It is so wintry in SW Michigan. I can’t ride bikes, but I’m game to talk bikes. This is a long post with no photos, so if you are here for pics and not for story time, come back in a couple weeks when there will be photos.
Yesterday, I dropped off everything I need to make a Charlie H. Gallop at the bike shop. I requested my number one favorite master mechanic to build it, and the price of that is time. It will take time before he can get to it. He is in the middle of building my son’s new dyno Clem wheels at the moment. He also just finished random, weird fixes on my Racing Platypus yesterday, and he returned my purple Platypus to me last week. I could be single-handedly keeping my bike shop in bread these winter months. He eyed my bags of parts and said, “You have your own shelf in the back, you know.” He handed one bag to N and said, “Put this on the Leah Shelf.” I have my own charge code in the computer at that shop, but that’s another story.
This was the hardest bike build I’ve planned. Which isn’t saying much considering I have only had a handful of bikes, but still. The concept of this golden Charlie eluded me. Should I do what I wanted or what was expected? Should the bike be a compromise?
In my view, road bikes are the ultimate in snobbery. All the other bike categories seem to live and let live. When you roll up to a road cycling ride, you can know you are being evaluated as other riders take stock of your bike and your kit. “Pure Road Bike” is what I call it: Road bikes should look a certain way. Road bike riders should also look a certain way. The Racing Platypus is not Pure Road Bike. And while a sparkly raspberry Rivendell mixte can hang with the mean-looking carbon machines on club rides, the comments and the prejudice have become tiresome.
Everyone wants to be accepted.
“Just think if Leah had a road bike,” my club friends would say. I always laughed it off, said I was content with the Racing Platypus. And I was. But I started to wonder what it would feel like to have a Pure Road Bike.
I bought my Charlie on a whim. I always get excited when Rivendell puts out a new model. I read the product description; it was like they had written it for me. At high noon of the presale, in the midst of Rivendell’s New Yorker fame, I put a golden Charlie in my cart and expected they’d snapped up before I could secure one.
The purchase went through.
The frame arrived and then sat. I finally had a road bike and could not decide how to build it. People thought I should keep it classy with silver parts. Ok, add just a pop of color to make it yours. Maybe drop bars. Keep it light - leave off those extras, you have them on your other bikes. I’d tire of agonizing and leave the project.
I looked at my purple Platypus. I’d chosen every part for that bike, and it’s my favorite build. I anodized its parts and made it a rainbow-y blur of color. Everybody likes that crazy bike, even the purists who’d never choose rainbow and oil slick. They like it for me. I tossed the classy, silver idea and decided I’d do what I like best: color. Since I love the rainbow bike I decided on another natural wonder theme. I’d chased the aurora borealis this summer and BAM, I knew what this bike was: A Northern Lights Charlie.
Velocity’s anodizer rides the Wednesday Evening Ride with me and he was game to try a deep custom Quill rim in northern lights. He pulled out a practice rim and laid the color down. Lifted it with acid and added different colors, walking a tightrope that risked the colors running and looking muddy. He aimed for a shimmering night sky look based on the inspiration photo I’d sent.
He nailed it on the first try.
Meanwhile, the Mountain West’s celebrated woman anodizer, Ashley, was staring into my box of parts, wondering how best to capture the northern lights on aluminum. Ashley can do anything; but she was conflicted about this project. First try yielded too much black in the background. The next attempt showed a colorful splatter effect. It was beautiful but lost the shimmering northern lights theme. Unsatisfied, she tried again and finally captured it. Shimmering northern lights twinkled at me from a Choco bar on my screen. Undeniably beautiful, whatever your opinion about Pure Road Bike. Some of the parts transferred color better than others; aluminum is not all the same. The Rivendell Silver 2 shifters were problematic; the finish is a plasticky, flaky compound that Ashley ended up blasting off. They took color poorly. The Silver 3 cranks, however, were wonderful. Maybe the best part on the bike. The chain guard and rings showed more pastel. The northern lights are ever-changing so all these different looks are good representations of the real phenomenon.
Selecting accessories was extremely difficult. If I added the extras that make the bike useful, it would look less like a road bike. I do want people to see this colorful bike as a road bike, not as an oddball. What makes a road bike a road bike? Drop bars? Light weight? Stripped down?
I tried to imagine my bike with no kickstand. What road bike has a kickstand? Well, Leah’s Northern Lights Charlie does. I take a lot of photos; leaning the bike is inconvenient. Grant pointed out that my bars would swing and topple the bike; trad road bikes prop easier. What about fenders? There are plenty of wet rides in Michigan and the muddy water that shoots up one’s back and onto one’s bags is intolerable to me. Gets in the way of being darling. Dyno. It’s expensive and adds weight and I know it. But after having dyno on all my other bikes and never ever thinking of charging and attaching my lights it feels like being hamstrung, a downgrade. Most of my miles are club ride miles - that’s way too often to fight with battery lights. As for bars, I met a man on his shiny new purple RoadUno, and he had Choco bars, which I thought looked sporty. I ruled out drop bars because they seemed a gamble. I would probably hate them.
In the end, the concessions I made are that I would attach no rack and only use a BananaSax on the saddle. So, not very many concessions. But the bike is rumored to feel light, fast, spritely. I think it will be different enough from my other bikes. I hand-wring about how this bike will be viewed in the roadie world. They will be so excited to hear I got a road bike. They will be so let down when they see my version of that. I don’t think I can apologize. I think I have to be Leah.
I set out in pursuit of Pure Road Bike. I found a Northern Lights Charlie instead. And I think it’s going to be grand.
Leah
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On Feb 20, 2025, at 1:54 PM, Michael Connors <michael.ge...@gmail.com> wrote:
image search Google with his name and 'bicycle'
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On Feb 20, 2025, at 3:23 PM, J G <cjus...@gmail.com> wrote:
"Deep Custom" is a term that, I believe, was initially associated with custom builder Erik Noren of Peacock Groove (and Cake bikes).
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On Feb 20, 2025, at 4:12 PM, Julian Westerhout <weste...@gmail.com> wrote:
Leah,
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On Feb 20, 2025, at 7:07 PM, meti...@gmail.com <meti...@gmail.com> wrote:
Your entire post makes me sort of giddy, Leah. YOUR JOB IS TO SHAKE US ALL UP, SISTER!
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On Feb 20, 2025, at 8:48 PM, Jason Fuller <jtf.f...@gmail.com> wrote:
I believe these two things are true: the Norther Lights Charlie is going to feel, and be, vastly more Pure Road Bike than your fleet of Platypii; the Charlie will also be only a tiny increment towards a Pure Road Bike in the eyes of your club ride audience.
I can certainly empathize with your experience, acknowledging it's even more stark of a contrast than my experiences of riding my shiny fendered but not overly-upright Rivs on rides with folks on typically modern gravel bikes. They see our bikes as novelty, but we know that's far from the truth. Maybe they get the same feeling as we do when they gaze at their own bike, but I doubt it honestly. And they certainly don't understand that they aren't just pretty bikes, either - they are joyous to ride. Maybe their beauty affects our judgement, but I don't see how that matters if the result is the same.
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On Feb 24, 2025, at 8:52 AM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:
Despite the prejudice, I have found that my non-traditional bikes keep up in the road rides I do, and when they (ok I) don’t, I’ll just go down a class. The fastest group I go with advertises 16.5-17mph, led by a couple on a tandem, isn’t that wild? I like that we are moving but not getting to that level where you’re gasping and wishing to be done. My women’s group goes 16, and that’s the sweet spot for chitchat, which I love. There is a group that goes 18, but it’s a bunch of dudes and I’m not brave enough to ride with them. But I have ridden with their leader on a different ride that he said would be slower and it was SO HARD. We had a mad-hilly route and this guy just always averages 18, regardless of what the ride is supposed to be. I couldn’t even hold a conversation and he said, “Just think if you did this every week, you’d be so fit!” No thanks.The RivSisters who went to HQ rodeo the Charlie and reported it was so spritely and lively and fast. I guess we’ll see if it makes any difference compared to my Racing Platypus. Maybe I will try the scary 18 mph dude class with the rumored fast Charlie.Leah










On Feb 24, 2025, at 10:12 AM, Doug H. <dhansf...@gmail.com> wrote:
That is an amazing audio setup! So cool to see what people can do with their bicycles.
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I got to go to Washington DC, and on my last day there, which was yesterday, my favorite mechanic texted, “Charlie H. Gallop, first of his name, is complete.”I came home last night and today made haste to go see Charlie and bring him home to live happily ever after with me. M, my favorite mechanic, is off today. A letdown! But I left him a card that will make him very happy when he gets it; he deserves everything, he is that good. But the other guys were there to chat about the NLC with me, which is half the fun of picking up a new bike.This bike looks little compared to the lengthy Platys that inhabit my garage.
<image2.jpeg>Isn’t it cute? It’s the 53, so it has lighter tubing, too.There was not one ray of sunshine today, making most of my color dull. Only the rims catch the light and twinkle at you.I asked the shop to hide the dyno wire and showed them an example. I think I’ll snip their black zip ties and add my gray ones. These are Ultradynamicos Cava Race tires in 38 mm.
<image3.jpeg><image4.jpeg>
The galloping horses on the chainstays really do it for me. Here is the RapidRise Grant set me up with. I have no idea if that’s a thing I’ll like; it’s a thing I wanted to try. I don’t know what the fuss really is, except that in the event of a derailleur failure, I’d be in a more pedal-able gear. M said, “RapidRise? Are we going to use it though?” He was not convinced. R from the shop said he gave it a test ride, rode up a ramp was shocked when he went to downshift and ended up in a higher gear. If I hate it I’ll just swap it for the normal kind.
<image5.jpeg>Some of Ashley’s excellent anodizing can be seen on the luscious Silver3 cranks and chainguard. I cannot convey how wonderfully the cranks took color. They drip with NL charm.I chose this Spurcycle bell in a moody black and blue. It fits the disposition of this bike - northern lights are never static. Wondrous, elusive things. Moody.
<image6.jpeg>You can see the Silver shifters did not take color well. They had a flaky finish that came off in anodizing and they look like blue metal now. I heard they frustrated the junior mechanic helping M. “There’s no directions to reassemble these! It’s just a schematic!” he was rumored to have said. There’s a scratch on one of the shifters and I do not at all care because I know they were a bear to reassemble. Mark at Riv had taken them apart for anodizing. Will said he’d mash it if he tried, it’s hard to do. I told the guys we could send them back to Riv but they took on the project themselves. In fact, if these shifters got ruined in this process, I will not be shocked. We’ll see how they perform.Here you a see I did do a little matching. I chose gold housing and a gold headlight. You’ll notice gold valve stems on the wheels.
<image7.jpeg>Again, the new Silver3 cranks in the shorter length (165?). The pedals are oil slick (not NL) but I’m getting away with it somehow.
<image8.jpeg>The spokes! 😍
<image9.jpeg>My bars are showstoppers but they look dark without sun. It’s a nice and muted look in cloudy weather, and will be dreamy in Michigan golden sunshine. They are Chocos, which I bought because I thought they looked sporty on someone else’s bike. 🙄
<image10.jpeg>Even the Paul levers had to be pulled apart for anodizing. They always take color well, but again, you’ll have to wait for sun to see.
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On Feb 27, 2025, at 10:01 AM, Sally Bidleman <3mu...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Feb 27, 2025, at 6:16 PM, Johnny Alien <johnny....@gmail.com> wrote:
Love the look of the anodized choco bars. Curious to hear your thoughts on them once the weather gets in line and you can spend some time with them.
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On Feb 28, 2025, at 2:20 PM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Feb 28, 2025, at 11:29 PM, Joe Bernard <joer...@gmail.com> wrote:
You may be stuck with that German mirror. I've tried a ton of mirrors and always end up wishing the dang thing was German as the Good Lord intended.
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On Mar 13, 2025, at 9:26 PM, Bicycle Belle Ding Ding! <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:
Charlie is pretty dreamy. I really like how the bike is feeling and I’ve got everything coming to make him whole. It’s hard to know how you ought to set up a new bike, and I actually ended up with most of the same stuff on my bars again. My setup is sick, why ruin it. I tried living without a mirror and a phone mount but I can’t do it. That bike is like a sunbeam when it stands in sunshine. I love the paint. I love the NL accents. The anodizing is going to get nicked - while on the SUV’s bike rack some gravel must have spit at the rim and chipped off the ano. Still, I regret nothing.
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<IMG_9397.jpeg><IMG_9404.jpeg>
On Mar 14, 2025, at 5:18 AM, John Johnson <johnemer...@gmail.com> wrote:
The 4 bikes neatly arranged on their racks in the garage is oddly super satisfying.
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On Mar 14, 2025, at 2:37 PM, Ryan <ryte...@mts.net> wrote:
If the purple is somewhat lighter, being smaller, maybe you could swap it with the raspberry, so the heavier run-aroud raspberry is on the bottom.
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On Mar 16, 2025, at 10:55 AM, reynoldslugs <be...@perrylaw.net> wrote:
BTW Leah, what is that Front Derailleur?
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