Migrate or journey with one's belongings by ox-wagon
a journey by ox wagon (especially an organized migration by a group of settlers)
(of an ox) Draw a vehicle or pull a load
journey on foot, especially in the mountains; "We spent the summer trekking in the foothills of the Himalayas"
any long and difficult trip
a unit of length equal to one twelfth of a foot
A very small amount or distance
edge: advance slowly, as if by inches; "He edged towards the car"
A unit of linear measure equal to one twelfth of a foot (2.54 cm)
A unit used to express other quantities, in particular
column inch: a unit of measurement for advertising space
A bicycle or motorcycle
motorcycle: a motor vehicle with two wheels and a strong frame
bicycle: a wheeled vehicle that has two wheels and is moved by foot pedals
bicycle: ride a bicycle
sixteen: being one more than fifteen
Bookbinding is the process of physically assembling a book from a number of folded or unfolded sheets of paper or other material. It usually involves attaching covers to the resulting text-block.
sixteen: the cardinal number that is the sum of fifteen and one
Nine speed cassette
The old cassette was yet another thing that was acting flakey on the bike; despite the old chain not being at all stretched (somewhere between 1/32nd and 1/16th inch per foot) new chains were hopping as if their mortal soul depended on it.
So I needed to replace the cassette (after ~5000 miles, I think; I'd rotated my cassettes around between the trek and the mlcm early this spring when the previous cassette started hopping) and I decided that this would be a good time to see how it would work trying to friction-shift a 1x9 drivetrain.
Thus a Shimano HG-80; I chose a 11-32 cassette instead of a 11-34, because the -32 starts at 11-12-14-16 while the -34 starts at 11-13-15-17, which shifts 1 tooth off all of my common cruising gears.
Trek Session 77 2
Close-up of the rear of the bike, showing off the Swinger 4 way rear shock, Saint cranks, MRP chainguide, the XT/X-9 drivetrain, Hayes Mag hiding on the other side, and a 2.5 inch wide Michelin Comp 16 keeping the bike stuck to the dirt/wood/rock/moss/mud/water.