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Mountains Crumble, Tim Dawson (2009)
Original article first published in The
Sunday Times
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I still remember the first mountain bike I ever saw. It was the early
1980s, and a fellow student at my university brought it back from the
United States. I begged a ride, to find that its most remarkable feature
was the massive range of the gears particularly the so-called granny
gear that enabled riders to keep pedalling up extraordinarily steep
slopes.
In the quarter of a century since, the vast majority of bicycles sold
in this country have been mountain bikes or at least they have
been styled to look like mountain bikes. Now, it seems, that era is over.
Hybrids, designed for town riding, are the biggest sellers today. The
rise of utility bikes, with hub gears, chain guards and upright seating
positions, has also taken a chunk of the market, as has the fashion for
folders and fixed-wheel bikes aimed at urban hipsters. And our seemingly
limitless enthusiasm for racing bikes fuelled by the success of
Chris Hoy, Mark Cavendish, Bradley Wiggins, Victoria Pendleton and Rebecca
Romero has turned another section of the market from knobbly tyres
to racing slicks.
Mountain bike sales fell off a cliff a couple of years ago,
says Carlton Reid, executive editor of the industry magazine BikeBiz.
There is still a lively albeit diminished mountain
biking scene, but sales have really shifted to other kinds of bikes.
At heart, I am not really a mountain biker, but the prospect of mountain
bikes disappearing from our shops saddens me for exactly the same
reason that the rise of all these other kinds of bikes gives me cheer.
Ever since Raleigh struck lucky with the Chopper in the 1970s, fashion
has been the prime driver of cycle retailing in Britain. And with the
rise of each new fashion, finding any kind of bicycle that was unfashionable
became absurdly difficult.
Until two or three years ago, it was extremely hard to buy a utility
bike in this country. Some cyclists felt forced to travel to Holland or
Denmark to pick up a sensible runaround. Others bought a mountain bike,
then spent a further £40 on road tyres as soon as they got it home.
For those who wanted a fixed-wheel bike, the usual route was to build
your own.
Enthusiasts for lightweight racing bikes would usually be served by
a single specialist shop in a big town or, more likely, buy by
mail order.
Today, most big bike shops will have something to show all of those
niche consumers, which is a good thing. Not least because it makes poking
around bicycle shops fun, which in turn drives sales.
So just because general-purpose mountain bikes have had their moment
in the sun, lets hope they dont disappear altogether. If nothing
else, because the pleasure to be had from scaling a vertiginous slope
on two wheels and virtually falling down the other side, is no less life
affirming than it was all those years ago.
TD Oct 09
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