I'll echo: Great thread, Joe! And, it brings back some wonderful memories.
As a kid, I was never far from my sparkly, orange Huffy after I learned to ride. Later I inherited my older brother's lovingly abused 10-speed and spent time with my Dad tearing it apart, stripping the paint, choosing my color, cleaning, shining, and oiling all the parts, and putting it all back together. This was a pivotal moment in my love of tinkering. Later I got into BMX bikes because they could go anywhere and you could jump stuff with them. In high school, girls became more interesting and my bike collected dust.
In university, I got another bike, rode it a bit, but then fell in love with my '75 VW for a while. After I graduated, I got an old bike and revisited the 'tear-down, build-up' that I had done with my father as a kid. That bike allowed me to see how being a bike messenger in San Francisco was, for me, a quick way to become a hostile, angry person. Some kind soul saved me from this by stealing the bike a couple of weeks after my first fist on the hood of a car. I walked the rest of my time in SF because...well, it's a great city for walking, and walking provided a more peaceful path.
Two years later, I was just beginning my first gig as an international school teacher in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia and I perchance met a guy from Northern California named 'The Breeze' who was cycling from Cairo to Cape Town with a fully loaded bike. 'You can do that!' For me, that was the moment! The Breeze ended up staying at my place for a spell, and it was his stories of adventure that sealed my fate as a 'bikey'.
Not long after I acquired a well-used Peugeot VTT (French for mountain bike), I made my first set of panniers and started riding anywhere I could in Ethiopia. This was in 1991 and the country was close to the culmination of its 30-year civil war. After the Eritreans had won their independence in the Spring of 1991, my first tour was of a newly liberated Eritrea, and it was an eye-opening adventure complete with bombed-out hotels, decaying bodies, and an infectious joy of an entire population of people at peace for the first time in 30 years with a future filled with possibilities.
In the years since I have lived and traveled all over the African and Asian continents, and my bicycle has been my constant companion. It wasn't until around 2014 that I saw my first Riv, and a year later I took delivery of my now, very well-traveled, well-loved 'Sweet As'. We have explored China, North America, ridden the Great Divide, and have crossed the highest pass in the Himalayas together. We are currently commuting to school in the most populated metropolis on the planet (where the most respectful drivers on the planet also happen to live) and, on weekends, we explore the steep, forested mountains of Japan.
Bicycles have opened the world to me in a myriad of ways and allowed me to connect with natural, remote places. But, most importantly, each bike I have ridden has brought me closer to understanding and appreciating my place in this beautifully complex mystery.
I guess that's 'bikey'!
Cheers,
John