Rivendell Bicycle Works was founded in 1994, by a guy with some very particular ideas about what a good bicycle ought to be. Over the years, his ideas expanded to bicycle accessories and then to riding.
RBW became a cool little mail order company and people caught on.
I was one of those people. I began working in the bicycle industry the same year that Rivendell began, and I was attracted to many of the ideas that RBW espoused.
Five years later, I bought a Rivendell frameset — well, actually a truck driver’s insurance company bought it for me — and built it up.
It has been a lovely ride, both the bike and the time spent living my bicycle life according to RBW’s template. I couldn’t keep up with all of it, mind you — I was never strong enough to be a long term mega-miler and my income simply couldn’t keep up with RBW’s prices — but I did my best to enjoy myself.
Then Covid happened, and changed my life.
I couldn’t ride a bicycle for almost two years. When I could begin riding again, it was a lot slower, the distances were shorter, my tolerance for cold, west weather had greatly diminished and my balance was more precarious than before.
At the height of my bicycle life, I averaged over two thousand miles a year for close to a decade. I wasn’t breaking any speed records, but I got to ride through some lovely places and mostly enjoyed it.
Since coming out of the pandemic and resuming riding, my rides are fewer and shorter now. If I can manage a ride of five miles round trip that’s an incredibly good day. If I can do it more than once or twice a week, that’s astounding.
During the latter half of lockdown, when I was still able to turn wrenches, I found an old Peugeot mountain bike, and set about making it work for me. It sits slightly lower than my Rivvy because the frame is more vertically compact. This means I need a longer stem to make the handlebars the right height. It looks a little dorky but it’s safe and solid for the riding I do now.
It’s also got a lower top tube, so I can get on and off more easily.
And for reasons I’m still not entirely clear on, it’s more comfortable to ride than the Rivvy now. The laid-back geometry allows me to set the saddle farther back, putting my legs and knees in a comfortable place. The most telling difference is that after I ride the Rivvy, my knees hurt for days. After I ride the Peugeot, they feel fine.
Since I don’t ride as much as I used to, I am seriously thinking about selling my 1999 All-Rounder, and being done with the whole RBW-cool of it all.
Early in RBW’s history, Grant would encourage folks to buy his bikes by saying they were “affordable for anyone with a job and bicycle priorities,” and I always winced a little when I read that. While I did buy a Rivendell myself, it was with the proceeds from a crash settlement. I certainly could never have afforded it myself, not on my bike mechanic’s wages. And I needed my bike shop job to obtain the discounted parts with which to build it up.
I worked in a bike shop that focused heavily on repairs, and on encouraging people to commute by bicycle on whatever they had. This probably helped to inform my discomfort as well.
It was fun for a long while, but I always held something back. Some of my enthusiasm was always tempered with how damned expensive it was to become part of the Rivendell cult, and also how overly male the whole thing felt for quite a long time. I’ve never forgotten that awareness in thirty years of my own enthusiasm for good bikes and places to ride them. That awareness has tempered my enthusiasm a little bit this whole time.
It’s not unlike the other parts of my life where I’ve belonged, but not fully. When the first half of your life is spent on the margins and always on the go, you never become fully grounded in any scene or group, because you can’t. It’s part of the hardwiring of my brain, for better or worse. Probably both. And it can’t really be undone now, and I am learning how to live with that knowledge. I am learning how to discern what still makes sense in my life, and what needs to be set down.
Not fully belonging has been hard but it has also allowed me to see things from a different angle. And so it has been with Rivendell and my participation in the RBW cult. I participated while knowing that I could never really keep up, and when I got dropped — physically, geographically or financially, I just kept riding my own ride and calling it good.
I’ve gotten to a point where I no longer have “bicycle priorities,” or the stamina to chase after them. And that realization has helped me to see where and how the RBW thing isn’t really serving me anymore. Not keeping up has become far more prevalent since I got sick and never fully recovered. Not keeping up has given me a new perspective on what it means to be in my body, and on how I move around in the world today.
I plan to put the Rivendell up for sale, probably in the early spring. I don’t know yet if I will sell it as a frameset or as a whole bike. I have a few months to consider that, and also to determine if I have enough strength in my hands to dismantle and clean it up. In case anyone here might be interested, here are a few details. The rest can come later.
Seat tube, c-c: 20.5”/52cm
Top tube, c-c: 21.5”/54.6cm
For 26”/559 mountain bike wheels and canti brakes
Wheels: handbuilt, Sun CR18 rims, Phil Wood hubs. Both could use some love, and the rims might need to be replaced at some point. Suntour 5-speed FW in good shape, plenty of room to swap in more cogs if you want, but it doesn’t need more than six or seven at most. Current tires are 26 x 1.75 vintage Conti TopTour 2000, tread is still fine for city use and sidewalls are still whole.
Nitto CrMO North Road bars, Technomic stem, friction shifters, SunTour champagne levers. Fenders, lights, pump can all come with the bike.
I will probably remove the rear mini-rack, basket, bag and maybe the saddle to swap over to my other bike.
The frameset is in used condition.still straight, never crashed, shows its beausage with paint chips and stickers but is solid and fine. It’s missing the original head badge. If I can find it, I’ll include it with the bike but you have to reinstall it. Includes a Shimano Ultegra headset in good condition.
The HS was last overhauled and the cartridge BB replaced about six years ago. The hubs feel fine, but maybe want some TLC from Phil, unless you have the tools and can do it yourself.
The bike is totally rideable right now as it is and it is fine. If you want something fancy and pristine, keep looking. But if you might be interested, feel free to reach out.
I’m not sure yet what I’d ask for the bike, and will think about it over the winter. But I will not accept trades, in whole or in part.
Bear in mind that since I cannot really use my hands as much now, I will likely have to pay someone to partly break down and box the bike for shipping, and that will be added to the asking price if you want me to ship the bike to you. I honestly would prefer to get cash in person for it. And since we’re heading into winter now, I will probably not make a more detailed listing until I’m ready to sell it in the early spring.
It’s been fun. And in February or March it will be someone else’s turn.
Happy riding.
5 comments:
Beth, I read this with a mix of wistfulness and understanding. I "get" everything you say, about changes in our lives, as well as the whole "Riv thing" and the financial side of it that was always a sticking point for many. I really liked a lot of what Rivendell and Grant brought to the cycling world in the early days, but even their attempts at more "affordable" stock frames (Heron, Atlantis, Ramboulliet, etc,) were always out of reach for many. I love the way you made that AR uniquely YOURS, and just looking at the photo reminds me of you and makes me smile. But clearly the time has come to part ways with that bike, and I hope you can find it a good home.
Beth, thank you for your thoughts. Like you, I have a complicated relationship with Rivendell. I appreciate what Grant and Co. do and like most of their bikes. And overall I think Grant Petersen is a good, decent person and doesn't deserve the scorn and vitriol he gets.
But like you, some of the things he says rubs me the wrong way. I didn't hear the "affordable for anyone with a job and bicycle priorities" line, but I do remember him saying something about "Riv is not for dumpster divers", which I interpreted as either for those who are broke or those who are resourceful (or both). I don't think he means to be divisive with these comments, more that he's being true to himself and has no filter. Still, it does sting and just gives more ammo to the "Rivendell is elitist" crowd.
I've admired the bikes from afar, but do not know if I'd ever get one. Plus, if I want to spend that kind of money, I want to get exactly what I want, not make compromises. But custom is expensive. The only reason I got a Bantam is because at the time I got it (ten years ago) Bob offered me a "can't pass up" deal due to his desire to establish himself. So I got a bike that has disc brakes (a Riv/Grant bugbear) and could also take an IGH (ditto.)
And the only Riv I could afford is a Clem(entine), and while I think they are decent, haven't done much for me. I see it and say, "Well, I can find a nice vintage MTB frame and customize it." Even if I got pretty extravagant with parts, it would most likely come out less than the $2,000 asking price for a new Clem. Yes, there are issues with doing this, and if you don't do it yourself, you will need to pay someone else. But it would be something uniquely mine.
I do get the reason why some people really get into Rivendell. It's nice to feel like you belong to something, and for those of us who don't fit into what mainstream cycling is in this country, we need the reassurance that we are not wrong. I am on the RBW listserve, but rarely participate. Even if I got a Riv I'd still feel too much like an outsider. It's the same with the whole bikepacking and alt-biking scene.
Hope you're able to sell the Riv for a decent price when you do sell it.
Best,
Shawn
https://urbanadventureleague.wordpress.com/landing-page/
Thanks Shawn. I'd always said that if the Rivendell hadn't come into my life, I'd try for a Surly Long Haul (pre-disc, of course). The early LHT's were fine bikes, even if they had threadless forks. And they came in a generous range of sizes at a time when hardly anyone else was offering that. But I'm happy with my Peugeot.
Yeah, its all bittersweet, of course. But I've already done a fair amount of letting go -- of accessories, tools and other bike ephemera. Some of the transactions were strained and I won't deal with those folks again. Others were really kind and sweet, and I will send friends to those shops as a way of showing my appreciation. (When you visit Portland again, check out TomCat bikes and Bikes4Humanity.)
And I still have a nice bike I can enjoy.
I had an LHT for five years. There's a part of me that wishes that I kept it. (Or at least was not forced to sell it in the dead of winter for too little to rustle up move in costs on a new place.) But I am glad that I have the Bantam. Other than the LHT's overbuilt ride, my biggest beef ironically was with wheel size. At the time I bought it (2008), the 56cm size took 700c wheels. I thought that advantageous since the wheels from the broken bike I'd be transferring parts from was that size, and I wasn't yet into 26 inch wheels. But it maxxed out for me at 35mm, and by the end I wanted wider tires, which would have been easy with 26 inch. (There was also the added complication of the Jandd front rack I had, which by itself was great, but would not allow for anything larger than 35mm.)
Best,
Shawn
https://urbanadventureleague.wordpress.com/landing-page/
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