Post by Ryan CousineauArgh. I saw the perfect bike about six months ago, a used Marin rigid
mountain bike in a rather small size.
I daresay that no serious bicycle for kids is likely to be heavier than
the three-speed of your youth. I know you're probably not looking for a
BMX, either, but if you want a high-end, lightweight bicycle for kids
this age, and you don't want to go all out into the weird realm of a
very small road bike (which would be silly for kids this age), a racing
The little bicycle that I had was light enough for a 6 year old - I was
on the long and wiry side - to pick up without any difficylty - I
certainly don't remember any. Graduated straight from that into a adult
bike in 4th grade or so - niece shows every sign of being tall like her
aunt and father rather than her mother, so she may only be a year or so
away from a "proper bicycle"
Post by Ryan CousineauI know it seems like I'm steering you towards the exact kind of bike
you're arguing against, but there's some sense here. These bikes (and
the Fishers suggested elsewhere) are kid-sized non-crap bicycles.
Despite the dirt-oriented heritage of either of these machines, they
would make fast and light road machines for kids as young as your
sibling's children here. The second bike there has a 12-speed
drivetrain, which is enough for anything a 9-12 year old would do, and
will take them as far and fast as their legs can manage.
We want them to have something where the riding - rather than the weight
- is what tires them, that they can pick up by themselves if need be and
that keeps them sitting in a good and safe posture while they're riding.
They live in a DC 'burb, and as I said, my sister has gotten so
disgusted with the constant driving children everywhere, that most days,
she rides her bicycle with the kids to school, leaves them and then
returns to ride back with them. Their existing bikes are not cheap, but
they simply aren't "right" for real riding vs. noodling around in front
of the house .....
Post by Ryan CousineauI'm not in the have-children phase quite yet, but I would be glad to see
my 6-8 year old on a bicycle like this. I think you may want to examine
how far or fast a 6-year old will go on a bicycle: at that age, I am
suspicious (perhaps incorrectly) that little legs would tire easily, and
little brains wouldn't have enough traffic sense to be safe unescorted.
On their current bikes, in fair weather, they are going 2.7 miles each
way from home to the oldest's school ... only having to get down and
walk the bikes at two bad intersections; then the youngest goes another
.7 miles to his school. My sister rides with them and their bikes are
locked at school and she keeps the key to avoid unescorted adventures.
Unfortunately, in the big city, kids don't do anything outside the house
without supervision, so the unescorted thing isn't a worry. The fact
that predators in our society have free rein has destroyed the freedoms
of childhood in my lifetime ....
Post by Ryan CousineauThere is one other item you may not be aware of, the much-loved
http://www.totalbike.com/reviews/adams_trailbike.html
I am sending these on to my father, who is the prime mover here.
Frankly, if the bike makers don't make scaled down (in size) and
slightly less complex bikes, but made in the proper configuration vs
what's out there for kids, they are losing the chance to snag more
riders young and "raise" them to want to continue riding - and buying
bicycles. I know my early experience with the aforementioned English
bikes and then the Italian bikes bought when we were stationed in Italy,
resulted in me riding a bicycle much longer than many of my peers.