😂

I used to work as a bartender but I got involved with community bike shops because I can't "handle-bars" anymore.



Cyn Williams 
Communications Coordinator
AMS Bike Co-op
University of British Columbia
604-822-BIKE | bikecoop.ca | @ubcbike

On Tue, May 22, 2018 at 5:14 PM, Jesse Cooper <jessecooper0@gmail.com> wrote:
Is all that 'wheely' necessary? 
Don't we find bike puns 'two tired'
Or maybe I 'spoke' too soon.

I only say that cause sometimes bike puns just 'drive' me to exasperation. Mostly when bike puns yank my 'chain' I get really 'cranky'.

I guess I just need to get a 'grip' and 'shift' my perspective. Maybe that's the 'hub' of the problem, if only I could get a 'brake' and find my 'bearings' I could 'roll' with bike puns. 

Jesse
Our Community Bikes
Vancouver





On Tue, May 22, 2018, 16:55 Ulick O'Beirne <ulickobeirne@gmail.com> wrote:
Hey guys,

Thanks so much for all the great info and ideas I've been harvesting so much from everyone's contributions to these threads. 

We're running a workshop around positive consent during our bicycle festival which we want to be fun and accessible: i.e. not preachy or confessional. 

We had thought that we'd do a couple of mechanical skills: puncture repair and wheel truing in the space; but couple this with some discussion around consent. But it needs to be safe for people who are there. We're bike mechanics, not therapists.

So had thought of a game involving bike puns (spinning out, going for a ride, whatever). So can you share your best bike pun? I'd love some more to add to my  collection, so that they might be incorporated into a workshop.

Ulick
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