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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Apr 2007
    Location
    Michigan
    Posts
    1,054
    I usually tell people the price. Its usually people at work too. Everybody has there 'own' thing that they want to spend money on. Some people spend $$$$ on cigs, just noticed the price at Walmart -OMG. A friend of mine at work spent over $200 on a purse. I don't even carry a purse. Look at $$$$ vacations, I don't, I love to camp. I figure I work hard, if I want to spend $$$ on my 'toys' I can. Just my 2 cents worth.
    2011 Specialized Secteur Elite Comp
    2006 Trek 7100

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Ontario
    Posts
    178
    surgtech, it's true that everyone has their own thing, and the cost is certainly relative. When the people in my bike club ask what it costs to board my horse, and I respond $325/month (CDN) they look at me like I have three heads and then go off on a self-righteous rant about how their bike (which is inevitably more expensive than mine) doesn't need to be fed and can be stored away in their garage for FREE in the winter when they're not using it! Man, I didn't even factor in lessons, supplements, farrier and vet bills, or mention that my old guy is chronically lame and I can't just switch out his old parts!

    When I tell HORSE people what I pay monthly for my horse, they look at me like I have three heads and exclaim, "where did you find board so CHEAP?!" Then when they ask why I always ride bareback and I tell them I can't afford a new saddle (old one desperately needs restuffing and I'm sure the tree is warped), they tell me that I could have found a decent used saddle for what my bike cost me. Suddenly, compared to a nice saddle, my bike seems really cheap.

    When lamenting about the $60+ I spent on gloves/arm warmers/frame pump at the bike shop the other day, the guy checking me out said, "yeah, but the majority of it is all start-up cost. Cycling is really very cheap."

    Then I think of my parents with their sailboat, which they put more time/money/effort into than the house. They plan to retire on the boat, so I guess it makes sense to them... but now the bike AND the horse seem a lot less expensive in comparison... but to be fair, my parents make a heck of a lot more money than I do and I STILL manage to keep myself, my horse and my bike afloat (pun not intended)!
    Last edited by run it, ride it; 04-16-2007 at 09:37 AM.

  3. #3
    Kitsune06 Guest
    It depends. In my work office, people tend to make enough 'disposable income' to have 'costly hobbies' so I could tell them flat out. Anyone else, or if I don't feel like it, or don't feel like justifying it, I just say "Well, you see I have both arms and legs... that means they're still waiting on my firstborn." Depending on the company, I may also throw in something like "They may be waiting awhile... "

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Feb 2006
    Location
    DE
    Posts
    1,210
    When confronted with a "how much" kind of question, my ex-MIL would always give a ridiculous answer - either high or low, depending on her mood and her feelings at the time toward the inquirer. And then the "glare."

    When I bought my (all carbon - $$$$) bike, my sister was looking at the instruction book that came with it, and said, "Oh your receipt is in here too." I just said "Don't look." We both have a reputation for being very frugal so I'm sure she was appalled at my extravagance and that the subject was discussed at her house after I left but she never said a word to me. Fast forward a couple years, and she does sometimes make remarks like "Well my bike didn't cost near as much as yours..."

    Well I'm not married, have no children to put through college, and have already bought all the graduate school I will ever need. If I smoked cigarettes, I would have spent half that amount in just a year's time so that's my justification. Besides, I still go into the bike shop 2 yrs later and tell them again how much I love my bike. It gives me more pleasure than smoking ever did.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    steuben county new york
    Posts
    626
    When people at work ask what my new bike costs..I tell them on sale and at an entry level bike, it was just over $1000.00..I get the deer in the headlight stare, the swallow, and the laugh then the "wal-mart has them for $150.00 you know" statement. I tell them, wal-mart bikes arent' the same, and I get the reply back of , "they are the same thing" I am usually walking away at this time as there is no point in explaining the difference because they've already got their own oppinion and have now concluded I have more $$$ than brains..Which I tend to differ, besides most of them smoke heavily and i don't. I've come to appreciate my biking friends even more.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2004
    Location
    North Texas
    Posts
    1,565
    I tell them "it's worth more than that 12 yr old, rust-eaten old JEEP I drive".

    spazz
    no regrets!

    My ride: 2003 Specialized Allez Comp - zebra (men's 52cm), Speedplay X5 pedals, Koobi Au Enduro saddle

    Spazzdog Ink Gallery
    http://www.printroom.com/pro/gratcliff

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Central Virginia
    Posts
    245
    I like Lisa's answer ... going to remember that!

    Shoot, I think cycling is expensive! I have yet to "stop buying" for my sport! If it is not components, than it is clothes or equipment. In fact, I am now working on creating a bike -- taking an old frame/fork and transforming it to a rideable bike. I am trying VERY hard to not spend much money, looking for gently used bargains, and it is still going to cost me somewhere around $400 to create a bike!

    Then, once I do that, I will just HAVE to upgrade my "good bike" ... that is easily another $400+ ... even more if I add everything ... but what is the fun in that? I mean, if I upgraded all at once, what would I do next year?

    Really, if all those non-cycling people knew how much time, energy, and money I spend on cycling they would cringe -- I can't imagine telling them! Geez, my husband doesn't get it and he rides a little and lives with me! Bike lust is a terrible and expensive thing ... but OH so much FUN!
    BAT
    Satisfaction lies in the effort not the attainment. Full effort is full victory.
    -- Mahatma Gandhi

 

 

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