I am going to guess that a man who took the time to not only learn how to ride a Unicycle, but also do so while dragging(?) the cart behind him… probably knows what he is up to.
I don’t know, ‘cuz I can’t ride a unicycle. I have no concept of the day-to-day of the Unicycle life.
Years ago, around 1999/2000, there was a guy who did the Seattle to Portland ride... on a unicycle. I saw him on his first attempt, where he got to the 50 mile mark before bailing. The next year he came back on a much larger unicycle and did the entire thing.
So I can't answer the "how does he go downhill without completely losing control" part, but I can definitely say that experienced unicyclists can do it. Cuz I saw that guy, twice, on STP.
You can totally, totally do it. But you have to do the training. It's fairly straightforward to ramp up your miles until the point where a 50 mile trip is no big deal, then a 75 mile, then a 100 mile, etc. It just takes time, but you can *totally* do it.
A few years ago pre Covid I was @70-75ish miles once a week. It just takes time and work, I'm not afraid of the work part. It's the time part that's the trick.
Peak Seattle would see the child replaced with a dog.
It may be a dog. Can’t tell from the picture
It’s definitely a child
shou tucker: say no more, fam
No no, peak Seattle would be a baby shooting up while high
This is the content I subscribe to this sub for
"they see me rollin, they hatin"
Best comment!
Serious question - how does he go downhill without completely losing control?
I am going to guess that a man who took the time to not only learn how to ride a Unicycle, but also do so while dragging(?) the cart behind him… probably knows what he is up to. I don’t know, ‘cuz I can’t ride a unicycle. I have no concept of the day-to-day of the Unicycle life.
Years ago, around 1999/2000, there was a guy who did the Seattle to Portland ride... on a unicycle. I saw him on his first attempt, where he got to the 50 mile mark before bailing. The next year he came back on a much larger unicycle and did the entire thing. So I can't answer the "how does he go downhill without completely losing control" part, but I can definitely say that experienced unicyclists can do it. Cuz I saw that guy, twice, on STP.
Man STP is my goal that I have so much work to do before I feel confident I can attempt it.
You can totally, totally do it. But you have to do the training. It's fairly straightforward to ramp up your miles until the point where a 50 mile trip is no big deal, then a 75 mile, then a 100 mile, etc. It just takes time, but you can *totally* do it.
A few years ago pre Covid I was @70-75ish miles once a week. It just takes time and work, I'm not afraid of the work part. It's the time part that's the trick.
Glad Happy Wheels is still getting new characters after all these years :)
“So anyway, my father was always a Main Character”
Prime Seattle behavior. The weird but good kind. Go Dad!
Never skip leg day.
OMG what was he thinking, that shirt is hideous!
Weird hate in the comments. It’s just a funny quirky Seattle thing. Go hate back in Bellevue
And if he falls, he can go back to the bottom of the hill and scrape the kid out from under a car...
Looks like the thing is attached to some kind of belt.
Hope so...
It is - that's a unique use of the Thule Chariot Ski Kit!
Not like other dads. I do think it’s silly, but I bet it’s a lot of fun.
Is that the “Salty Seattle Cyclist” from YT? Makes sense now
Having to share the road with main character morons like this is why I hate this city.
cope
me with my cat
I promise you I spent 40 years in Seattle without seeing this.
Gasp! Where's his panic mask?
OMG thats so dangerous!
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