Categories: Guest Article

Guest Article: Bikes Smell Awesome Too.

Fixing a puncture for a neighbour.

@snoov moves the topic away from Lance, doping, EPMS, and Berty’s Spanish adventures. Our brains are so crammed with nonsense our childhood memories get jammed deep down into the center.  A memory waits to be released and sometimes it’s a remembered smell that floats it up to the surface.

VLVV, Gianni

My front tyre has been losing more air than the rear for a couple of months now. I’d just figured it was the valve as I had clumsily bent the little pin that’s inside while removing the pump before we hit the road. I bent it back and it seemed to be okay. It has always lasted our rides but this evening I decided to strip the tube off and test it in a basin of water. To my surprise there was no air escaping from the valve but there was a tiny hole in the tube so I patched it up and put it back on the bike. It occurs to me now that the low pressure of a tube out of the tyre is nothing compared to my normal 120psi and so if the valve was leaking, this test probably wouldn’t show it. Then I decided to test all the tubes I have lying around and repair any holes so that they’re all ready to go. To be fair I’ve only had two punctures since taking to the roads and one was a classic pinch puncture bumping up the kerb-cut right outside my flat as I arrived home from a ride.

I didn’t find any holes, but when I let the air out of the first tube right in front of my face I took a deep breath of the expelled air. The smell was delicious. It brought back memories of the many punctures I’ve fixed in my time on bikes. It brought back the lesson I learned when my Dad dropped me off at the only skatepark in Scotland and at the time when it was one of the best in Europe. I had an American BMX that I’d begged my parents to order over for my birthday and Christmas which I’d also committed my life savings towards, an SE Racing Quadangle. I had arrived with a puncture which I planned on making good but after pumping it up for the second time and rolling forward … pssss. I was too keen to ride and one of the locals asked if I’d checked the tyre for glass. I hadn’t and found a large piece straight away, once the third puncture was fixed my Dad arrived and it was time to go home, day wasted.

The smell also took me back to when I was still at Primary School (maybe 8 or so) and had gotten my first puncture. I went into the house and told my Mum. She said we’d have to go down to Woolworth’s and get a Puncture Repair Outfit! Now that was exciting, I remember thinking how great it was going to be and tried to imagine what it would look like, what it would consist of and even what colour it would be. The disappointment of not being able to ride my bike had completely disappeared, I was getting a Puncture Repair OUTFIT!!! Not only was I going to be able to fix punctures, I was going to look fantastic while doing it. I hadn’t even begun to imagine what other activities would now be open to me. So, we got in the car. We drove to the shops down near the beach and esplanade. Parked up and walked towards “Woolies”. I can’t help wondering if my Mum had noticed my level of excitement, and maybe questioned that somehow, my expectations were somehow out of wack. I’m pretty sure she noticed the tears though, when she picked up the box and showed it to me. It was about 15 centimetres long (6″) and I just knew that there was no way going to be an overall in there.

snoov

Got a bike to get fit in 2009 (Tricross). Entered 2011 Etape Caledonia to motivate myself after not really riding the bike. Trained from February and completed 130km in 4.5 hours on an Allez I was given by a guy who showed me the rules. Now I'm on the road to rule compliance and watch every RR I can find although I've ALWAYS been fascinated by the Tour. Bike handling skills from BMX racing and halfpipe action which also claimed my two front teeth.

View Comments

  • I notice that no one has ever done a reverence article on flared trousers (see awesome picture above).

    They were a bugger to tuck in to Pathfinder socks.

    I love the smell of inner-tube in the morning, it smells like...victory.

  • You do realise there's a body on the grass behind you in the picture don't you?

  • I remember the first bike shop I ever frequented as a kid: Dooley's Cycles in Paisley. It was a cramped, cave-like place nestled in the lee of a railway viaduct. Upon entering the crowded shop, jammed full of bikes and accessories, to reach the small counter, you were struck by a heady scent of oil, grease and rubber. Sure the air was probably a bit musty too, but  it was intoxicating as if one was breathing special cycling air. It's still there, a bit smarter and cleaner than in my childhood, but there still that scent that modern shops just seem to lack.

  • Tea spoons as tyre leavers no doubt.

    Was the skatepark Livingstone? I always wanted to go there but we lived in the south of England - Romford was the one I went to the most and it was brilliant.

  • Bravo! A lovely piece.

    The mere mention of SE Quadangle fills me with envy. I always wanted one of those, but had to make do with a DP Freestyler......

  • My only real beef with Park glueless patches is the lack of glue. At the end of the road season a couple of my like minded buddies and I would gather up all our punctured tubes, get out the TipTop Touring Patch kit, throw "Hot Dog The Movie" in the VCR (a ode to the pending ski season) and huff glue under the guise of saving money and the environment.

    Good times.

  • Yes!  The smell of the bike shop.  I remember walking into Bicycle Center in Danbury, Connecticut as a kid, or when I would patch a tire, the scent should be a perfume.  It might not work for everyone, but I'd be all over that.

  • I had a hutch trickster with redline flight cranks and green skyways. It was a beauty.

    My friend had a quadangle but the frame kept cracking. He also had a sky blue PK Ripper that I always lusted after.

  • I go to the local bike shop somewhat weekly to eat lunch at the work counter -- and study whatever operation is underway.

  • Ha, that photos is just great! Nice one, snoov. Very cool. I have pretty poor eyesight so I like to think I have heightened smell. More than once I've been out on a bike and passed a pretty girl, had her perfume reach my nose...and be immediately taken back to a GF from my past who wore the same one. Totally crazy to me a little perfume can transport me back five, ten, or fifteen years!

    scaler - Ha, Hot Dog! We'd watch a lot of North Shore growing up! Had it on a vhs taped off of HBO. Rick Kane is the man! And gotta love Turtle as well.

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