Big smile, little burnout. East Side Moto Babe. | photographed by Daniel Bergeron (website)
Posts Tagged ‘moto’
How did you like the electric bike, and how hard did you run it before it ran outta juice?
I really liked riding the Enertia. Once you get past the fact that you’re not shifting… there’s no clutch, no shifter. One speed, one gear… GO! Also it makes almost no sound. So while you ride by someone at 30 mph, you can still hear them talking! It’s crazy. I didn’t get to ride it far, maybe a quarter mile before it died. However, we were in this crazy black hole location that was killing all batteries, electronics, etc. So I don’t really blame the machine. Also it was only at 14%… Continue Reading »
How did you like the electric bike, and how hard did you run it before it ran outta juice?
I really liked riding the Enertia. Once you get past the fact that you’re not shifting… there’s no clutch, no shifter. One speed, one gear… GO! Also it makes almost no sound. So while you ride by someone at 30 mph, you can still hear them talking! It’s crazy. I didn’t get to ride it far, maybe a quarter mile before it died. However, we were in this crazy black hole location that was killing all batteries, electronics, etc. So I don’t really blame the machine. Also it was only at 14%… Continue Reading »
MotoLady on the Brammo Enertia
Julie Andrews (aka Mary Poppins) as a pin-up on a BMW. A flip flop pin up, no less! From the book “Julie Andrews: An Intimate Biography” by Richard Stirling- Julie, dressed by Versace, looked smart but not particularly elegant. She was seen riding a motorcycle, driving a Range Rover, dispensing charity to the Parisian poor and treating her twenty-two-year-old son in the film as if he were Friedrich von Trapp.
Julie Andrews (aka Mary Poppins) as a pin-up on a BMW. A flip flop pin up, no less! From the book “Julie Andrews: An Intimate Biography” by Richard Stirling- Julie, dressed by Versace, looked smart but not particularly elegant. She was seen riding a motorcycle, driving a Range Rover, dispensing charity to the Parisian poor and treating her twenty-two-year-old son in the film as if he were Friedrich von Trapp.