Why do you need to wear special clothes to ride? Not arguing, just curious. 
I've been riding for about 50 years. Newspaper bikes as a before teenage 
years, then Raleigh racers in college. Shorts and tee shirt have always 
worked for me. What's the advantage of bike shop attire?  

On Wednesday, February 25, 2015 at 8:21:59 AM UTC-6, Jim Bronson wrote:
>
> Guilty as charged.  In fact I am definitely not an adherent to Grant's 
> thoughts on cycling attire.  I'm wearing plum-smuggling cycling shorts 
> every time I ride, unless it's a very, very short ride.
>
> But unlike some folks, I don't feel any pressure to conform to the Unracer 
> philosophy.  It's just more ideas about how to make cycling more enjoyable 
> and accessible to all
>
> On Wed, Feb 25, 2015 at 7:39 AM, Ron Mc <bulld...@gmail.com <javascript:>> 
> wrote:
>
>> Every day, there are frightful sights in lycra on every bike path
>>
>> On Wednesday, February 25, 2015 at 2:18:24 AM UTC-6, Peter M wrote:
>>>
>>> Every runner knows those Damn walkers are just in the way [image: 😉].... 
>>> Must be winter. 
>>> On Feb 25, 2015 2:50 AM, "'pb' via RBW Owners Bunch" <rbw-owne...@
>>> googlegroups.com> wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, February 24, 2015 at 8:18:22 PM UTC-8, Doug Williams wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> pb,
>>>>>
>>>>> Hmmm...I'm glad that you found a few good LBS's, 
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> No, I called three, and got three answers.  I made three calls.  I got 
>>>> three answers.  I chose the three because they were representative of 
>>>> three 
>>>> major corporate entities.
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>>> but have you read a mainstream bicycle magazine recently? I see all 
>>>>> sorts of articles and advertisements glorifying racing and bikes so 
>>>>> lightweight that they are completely impractical for normal use. I see 
>>>>> VERY 
>>>>> few articles and advertisements featuring practical and reliable bikes or 
>>>>> articles that espouse using a bike for transportation rather than for 
>>>>> only 
>>>>> racing or exercise. Transportation? What's that? A fun ride that isn't a 
>>>>> race? What's that?
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Do you read Vogue to find articles on dungarees or Harris tweed?  Do 
>>>> you read GQ to find out what to wear when gardening?  I don't even 
>>>> know what the "mainstream bicycle magazines" are any more. I do know 
>>>> that Bicycling (does it still exist?) didn't offer a new article, 
>>>> or cover, in twenty years.  They just recycled the old ones on a regular 
>>>> basis (Climb better in 30 days!  Get faster in 30 days!  Prepare for a 
>>>> century in 30 days!  Get leaner in 30 days!).  I hope you don't pay to 
>>>> read 
>>>> it.  Doug, are you confusing magazines with actual journalism?  Magazines 
>>>> exist to make money, and they'll print whatever they think will sell 
>>>> copies.  Apparently what you think is interesting isn't what they think 
>>>> will sell copies.  Does that prove something about your local bicycle 
>>>> shop, 
>>>> or does it just indicate that maybe you're looking at the wrong magazine, 
>>>> which you knew before you picked it up.       
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>>> I don't think that Grant just invented this issue. The phenomena is 
>>>>> quite real. Grant's message resonates with many because the racing 
>>>>> phenomena IS real.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> No, Grant didn't invent the issue, but he has fed the flames, and kept 
>>>> it alive, and he has perpetuated a stereotype, and he has offended folks 
>>>> along the way.  For no reason.  And I assure you that it has affected his 
>>>> bottom line by marginalizing him.  Canonize him for that if you wish.  
>>>>    
>>>>
>>>>>  And yes, I do (quite often) encounter smug racers in their spandex 
>>>>> uniforms who disparage practical cyclists. They are mostly wannabe's and 
>>>>> not real racers, of course. But they are numerous and annoying just the 
>>>>> same.
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> Oh come on.  There are rude and irritating members of every population 
>>>> group.  Do they represent their groups as a whole?  See comments about 
>>>> stereotyping.  Also, people tend to see what they are looking for.  If you 
>>>> are looking for snotty racers, you'll probably find them.  Ironically, 
>>>> typing that reminds me of riding into my neighborhood one night from work. 
>>>>  
>>>> My commute ride is about 40 quite hilly miles each way, a solid 2.5 hours, 
>>>> especially after a day of work, and I had ridden both ways that day, 
>>>> leaving the house in the morning at 5:30 (no, I do not do that commute 
>>>> both 
>>>> ways very often).  I was on a carbon Look, in lycra, and I had my clothes 
>>>> and shoes and files and a laptop in my Timbuktu.  I was riding very 
>>>> tiredly 
>>>> into my development, done for the day, when a fellow in jeans and a plaid 
>>>> shirt went spinning past me on a Surly.  He was sitting upright, and he 
>>>> ignored me as he spun past with a grin.  I guess he kicked my ass.  If it 
>>>> had been me passing him, I would have said hello, because I try to be 
>>>> friendly to other cyclists.      
>>>>
>>>> Here is my suggestion to you and to Grant:  Promote and enjoy the kind 
>>>> of cycling and bicycles that you like, and let those things stand on their 
>>>> own feet.  If your LBS sucks and just wants to sell $15,000 Pinarellos and 
>>>> one-piece suits, go to another store, or mail order, but don't tell me 
>>>> that 
>>>> proves every LBS sucks, or that every customer of that LBS is an ass.  
>>>> Don't sneer at other cyclists along the way, or if you do, they may say 
>>>> things like Norma Steinberg said.  There is sufficient rudeness and 
>>>> division in our world.  Don't perpetuate it.
>>>>
>>>> Think about my comment about Ritchey and Fisher and Kelly not needing 
>>>> to belittle roadies to make mountain biking attractive.  The opposite 
>>>> happened -- suddenly it was cool to have two bikes!  Grant's ideas in Just 
>>>> Ride are fine.  Yeah, I've read it -- he sent me a copy, and I have it at 
>>>> my right hand.  It's just not necessary for anyone to prove that his ideas 
>>>> are right by proving that someone else's ideas are wrong.  Sometimes two 
>>>> ideas can be right at the same time, and to make an idea attractive does 
>>>> not require belittling another idea.  You want to go for a run, go for a 
>>>> run.  You want to go for a walk, go for a walk.  Runners and walkers don't 
>>>> need to call each other stupid or liars.     
>>>>
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>
>
>
> -- 
> Keep the metal side up and the rubber side down!
>  

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