@snoov moves the topic away from Lance, doping, EPMS, and Berty’s Spanish adventures. Our brains are so crammed with nonsense our childhood memories get jammed deep down into the center. A memory waits to be released and sometimes it’s a remembered smell that floats it up to the surface.
VLVV, Gianni
My front tyre has been losing more air than the rear for a couple of months now. I’d just figured it was the valve as I had clumsily bent the little pin that’s inside while removing the pump before we hit the road. I bent it back and it seemed to be okay. It has always lasted our rides but this evening I decided to strip the tube off and test it in a basin of water. To my surprise there was no air escaping from the valve but there was a tiny hole in the tube so I patched it up and put it back on the bike. It occurs to me now that the low pressure of a tube out of the tyre is nothing compared to my normal 120psi and so if the valve was leaking, this test probably wouldn’t show it. Then I decided to test all the tubes I have lying around and repair any holes so that they’re all ready to go. To be fair I’ve only had two punctures since taking to the roads and one was a classic pinch puncture bumping up the kerb-cut right outside my flat as I arrived home from a ride.
I didn’t find any holes, but when I let the air out of the first tube right in front of my face I took a deep breath of the expelled air. The smell was delicious. It brought back memories of the many punctures I’ve fixed in my time on bikes. It brought back the lesson I learned when my Dad dropped me off at the only skatepark in Scotland and at the time when it was one of the best in Europe. I had an American BMX that I’d begged my parents to order over for my birthday and Christmas which I’d also committed my life savings towards, an SE Racing Quadangle. I had arrived with a puncture which I planned on making good but after pumping it up for the second time and rolling forward … pssss. I was too keen to ride and one of the locals asked if I’d checked the tyre for glass. I hadn’t and found a large piece straight away, once the third puncture was fixed my Dad arrived and it was time to go home, day wasted.
The smell also took me back to when I was still at Primary School (maybe 8 or so) and had gotten my first puncture. I went into the house and told my Mum. She said we’d have to go down to Woolworth’s and get a Puncture Repair Outfit! Now that was exciting, I remember thinking how great it was going to be and tried to imagine what it would look like, what it would consist of and even what colour it would be. The disappointment of not being able to ride my bike had completely disappeared, I was getting a Puncture Repair OUTFIT!!! Not only was I going to be able to fix punctures, I was going to look fantastic while doing it. I hadn’t even begun to imagine what other activities would now be open to me. So, we got in the car. We drove to the shops down near the beach and esplanade. Parked up and walked towards “Woolies”. I can’t help wondering if my Mum had noticed my level of excitement, and maybe questioned that somehow, my expectations were somehow out of wack. I’m pretty sure she noticed the tears though, when she picked up the box and showed it to me. It was about 15 centimetres long (6″) and I just knew that there was no way going to be an overall in there.
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@snoov - now you're back can we get down to organising a Cogal?
Snoov, nice story
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JaW0M6V85j8
@brett
That banana seat brings back memories as I learned to ride on a bananaseated Schwinn. On the first day when I figured it out, I rode up and down the block until my legs were ready to fall off and it was time for dinner. On the second day, I learned how to pop a wheelie and kept popping bigger and bigger wheelies until I went right over backwards and on my ass.
@brett
Awesome photo. You guys were more sophisto than us in the bike pimping department. The banana seat, stick shift and sissy bar/back rest was required for the pimp bike.
@snoov, where the hell are you? Great post. I really do love the way a smell can get straight to a memory that would otherwise be hard to conjure up. And that repair outfit photo is a killer.
@the Engine
I fear he is not back. I planned to post this and let him know yesterday what I was up to...nothing back.
I literally have no sense of smell. None. Can you describe this smell in colors?
@frank
you ever ride into south St Paul? the old stock yards must have reeked, now they are all gone and buisness parks have been built.
I love the smell of Campagnolo Original Spare Parts -- namely a new set of Brake Pads (BR-RE700). Changing pads is tedious, but feels good (smells good) when it is done.
@RedRanger
That's a remarkable asset if you have to deal with nappies. SWHMBIAV's brother has the same lack of smell and a one year old, and his wife considers that an unfair advantage.
@minion
It really is. But it also scares the shit out of me. several years back I was working in a meat packing plant that ran cold. there was an ammonia leak that no one told me about and I worked the entire shift in that shit.
Love the smell of my bike shop. Only thing that is better is the smell of a saddlery. Leather saddles, leather reins, leather bridles... totally intoxicating. Since I rode ponies before a bike I am not being disloyal to my bike shop!