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His name was Earl, but everyone in town called him "The bicycle man." He was hip before hippies were tie dyed, a  bohemian of sorts, a loner, a quiet man. Lived out at the edge of town in a self made house, some would call it a shack. Ole Earl use to scare me a bit with his gray beard, deep set gray eyes, low deep voice and the clothes he weared, But I learned a life lession from that man. He said, looking up, "See these here spokes," pointing to the spinning wheel of my three geared bike, "they's all got to be in off set tension or else the rim will be warped." I've noticed over the years that rule applies to a lot more things than wheels.
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Jan 18, 2011
Jan 18, 2011 at 9:31 AM UTC
His name was Earl
His name was Earl, but everyone in town called him "The bicycle man." He was hip before hippies were tie dyed, a  bohemian of sorts, a loner, a quiet man. Lived out at the edge of town in a self made house, some would call it a shack. Ole Earl use to scare me a bit with his gray beard, deep set gray eyes, low deep voice and the clothes he weared, But I learned a life lession from that man. He said, looking up, "See these here spokes," pointing to the spinning wheel of my three geared bike, "they's all got to be in off set tension or else the rim will be warped." I've noticed over the years that rule applies to a lot more things than wheels.
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perig3e
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American
Jan 18, 2011
Jan 18, 2011 at 9:31 AM UTC
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