Trends If It’s 100 Years Old, It Must Be Good! Cycling’s slightly baffling (and very bumpy) infatuation with retro-chic ‘It’s the purest sense of the bicycle there is,” says Wes Williams as he runs his hands over an elegant, no-frills frame in his bike shop in Crested Butte, Colorado. “It’s like sex: You can’t really say what it’s like until you do it. And once someone does, they say, ‘Whoa, I gotta have one of these scorchers!'” The name comes from the 1890s, the last time bikes like this were popular, when packs of reckless cyclists terrorized horses and pedestrians in New York City. Recently, though, modern-day metamorphs of these vintage machines 鈥 the bicycling equivalent of the Model T 鈥 have begun making intermittent appearances on both coasts, from Critical Mass bike rallies in San The scorchers that Williams and others are building boast state-of-the-art components such as titanium handlebars, but the mechanics hark back to the 1890s 鈥 creating an impression not unlike seeing your grandmother in Air Jordans. There’s no suspension, and no freewheel 鈥 only a single fixed gear. Which means that when a scorcher moves, so must the legs of its Part of the answer resides in the challenge of simply staying on the damn things. “Daydream for a minute, and you’ll get thrown right over the bars,” says Scot Nicol of Ibis Bicycles, which came out with a very limited line of $1,000 scorchers a few years ago. Equally alluring may be the refreshingly minimalist alternative that scorchers offer to cycling’s notorious fixation |
If It’s 100 Years Old, It Must Be Good!
New perk: Easily find new routes and hidden gems, upcoming running events, and more near you. Your weekly Local Running Newsletter has everything you need to lace up! .