Wraparound shades. Mullets. Jorts. If you haven’t noticed, all three of these ’80s/’90s staples are very much back in fashion. And they aren’t the only throwbacks rising, zombie-like, from the nostalgia graveyard.
After all, Germany’s two-wheeled DTC sensation Canyon — makers of excellent road, gravel and mountain bikes and recent recipient of a $30 million investment from LeBron James — believes in at least one product whose heyday resided in this era. I speak, of course, of the hardtail mountain bike.
Hardtail is slang for a bike featuring only front suspension, and back in the day, such a set-up was your only realistic option. Yes, full-suspension bikes technically date back to well, 1885(!), but mountain bike innovators didn’t start seriously experimenting with them till the ’90s, and even then hardtails were the standard.
Fast-forward to 2022, and full-squish bikes are all over the trails, whereas hardtails are almost like stick-shift cars: increasingly rare. Yet, just as there’s a certain satisfaction in properly operating a manual transmission, these old-school bikes have their own appeal. So when Canyon offered me the opportunity to test out its affordable, anachronistic Grand Canyon 7, I pulled a Doc Brown and said, “what the hell?”
So having not ridden a hardtail in probably 20 years, I saddled up. Here are my impressions after several weeks of testing.