The Niagara Falls Review

Pedalling through winter’s worst

- DAVID SHARP THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

PORTLAND, Maine — Gone are the days when cyclists had to put away their bikes for the winter. These days, hard-core riders are staying outdoors year round thanks to “fat bikes” that allow them to conquer winter’s worst instead of staying indoors on a stationary bike.

The bikes, with comically large tires, have come into the mainstream in the past couple of years, after being introduced about a decade ago.

John Grondin, 48, of Scarboroug­h, Maine, got his fat bike to kick the winter blues.

“I wanted to get outside and ride in the winter,” he said. “I like to ride, period. I’ll ride a road bike. I’ll ride a mountain bike. I just want to ride.”

The ginormous tires are wide enough to float over snow and bounce over obstacles. Groomed snowmobile trails provide miles and miles of winter riding.

Fat bikes represent the first major bicycle trend in several decades, after BMX bikes in the 1970s and convention­al mountain bikes in the 1980s, said Jay Townley, partner in Gluskin-Townley Group, a consultant and market research company focusing on the bicycle business.

Growth in the segment has provided something to cheer about for bike retailers and has prevented a slide in bike sales, which number about 18 million units a year, he said.

“The industry, quite frankly, needed something. If anything, the fat tire bike helped to keep a stable bike industry instead of losing volume,” he said.

The NPD Group, which tracks U.S. retail sales of bikes, reports that fat tire bike sales have grown eightfold in the past three years, to US$74.7 million in 2016.

The growing popularity can be seen at fat bike races.

Every weekend there are races and festivals across snowbelt regions stateside. Dozens of riders braved single-digit temperatur­es in February for the Sugarloaf Fat Tire Festival at Maine’s tallest ski mountain.

The bikes aren’t cheap. Purchased at an independen­t bike shop, they can easily top US$1,000, and the price goes up from there. But lesscostly versions are being sold these days at big-box retailers like Walmart.

Bike shops appreciate the extra business during what’s typically a slow time of the year.

Cyclists can ride their fat bikes even if there’s a lack of snow that sidelines snowmobile­s and crosscount­ry skiers and others winter sports, said Adam Gariepy, shop manager at the Bar Harbor Bicycle Shop.

Range Morton, sales manager at Gorham Bike and Ski in Portland, Maine, said fat bike sales creep upward when there’s a lack of snow that leads to a correspond­ing decrease in ski sales.

“The fat bikes really help us to get through the winter,” Morton said. “They were a big help last year and this year.”

 ??  ?? A fat tire bicyclist rides on a cross country ski trail during a race at the Sugarloaf ski resort in Carrabasse­tt Valley, Maine.
A fat tire bicyclist rides on a cross country ski trail during a race at the Sugarloaf ski resort in Carrabasse­tt Valley, Maine.
 ?? ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP ?? Range Morton rides down a stairway on his fat tire bike at a park in Portland, Maine.
ROBERT F. BUKATY/AP Range Morton rides down a stairway on his fat tire bike at a park in Portland, Maine.

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