About fifteen years ago, I saw a classic Cinelli track bike with a floral basket attached to the handlebars. I'd never seen such an arrangement before, and I complemented its rider, a young woman with hair in hues that weren't offered even in DuPont Imron. She grinned, as if I'd gotten some sort of joke.
Now I see all like manner of baskets--including porteur-styled ones--as well as racks and bags on fixed gear bikes. Granted, those bikes aren't classic Cinellis or classic anything else. But they are fixed-gear bikes nonetheless, even if they'll never get near a velodrome. So it's still a little odd, at least for me, to see them so rigged up.
This one, though, takes the genre of the fixed-gear city transporter to new heights:
Or, more precisely, it takes rear baskets to new heights, literally. Perhaps it redefines "suspension" on a bicycle.
Now I see all like manner of baskets--including porteur-styled ones--as well as racks and bags on fixed gear bikes. Granted, those bikes aren't classic Cinellis or classic anything else. But they are fixed-gear bikes nonetheless, even if they'll never get near a velodrome. So it's still a little odd, at least for me, to see them so rigged up.
This one, though, takes the genre of the fixed-gear city transporter to new heights:
Or, more precisely, it takes rear baskets to new heights, literally. Perhaps it redefines "suspension" on a bicycle.