Jump to content

Recommended Posts

Hi, I’m selling this bike which is barely used and in excellent condition. It was bought for £350 and I’m selling for £115.

It’s very lightweight at 10.1kg, with easy gear changing. It’s recommended for kids aged 6-11, up to 140cm. 
 

It’s been stored in our garage so no exposure to the elements. 
 

Pick up from Ringmore Rise at the back of the Horniman museum gardens. 
 

DM me if interested, it would make a fantastic Christmas present! 

1f6d0f7a-8a6c-4751-aac4-7d7c3fabddb7.jpeg

d571ce5e-2b66-40b1-b6de-4aa0e7463c06.jpeg

49959cbe-1a5b-486b-b49c-cb865d161f2e.jpeg

Edited by NicolaWJ
  • NicolaWJ changed the title to SOLD: 24” kids Pinnacle Aspen bike - black/yellow

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Voluntary organisations are probably not making use of the boards any more because of the state they are in. To the best of my knowledge a small number of people had keys originally, but I have no idea who has them now. I imagine it is going to take a fair amount of time to get all this properly up and running again, and then properly maintained.
    • Alice, you may have nailed one of the issues, which is presumably a key holder who needs to find time to change flyers and so on.   I take on board the issue about free advertising for businesses, but would not put small, very local businesses into the same category as all other businesses. That said, I can see rationale for voluntary and NFP taking precedence, are these organisations actually making use of the boards?
    • The community noticeboards I see are incredibly out of date,  who has the key? anyone step forward?
    • Where to begin? I'm middle class and am quite happy for them to be used for information about voluntary/not for profit/non commercial events, they should not be used as a means of free advertising for businesses, small or otherwise, they are just not large enough.  Commjnity groups do not have the money to advertise to increase awareness of the services they offer. The examples you have given which you would like to see them used for may reflect your own priorities but the community of East Dulwich reflects a much wider range of interests and requirements. The  notice boards were introduced in 2011 when East Dulwich had already gentrified and their purpose discussed in the EDF thread announcing their arrival.  
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...