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The Tandem!

I didn't realise the tandem would be such an interesting thing, and get several comments right away! It is such a normal piece of life for us, and has been for years, that I don't think twice about it anymore. And yes, hauling stuff is very easily done with this contraption (but transporting wool was not the main reason we got it).

Back in about 2004/2005, the Most Patient Husband and I realised we would both like to go on bike holidays together, but our performance on bikes was, how shall I put it: slightly dissimilar. Slightly as in that famous race between the hare and the hedgehog, only without the hedgehog trick. (I was the hedgehog, by the way. Still am.) So the obvious solution was trying out a tandem, and we started right away to look for one with good luggage capacity to get holiday equipment onto the bike without having to add a trailer (which is the usual solution for tandem vacations).

We stumbled across a slightly unusual bike that way - the Hase Pino. Which was a semi-recumbent, and we'd never had contact with 'bents before, so it was all very weird and new. On this, you have the usual luggage rack that will fit three bags (two panniers and a topcase), plus an optional lowrider underneath that will fit another two large and two small panniers. Which sets you back a bit compared to two single bikes, but not so much.

So we went to our local bike dealer for special bikes, ZoxBikes - and he did have one of the tandems... so off we were for a test ride. The first metres were very weird, and the first corners doubly so, as the stoker (the one not handling the steering stuff) sits on top of the front wheel. Which means the captain (the one who does handle the steering stuff) has to guess where the wheel is, and the stoker has the feeling of going straight into a wall or the abyss that you can get when you sit in a bus right in front.

A little test round an a slightly larger test round later, we went home... and we got our tandem in October 2005.

Daniel_IMG_5068

It's a relatively pricey bike (you pay extra for exotics), it does have quite a few flaws (there are some technical details that are, well... questionable), but we haven't regretted our decision for a single second. We've gone on tours long and short, we've hauled all kinds of stuff with it, we've spent wonderful vacations in Spain and (most often) in England with this thing. We also use it as our main daily means of transport when we go somewhere together, year round - on spike tires in winter for safe riding.

So. That's the tandem story - or at least the first part of it. If you have questions, ask away in the comments, and I'll write more!
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Comments 4

Heather on Wednesday, 30 May 2018 16:36

Can you post the photo with the racing number stuck to your foot please?

Can you post the photo with the racing number stuck to your foot please?
Catherine Raymond (website) on Wednesday, 30 May 2018 18:21

I can't comment on how rare tandem bikes are in Europe, but I will say that they are seldom seen in the US--or at least in the part of the US where I live (Northeastern states).

I can't comment on how rare tandem bikes are in Europe, but I will say that they are seldom seen in the US--or at least in the part of the US where I live (Northeastern states).
Katrin on Monday, 04 June 2018 11:38

Tandem bikes are rather rare here, too. I don't know if there are differences between the countries in Europe, but you probably get more of them where you have more bicycles as opposed to fewer for the population count.
Any tandems, though, require two people who find each other agreeable enough to sit on a single machine (including the riding styles and preferences) and the means to get said machine. Tandems are usually the price of two single bikes of similar quality (which can range from very low to extremely high) plus some more (which we call "Exotenaufschlag", exoticness surcharge). So it is a commitment, especially if people are not sure they will indeed have fun riding together - which does explain why there are not more of these wonderful things around.

Tandem bikes are rather rare here, too. I don't know if there are differences between the countries in Europe, but you probably get more of them where you have more bicycles as opposed to fewer for the population count. Any tandems, though, require two people who find each other agreeable enough to sit on a single machine (including the riding styles and preferences) and the means to get said machine. Tandems are usually the price of two single bikes of similar quality (which can range from very low to extremely high) plus some more (which we call "Exotenaufschlag", exoticness surcharge). So it is a commitment, especially if people are not sure they will indeed have fun riding together - which does explain why there are not more of these wonderful things around.
Harma on Thursday, 31 May 2018 10:37

I second Heathers request.

I second Heathers request.
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