Or really for her dad, a life long cyclist with 150k+ miles under his belt?
Hi I'm Hank from Seattle. I currently ride a Salsa Vaya on roads and an Ibis Ripmo off roads. I've been on e-bikes here and there and found them to be wonderful fun and good exercise. No crusty analog cyclist bias here at all. But at the moment not worth the price for me, as my cycling has reduced a bit and I'll take all the exercise I can get on my short commute and as frequent as possible singletrack forays into our incredible Cascade Mountain mountain bike infrastructure.
But for my girl! She turns 12 in May. Has some time in pedaling bikes, but given that we live smack in the middle of Seattle -- statistically an exceptionally dangerous city for cyclists unfortunately -- she doesn't have the free range bike everywhere background I had as a kid.
Type 1 and 2 ebikes are legal for any age in my state.
Her mom and I love to ride bikes with her! We've done five tours in Europe with her so far: two Weehoo, one Followme Tandem, two Hase Pino tandem. Getting her on a tandem with me has been a good solution for balancing mom and dad's desire to cover some ground and get some exercise with her ability and comfort limits. Do some tandem riding w/ her at home too, as well as plenty of regular family bike rides.
While fun, this family bike riding is not in the least a workout for mom or dad.
So I decided to get my girl an ebike and see how that goes. Hopefully it helps at least to some extend to balance our group and make everyone even happier together. If it goes well we might rent her a small ebike instead of a seat on a Pino on our next (fingers crossed) family tour in Europe in late August/early September.
I'm a sensible, safety-minded guy, will find a safe place for her to learn the e-bike on low settings, etc. I know cycling, but I don't know e-bikes! As such would love to hear any and all practical advice about e-biking in general and particularly for a tween-age kid.
The bike I bought: 2020 Rocky Mountain Growler PowerPlay hardtail mtb. I could well be wrong, but thought that maybe a mid-motor, low engine cut off speed, and no throttle would help her not zip off accidentally into traffic. I like all types of bikes, but find that slack-ish mountain bikes with big wheels and tires are remarkably apt at staying upright when the going gets unusual. I like the stock WTB Ranger 2.8 tires: low-knob, easy-rolling, good enough on pavement and great on dirt roads. I'm a bit concerned that the Growler will be too heavy for her 105lbs to handle (got a good deal on the entry-level Growler that has some near throw away part spec. I have a garage full of nice mtb part so think I can get weight down to between 18 and 20 kilos without too much expense). I might put a suspension adjusted steel fork on it for now and add a quality suspension fork when she is ready to take it on real mtb rides ...
So anyway that's the deal, all advice from you experienced e-bike riders is appreciated!
Hank
Hi I'm Hank from Seattle. I currently ride a Salsa Vaya on roads and an Ibis Ripmo off roads. I've been on e-bikes here and there and found them to be wonderful fun and good exercise. No crusty analog cyclist bias here at all. But at the moment not worth the price for me, as my cycling has reduced a bit and I'll take all the exercise I can get on my short commute and as frequent as possible singletrack forays into our incredible Cascade Mountain mountain bike infrastructure.
But for my girl! She turns 12 in May. Has some time in pedaling bikes, but given that we live smack in the middle of Seattle -- statistically an exceptionally dangerous city for cyclists unfortunately -- she doesn't have the free range bike everywhere background I had as a kid.
Type 1 and 2 ebikes are legal for any age in my state.
Her mom and I love to ride bikes with her! We've done five tours in Europe with her so far: two Weehoo, one Followme Tandem, two Hase Pino tandem. Getting her on a tandem with me has been a good solution for balancing mom and dad's desire to cover some ground and get some exercise with her ability and comfort limits. Do some tandem riding w/ her at home too, as well as plenty of regular family bike rides.
While fun, this family bike riding is not in the least a workout for mom or dad.
So I decided to get my girl an ebike and see how that goes. Hopefully it helps at least to some extend to balance our group and make everyone even happier together. If it goes well we might rent her a small ebike instead of a seat on a Pino on our next (fingers crossed) family tour in Europe in late August/early September.
I'm a sensible, safety-minded guy, will find a safe place for her to learn the e-bike on low settings, etc. I know cycling, but I don't know e-bikes! As such would love to hear any and all practical advice about e-biking in general and particularly for a tween-age kid.
The bike I bought: 2020 Rocky Mountain Growler PowerPlay hardtail mtb. I could well be wrong, but thought that maybe a mid-motor, low engine cut off speed, and no throttle would help her not zip off accidentally into traffic. I like all types of bikes, but find that slack-ish mountain bikes with big wheels and tires are remarkably apt at staying upright when the going gets unusual. I like the stock WTB Ranger 2.8 tires: low-knob, easy-rolling, good enough on pavement and great on dirt roads. I'm a bit concerned that the Growler will be too heavy for her 105lbs to handle (got a good deal on the entry-level Growler that has some near throw away part spec. I have a garage full of nice mtb part so think I can get weight down to between 18 and 20 kilos without too much expense). I might put a suspension adjusted steel fork on it for now and add a quality suspension fork when she is ready to take it on real mtb rides ...
So anyway that's the deal, all advice from you experienced e-bike riders is appreciated!
Hank
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