Source: Yet Another Cycling Forum
Any other photos of interesting touring set-ups? Please share them here.
Andrew
Ultralight touring ... :)
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Ultralight touring ... :)Source: Yet Another Cycling Forum Any other photos of interesting touring set-ups? Please share them here. Andrew
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)Can't really tell, but looks like they could be thorns.
Masi Speciale CX 2008 - Brooks B17 special saddle, Garmin Edge 810
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
Ask at YACF. Friendly bunch. Andrew
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)That rackbag she is hoofing is HUGE!
Riding bikes in traffic - what seems dangerous is usually safe; what seems safe is often more dangerous.
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)A large part of me hopes this is tongue in cheek.
They appear to be cruising around a village in the UK somewhere and she's carrying about 3 litres of water. Plus an extra bottle on top of the rack bag; just in case they get stuck 100m from the next shop? The phrase "horses for courses" comes to mind. In my opinion they have the wrong horse for their current course. Edit: after checking out the other forum, I see they are headed to south america, and he's carrying a kite surf: mental.
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)This guy impressed me; he had a folding canoe on his trailer. When he wanted to, he could make up the canoe and put the bike and trailer in it, along with the usual camping gear.
He's certainly keen! Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk 2
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
Great share ... ![]() Andrew Last edited by Aushiker on Wed Jun 13, 2012 7:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Not so Ultralight touring ... :)I run into Peter from Sydney at the Doon Doon R'house in 2009 on my trip around Au. He is a bit of a character posing for photos with his rig and is asking for a gold coin donation. Hes average for a day is about 30 km
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Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
St Malo in France actually. Riding bikes in traffic - what seems dangerous is usually safe; what seems safe is often more dangerous.
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)Its no surprise that guy is only doing 30km per dya but i am sure he'd be a lot happier if he could ditch some of that junk he's hauling, even if it is all he owns in the world.
I met a guy carrying an acoustic guitar last year on the road to Darwin from Katherine. He was riding barefoot too, although he did have shoes. I wish i had a picture of those two. One couldn't wear a helmet for the size of his dreadlocks. They were from argentina. In india i met a couple and the guy was travelling with his electric guitar so he could practice, although unplugged. They were swiss. I also met this guy from Taiwan who had ridden from Melbourne.http://www.photoblog.com/shangrila/2011/05/29/day-10-western-australia--northern-territory-cycling-tour.html
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
I reckon I could do a nice 130 clicks a day hauling his load no problem and still be happy. Ricky
I'm impressed that would be a great deal of fun having a canoe as part of a tour trip that is food for thought so thanks for the link.
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)The joys of the serendipitous photos eh...
Sent from my GT-I9100 using Tapatalk 2
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
As long as you don't manage to capsize it. Then you're up the, err, creek without a paddle. Or bike, food, clothes . . .
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
Very true but part of the fun and adventure but having said that I bet I would be the first to do as you said end up in the drink. Ricky
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)Riding bikes in traffic - what seems dangerous is usually safe; what seems safe is often more dangerous.
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)Last edited by Aushiker on Fri Jun 15, 2012 12:11 am, edited 2 times in total.
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)
I've actually pondered doing a similar thing myself with a bodyboard and other related surfing gear. A standard 26" or 700c touring bike with a trailer for the wet-suit and other gear plus a board mount/rack on the trailer should be all good. I considered something like from Surly as wider tyres could help, but honestly you can usually get within a few hundred metres from the majority of surfing breaks by a sealed or gravel road, so a 35mm tyres will be wide enough and just walk the rest. Bodyboards are pretty light and small compared to a foldable canoe, even including a pair of fins, full wetsuit etc it's only a few kg of weight. Check out my practical cycling and cycle touring website: VELOPHILE AUSTRALIA
Re: Ultralight touring ... :)I'd like to be able to take my cat on tour.
http://www.photoblog.com/ShangriLa/2007/05/26/ http://www.photoblog.com/ShangriLa/2007 ... games.html http://www.photoblog.com/ShangriLa/2007 ... imals.html I cant' the one about the sheep story.
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