If you need to stick to your ideas and quite naturally can not or will not sacrifice what your stand for then Rietti's latest addition to the world of folding bikes (or more specifically the 'Army recon' style of folding mountain bikes) has got your name written all over it.
In your case money may or not be an option or it just may be a case of refusing to compromise your ideals. Let's face it what you drive or what you ride says a lot about who you are; there's just no getting nearby that in today's society. Personally I all the time have been and all the time will be a sports car kind of guy. My sports car is my identity and it says as much about me as does my leather jacket, my watch, my sneaker variety and my girlfriend. It's sleek, stylish, fast, changes gears and changes pace in a hurry and on the fly and maneuvers in and out of traffic and nearby current and inherent obstacles in the blink of an eye. If I want to get downtown from my office on the outskirts of the city then I just crank up some excellent 'Prodigy' on my top of the line stereo ideas and I'm there in twenty minutes.
Army Trips Travel
Now what does this have to do with an Army Recon folding mountain bike you ask... Everything.
I'm about as likely to trade in my sports car for a truck, van, middle point wagon, house sedan or even an Suv as I am to start wearing corduroys and Dockers or boat shoes and crocs; it's just not going to happen, not now, not later, not ever. My sports car defines my style and Yes style matters, it's who I am and how I retell to my world.
Now personal history tells me lots of citizen whether don't know what they want and who they are or are too willing to compromise those things without a moment's hesitation. I can speak from personal experience. Some years back before I'd discovered the world of mountain bikes never mind the folding mountain bike or good yet the Army Recon folding mountain bike by Rietti I bought an Eagle Talon. Now being a bit of a trend setter and possessing a clear sense of personal style I also, before the fad, picked up a thin, supple lambskin button up ¾ black leather jacket on a firm trip to London, England. Although I was the first of my friends to own both a black leather jacket of this cut and style and also the first to buy an Eagle Talon I would not be the last. Shortly afterwards two of my friends proceeded to buy the coat and the car and then there were three.
Now for me my Eagle Talon served my purposes perfectly. It had decent gas mileage for a high doing machine, was relatively easy to park, could conveniently take one passenger (my girlfriend) and was uncomfortable adequate to discourage unwelcome, tag-a-longs thanks to the dinky back seat. Also importantly the back seat folded down and I could take off the wheels from my Kona 'Lavadome' mountain bike and although somewhat dirty and somewhat inconvenient in the days prior to folding mountain bikes I was able to take my mountain bike on regular off-roading weekend adventures. As for my two friends, well, six months after buying an Eagle Talon they traded it in for an Suv, a mortgage and a white picket fence with the wife and 2.5 kids. Of policy I'm exaggerating for succeed but it does make me wonder if some citizen categorically know what they're looking for if they're willing to change their mind faster than I change gears.
Now to be honest I'm not much of a gearhead or even much of an extreme/adrenaline athlete or enthusiast and I'm not keen on adding more war scars like the ones I picked up in the year that I squeezed my mountain bike into the back seat of my sports car. You see long before the good citizen at Rietti designed their Army Recon folding mountain bike, a weekend warrior had to compensate for the lack of a convenient folding mountain bike by folding his backseat instead.
While I sold my Eagle Talon long ago and my Kona mountain bike is somewhere in Thailand at my father's house the endearing message is the necessity of a folding mountain bike versus a approved issue mountain bike; especially one that is durable, trustworthy and delivers doing and style like the Army Recon folding bike from Rietti. I choose to travel light on my life journey now and neither my mother nor my sister has any extra warehouse space in their Vancouver apartment so your typical non-folding mountain bike struggles in this scenario. It appears that as big, gorgeous and untamed as Canada's outdoors may be nobody downtown or in the suburbs has any space to spare these days.
Now let's talk a bit more about Rietti's folding mountain bike. While I'm not the type brave or crazy adequate to buy a racing bike or even a high doing road bike (like my friend who snapped his collarbone last weekend), I've got no interest in an Suv in terms of gas prices, highway doing or environmental consequences and I'm not about to stick a roof rack on my sports car, it doesn't mean I don't harbor a fantasy or two of my own.
What guy doesn't like toughness, doing and panache and the Army Recon folding mountain bike has all of those qualities and then some. Personally I go for vintage motorcycles and Rietti's Army Recon look has that covered and for all of my Gq inspired style aspirations what beer drinking, hockey fight loving, steak eating, air guitar wielding self respecting red blooded Canadian male wouldn't love to get hold of the keys to a Hummer for a day. That's what the Army Recon mountain bike is to folding bikes. In a word the 'Hummer' of folding bikes. It's big, strong and durable yet somehow it possesses the excellent cool of a Harley Davidson 'Fatboy', the smooth gear shifting of my Eagle Talon and the clean, crisp lines of my black leather jacket.
If you're looking for a folding bike and not just any folding mountain bike but the one with the power, style and finesse reminiscent of your very own independent, individualistic spirit of non-compromise then there's only one choice. The Army Recon from Rietti is the only folding mountain bike on the store that possesses the same strength of character and strength of purpose that you do.
Recommended: Absolutely!
The Best Folding Mountain Bike - Rietti 'Army Recon' Folding Mountain Bike revealGreen Spaces and SPN: Blogging Sustainability Pt.2 Video Clips. Duration : 32.60 Mins.Green Spaces hosted Blogging Sustainability in Partnership with the Sustainable Practice Network on June 26th, 2008. Over 60 people showed up to hear the take from leaders in blogging, take a rooftop tour and have some organic wine provided by the Greene Grape in Fort Green Brooklyn. Jill Fehrenbacher, Editor, Inhabitat.com Jill Fehrenbacher edits Inhabitat www.inhabitat.com, and is a freelance designer and student at Columbia's Graduate School of Architecture and Urban Planning. She created Inhabitat in the Spring of 2005 as a way to catalog her endless search for new ways to improve the world through forward-thinking, high-tech, and environmentally conscious design. Educated at Brown University, where she received a BA in Art Semiotics, and Central St. Martins, where she received an MA in Design Studies, she currently resides in New York City, which so far has been good for her obsession with rooftop gardens and vegan junk food restaurants. Ken Rother, President/COO of Treehugger Ken, President and COO, is responsible for bringing the vision and strategy of TreeHugger to life. Ken has been involved in the Internet since the early 90's when he co-founded Mountain Lake Software in Toronto Canada. Mountain Lake helped some of Canada's largest financial institutions take their first steps onto the WWW. Ken has held various roles including VP of operations responsible for all deliverables of their internet consulting division and later as divisional CIO introduced process ...
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