KMFJD
Lifer
- Aug 11, 2005
- 30,016
- 45,230
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This is one type of trick I doubt I'll ever be able to teach my dog
I'm with ya. I've tried, furthest I've ever got is about the point where one begins placing the morsel of food on the dog's snout.
So far, I've seen the trick work real well with a Pointer, but with our aussie/lab mix, it's a comical bust.
That is really weird - and the closest thing to a Flintstones car I have ever seen.
One might wonder, how do you brake?
Pedaling backwards to brake is for fixed-gear bikes bought at Toys R Us and Wal-Mart. You'd know that if you ever rode anything other than a kid's bike.One might wonder, how do you brake?
Pedaling backwards to brake is for fixed-gear bikes bought at Toys R Us and Wal-Mart. You'd know that if you ever rode anything other than a kid's bike.
That said, I went everywhere on my fixed-gear Huffy, RoadMaster, Murray, etc Wal-Mart bikes as a kid, but even some of those had calipers. My first disc brake was my motorcycle.
I'm with ya. I've tried, furthest I've ever got is about the point where one begins placing the morsel of food on the dog's snout.
So far, I've seen the trick work real well with a Pointer, but with our aussie/lab mix, it's a comical bust.
cmon now, there's fixies that are quality adult bikes. I will have a single speed eventually, but not a fixie
Right, but they almost universally have lever/cable-actuated brakes (calipers; rarely discs).