
Lizzie ‘s finished touring bike. Frame finished all naturally and she’s a instrument maker and h
Lizzie is an instrument maker by trade, and that precision shows in her touring build. The frame finished in natural bamboo with brown flax joints, the setup practical and ready for distance.
The spec choices tell you this bike is going places: rear rack for panniers, full mudguards for British weather, drop bars with comfortable ergo hoods for long days. The red accent at the bottom bracket adds a spark of colour to an otherwise understated palette.
What catches the eye is Lizzie's Dunwich Dynamo t-shirt — the famous overnight ride from London to the Suffolk coast. If you've done the Dun Run, you know the kind of miles this bike needs to handle: 120 miles through the night, dodging potholes by headlight, arriving at the beach as the sun comes up.
The geometry suggests proper touring DNA: longer chainstays for stability when loaded, relaxed head angle for steady steering, enough clearance for wider tyres when roads turn rough. This isn't a race bike pressed into touring duty; it's purpose-built.
Instrument makers understand materials intimately — how wood resonates, how joints transfer vibration, how tension creates tone. Building a bamboo bike draws on similar intuitions. The tubes flex differently than metal, the fibre joints dampen road buzz, the whole assembly works together as a system.
Standing outside what looks like the workshop, brick wall behind, metal railings beside — this is the moment between finishing and riding. All those hours of careful work about to translate into kilometres.
Ready for adventure. Nice one, Lizzie. 🎋
