| Re: You know you're a biker when... In article <1170207939.050676.172880@a34g2000cwb.googlegroups .com>,
"marian.rosenberg@gmail.com" <marian.rosenberg@gmail.com> writes:
> On Jan 29, 8:34 pm, "Ken C. M." <k...@up-yours-spammer.net> wrote:
>> marian.rosenb...@gmail.com wrote:
>> > The helmet you bought this week cost more than the washing machine you
>> > bought last week.
>>
>> > -M
>>
>> You have more cycling clothing than /normal/ clothing.
>
> Do t-shirts from cycling events count as cycling clothing?
>
> Or any other _$random clothing item$_ with bike related advertising on
> it; Is that cycling clothing?
I guess anything one wears while riding counts
as cycling clothing.
> If there is no bike related advertising on it but you got it at a bike-
> related event, is it cycling clothing?
I dunno, but I find my brimless welder's cap under
my helmet prevents ice cream headaches when riding
into cold headwinds. It's small, it's light, and
if I ever need to use it as such, it'll do for an
hankie. But then I wouldn't be able to wear it
again until I subsequently wash it.
cheers,
Tom
--
Nothing is safe from me.
Above address is just a spam midden.
I'm really at: tkeats curlicue vcn dot bc dot ca |