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OK, I saw this on a Saturday AM infomercial and fell in love. I know my daughter will, too. She loves scooters, she loves bikes, so she will love...
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We sold those at the toy store I used to work at, so I can testify that they are very well-made and sturdy and a lot of fun. They're spendy, so they're hard to sell, but everyone who bought one from me really liked it.
Posts: 8504 | Registered: Aug 1999
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Hmm, if you look on one of the pics on the right, there is a guy riding on a dirt track, but I think those wheels are bigger.
Posts: 10890 | Registered: May 2003
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I can't let my daughter see that, she'll want one. Emily loves her razor scooter, preferring it to her bike.
Posts: 14428 | Registered: Aug 2001
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Those look neat - what a great gift for your daughter!
If one or both of the babies is a girl, I'm going to buy a beautiful dollhouse. For her. Of course, I'll have to keep it in my bedroom, to keep it safe.
Posts: 3037 | Registered: Jan 2002
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lol, Mrs. M! There's unconditional love for you I guess greediness doesn't factor much into that equation..
Elizabeth, I have seen one person use something like that at school. was in control and all that good stuff. It looked like fun.
I know what you mean about not liking it too much in front of your daughter. I'm not a teenager anymore and there's still some of that residual 'my parents aren't cool' in my head. I'm not coming up with any examples though. It's mostly gone now, so it's okay.
Posts: 1056 | Registered: Mar 2002
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So these Trikkes are powers by weaving side to side? I don't think Chicago cabbies would appreciate that one very much... LOL Otherwise they do look like a lot of fun and something I could have realistically seen myself using to get to and from work.
Posts: 4515 | Registered: Jul 2004
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quote:Originally posted by Goody Scrivener: So these Trikkes are powers by weaving side to side? I don't think Chicago cabbies would appreciate that one very much... LOL Otherwise they do look like a lot of fun and something I could have realistically seen myself using to get to and from work.
I thought the same thing (well, not about Chicago, but about weaving). You would need an empty location to use them...even on sidewalks you would run into people. Though it does look fun.
Posts: 1901 | Registered: May 2004
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Lupus, Chicago cabbies think they own the roads (and sometimes the sidewalks too). If it were a straight motion like on a Razor scooter, or maybe even a slight weave, then it would be an easy answer. But the video on the site shows people going as much as 3-4 feet in either direction. THAT would be dangerous for commuting, and the nearly 2 miles from my train to my office are what I have in mind... especially now that the Chicago Transit Authority has announced plans to eliminate all but one possible bus route that I could take when I don't feel like walking.
Posts: 4515 | Registered: Jul 2004
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When I saw this person on a Trikke, it was on the closed roads on campus. Probably a first year, cuz it would be kinda dangerous to take that thing into the streets. (We only have space for freshmen in the dorms)
So, sometimes my mom and I are at a place that sells clothes together. She sees something she likes and shows me. I tell her no, looks too young for you. Is that bad? Parents? Makes me think of when my cousin said short hair is for older women, and I should grow mine out.
Posts: 1056 | Registered: Mar 2002
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esl, I was not really offended at all, I thought it was a hott that she said that. I think it depends on your relationship with your mom, really.
As for the side to side motion, when I saw the video on the infomercial, it did not seem to have so much of a swerve. The person moves side to side, but not the trikke, it seemed.
Posts: 10890 | Registered: May 2003
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It has arrived! The box is huge. Luckily, my daughter was not home, because the box has huge pictures of the Trikke on it. She is going to be so excited! Well, let's face it, I am excited, and wanted to open the box "just to see it," but my husband was thre to stop me from the exploration.
Warning for anyone who buys one:
The Trikke which they show on TV is not the one you get for 99 dollars. It is a smaller version. My husband was able to find the infomercial version for 79 dollars. Such a shopper!
Posts: 10890 | Registered: May 2003
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Well, naysayers(including me, of course), as I was typing "disillusionment," my daughter was figuring out how to do it, and is now bopping around the driveway. She raised the handlebars. I tried it, and I was just as bad as before. I blame my condition. I have that privelege until I go back to work in the fall, I figure.
Posts: 10890 | Registered: May 2003
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