As far as I can recall, I've been interested in cycling that one fateful evening out on an open field when dad, after reassuring me he wouldn't let go of my first ever bicycle, did. I still remember that day clearly - it was some German-made kid's sized two-wheeler and I'll have to post some pics of it once I dig it out. And I'll also need to find out its make.
To distract me from worrying I'd fall, he kept me talking away. Without me knowing it, he'd let go of the bike and I had continued cycling, and talking, for at least five minutes (yes, it was a large field and I was going quite slowly). Then I asked him something like, "dad, you're pretty quiet back there - is everything ok?". After asking a few times I looked back and dad was like half a mile behind me. That was when, in terror, I jumped off the bike. A little bit like that 12-second hop which the Wright Brothers took on Kitty Hawk (tho' far less glamourous) in 1903, that's how the cycling part of me was awakened.
Till my pre-U days, cycling was taken first as utility. Any thing social or personal that came along the way was a bonus. During that stage in life, Raleigh-branded BMX-type bike (which eventually got stolen - another story in itself) and some unknown Chinese-made hard-chromed hard steel frame road bike with budget components (which still lies dormant with my first bike somewhere in my parents' home) afforded mobility previously unimagined. Until very much later when my driver's license came along, the bicycle was my key to accessing anything beyond the gates of my home. And, boy, access almost anything I did.
During this time, in an age lacking internet access,
BBC World or the budget to finance "proper" reading material, my impressions of the rarefied professional cycling world was centered around the occasional news reports of the
Tour de France which filtered through the local news (which were, incidentally, far and few). However, one name which did leave an impression, along with the "bullhorn" type handles of his racers was the legendary Greg LeMond. And watching 30-second clips of him crossing the finish line of a Tour stage was just awe-inspiring to a then highly-impressionable teen.
Then came the next chapter.