Getting into the sport of mountain biking is not necessarily an inexpensive leap. Sure, there are plenty of different factors that influence the cost of entry one way or another — where are you going to ride? How often? What are your expectations of performance from a bike? Do you plan on upgrading it ever? The list is endless. I’d say that a lot of people I know, as kids, had some help from their parents with their first real bike. I know I did.
While some parents will happily drop $10,000 on a 20 lb carbon bike for their kids to use in high school NICA races and some spend large sums of money on bikes, parts, and travel for their kids to go to camp at Whistler without thinking twice, other parents are a bit more reserved. To each their own. I’m not here to judge.
At some point, as many kids did, I had to start working to pay for the bikes and parts I wanted, at least to an extent, and the timing went hand-in-hand with me getting more into the sport and wanting more expensive bikes. I was experiencing inflation firsthand, but it was due to broken bikes and parts needing upgrades to save the same fate from happening again. Did I need all of this to ride? No. However, I was breaking wheels, bending cranks, and using my XC bike as an urban freeride dirt jump machine, and it just wasn’t working out.
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