a "Tri-Power" Thruster, mind you, but neat bikes just the same)
Here's my brilliant marketing idea for the day: I think that if Mongoose, or any of the 1980's BMX superpowers started selling reasonably well-made 26" bikes that were essentially scaled-up vintage 20" BMX bikes, they would sell like hotcakes. The nostalgic force is strong with the thirtysomething demographic, and people have done far more ridiculous things to harken to their youth. A 130% sized BMX bike sounds ridiculous, because, well, it is, but I still kind of want one now.

Mongoose still makes some pretty good bikes, http://www.mongoose.com/usa/eng/mtn/Products/Mountain-Pavement/, but those aren't the ones that roam the street of hartford, creaking and a squeaking.
ReplyDeleteRegarding the 26" BMX. check out the SE bikes website.
ReplyDeletehttp://www.sebikes.com/Retro/26--Hundreds-PK-Ripper.aspx
SE makes a 29er, too, I think.
ReplyDeleteWas talking bike in Brooklyn a few weeks ago, and met this chick who loves to take pictures of bikes covered in snow. She called them "Snow Bikez"
ReplyDeleteI have a picture, wish I could show you. Send you email along to me. Kevin@wheelmencompany.com