@ssamulczyk If you need encouraging to do so, it certainly looks as though you'd get the use from it.
I'm perpetually tempted by an insta360 but don't think I'd use it enough to justify. See also a drone.
@pete Yes. All those tempting toys that you think you’d use every day… Then it comes out it’s a hustle to take a drone with you and you end up playing with it more than riding…🤷🏻♂️
Also, buying #Fizik#TerraClimaX2#cycling#shoes is already starting to pay off! The thermal comfort is amazing and they really are weather-proof! It was a pricey but good choice! @cycling@rower
Podsumowując nową Gruzję - jeden bardzo dobry "gruziński" numer ("Wojna Domowa"), jeden bardzo dobry numer jak z płyty WTZ ("Do pokoju") i jeden numer, który zyskuje nową jakość w remiksie Perturbatora i brzmi jak jakiś Gruzing Joke :D ("Kciuk cel pal") choć wersja pierwotna niczego nie urywa. @muzykametalowa@postpunk
@arkd generalnie na razie tak naprawdę podoba mi się jeden numer na tej płycie... problem w tym, że zupełnie nie brzmi jak Gruzja, a jak WTZ ;) @muzykametalowa
After over two decades, Surly moved the Cross-Check frameset from their standard lineup of bikes to the ‘Legacy Lineup’ of their website. Surly confirmed that the bike is no longer in production and is unlikely to come back.
If you haven’t owned this gravel/cyclocross/touring/whatever bike yourself, you likely know someone who has. The Surly Cross-Check was the egalitarian choice in cycling, simultaneously someone’s utilitarian dream bike that was attainable and sold at a fair price.
The end of the Cross-Check marks the bike’s reign as the most bike that ever biked, the go-to way to make a pile of parts you hoarded in the corner of your garage into a functioning bicycle, and the defacto option that a bike nerd could happily ride and recommend to their non-bikey friends all the same.
@tk@cycling@mastobikes@mhoye Aw, dang. I rejoined the cycling world 12 or 13 years ago on a black Cross Check. I loved it unreservedly, and kept it in my garage for years after I rode it regularly— it got displaced by lighter, shinier bikes — mostly out of sentimental reasons.
I finally sold it last year to a math grad student who rides it nearly every day.