Jack Tyler
Active Member
We just moved to Bozeman, Montana - a small city full of avid bikers and bike paths, some of which lead you right up (please note: I said ‘UP’…) into the national forests. I wanted to escape the silliness of a 2nd car since we rarely used our last one. However, I also wanted ‘wheels’ in order to commute 10 miles to the airport - whether planned or on a whim - to tinker with the plane or go fly. Given all that, I was convinced my solution lay in buying an ebike, a sorta-commuter that could still handle maintained trails (and help me go ‘Up’). And of course EBR, Court’s 500+ reviews and this Community all provided helpful guidance.
But one troubling theme kept surfacing over and over in the advice I received here: Try before you buy. ‘The bike needs to feel ‘right’ to you,’ said the gurus who’d gone before. (Their corollary: What feels ‘right’ to the last guy won’t necessarily feel ‘right’ to you. So much for putting lots of weight on the reviews alone). Bozeman lacked a ‘real’ ebike dealer and even those who were some hours away offered very few demo bikes to ride. What was I to do? Turns out I saw many others posting here with the same exact dilemma. So FWIW I thought I’d report on what I did and how it worked out for me.
“If the mountain won't come to Muhammad…” So the plan was to go where the bikes were, which from Montana could mean Seattle, or maybe Oregon or down to Southern California or…well, there seemingly were lots of choices. But since it meant a Com Air flight and a multi-day hotel room (I wanted lots of ‘wheel time’), cost was the first concern. (As it turned out my spending produced savings I didn’t expect. More on that below). A second concern was that a given dealer not just have ‘lots of ebikes’ but rather had - on hand - a hefty percentage of the models that were on my short list. Turns out I didn’t find that many of those dealers. So folding together el cheapo airfares (from Montana, there aren’t many…) with affordable hotel rates, the handy presence of Uber for ground transport, and a dealer with a solid rep and large, relevant inventory, I ended up making the pilgrimage to Len Mattioni's store (aka: Crazy Lenny’s) in Madison, WI. Which BTW happened to offer an affordable Best Western only a short walk away, so I could even ignore Uber most of the time.
But one troubling theme kept surfacing over and over in the advice I received here: Try before you buy. ‘The bike needs to feel ‘right’ to you,’ said the gurus who’d gone before. (Their corollary: What feels ‘right’ to the last guy won’t necessarily feel ‘right’ to you. So much for putting lots of weight on the reviews alone). Bozeman lacked a ‘real’ ebike dealer and even those who were some hours away offered very few demo bikes to ride. What was I to do? Turns out I saw many others posting here with the same exact dilemma. So FWIW I thought I’d report on what I did and how it worked out for me.
“If the mountain won't come to Muhammad…” So the plan was to go where the bikes were, which from Montana could mean Seattle, or maybe Oregon or down to Southern California or…well, there seemingly were lots of choices. But since it meant a Com Air flight and a multi-day hotel room (I wanted lots of ‘wheel time’), cost was the first concern. (As it turned out my spending produced savings I didn’t expect. More on that below). A second concern was that a given dealer not just have ‘lots of ebikes’ but rather had - on hand - a hefty percentage of the models that were on my short list. Turns out I didn’t find that many of those dealers. So folding together el cheapo airfares (from Montana, there aren’t many…) with affordable hotel rates, the handy presence of Uber for ground transport, and a dealer with a solid rep and large, relevant inventory, I ended up making the pilgrimage to Len Mattioni's store (aka: Crazy Lenny’s) in Madison, WI. Which BTW happened to offer an affordable Best Western only a short walk away, so I could even ignore Uber most of the time.