Gay ride
LGBTQ+ride
Darla Lathan
It said "Select Driver," but listed no drivers. When I tried to report the bug, the application froze before I finished typing my state, and I had to exit the app. I had to take a Lyft home, instead! Buggy app! I couldn't find customer reviews anywhere but on the Google Play store! Suspicious!
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D J
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Sadly after making a reservation for a ride a day in advance, I learned 5 minutes before the scheduled arrival day that no driver would be coming (and that was after I went through a covoluted way to watch if there were any notifications). I then made a Lyft appt and driver arrived in 3 minutes. Friendly idea, poor execution and communication. This app should be taken off the Play store .
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D M
Great idea, joyful it exists, but it's only accessible in a tiny area and the app will permit you go ahead and make an appointment when you aren't even in their service area. I can't conceive how many people have had their plans screwed up for realizing nobody
Gay Train: A Fabulous Ride On The Rails
From high class to high-speed, these trains keep our trips on track.
In the roomy world of gay travel options, the spotlight frequently lands on cruises, resorts, and full-weekend events. But with the travel scene constantly evolving, an unexpected and unique experience has emerged – gay train trips!
Generally, trains are comfortable, with plenty of room to move around and a plethora of windows providing a scenic backdrop to the entire trip. Some even offer resort-like amenities. A plush bar and/or lounge is usually available on longer trips. There are high-speed trains, bullet trains, luxury trains, light rail trains, and old-timey locomotives.
Because our tours involve move within the country we are visiting, trains have emerged as one of the most convenient ways to location-hop. Europe’s rail network is second to none, Japan is famous for its bullet trains, and panoramic-view locomotives are the preferred method for getting to and from Machu Picchu with ease.
Though we don’t offer any tours that grab place entirely on the rails, many of our tours involve a gay train trip in the itinerary. Read on to find out which
Be Gay, Ride Rollercoasters (light - tri-blend)
$28.95
a play on the classic "be same-sex attracted, do crimes" meme i bring you "be male lover, ride rollercoasters" tee shirt
- 50% polyester, 25% combed ring-spun cotton, 25% rayon
- Fabric weight: 3.4 oz/yd² (115.3 g/m²)
EU GPSR Product Information:
- Manufacturer contact information
- Name: Adventures with Alex Official Store
- Email: contact@support.adventureswithalexshop.com
- Postal address: PO Box 5696 Santa Monica, CA 90405
- Additional information: This product is made for adults. Meets the flammability level requirements. 2 year warranty in EEA and UK, established by Directive 1999/44/EC.
- Quality is guaranteed. If there is a print error or seeable quality issue, we'll change or refund it.
- Because the products are made to order, we do not accept general returns or sizing-related returns.
Be Queer , Ride Rollercoasters (light - tri-blend)
Quantity:
Ride Streak: One Man’s Quest to Drive 10,000 Days in a Row
Colin Gay’s Instagram account is, at a glance, fairly monotonous.
Every square of his @ridestreak account is a selfie, and nearly all of them are a side view of Gay’s head, in a white S-works bike helmet, his encounter pointed forward down the road. Depending on the season, his chin and mouth might be covered by a Buff; in warmer weather, his salt-and-pepper beard catches the wind. The captions on the posts don’t add much luster; each one is just a number in chronological order: 3351, 3352, 3353, 3354, 3356, 3357 — you obtain the gist. Male lover puts one hashtag, #ridestreak, next to the number, and that’s it. He has 945 followers.
But the benign Instagram account belies something astounding. Those numbers represent Gay’s commute streak, the number of days he has ridden his bike in a row. By January 18, he was up to 3,358 days. That’s over nine years of riding every free day.
Gay isn’t a professional cyclist, nor does anyone settle him to travel his bike. He’s a dad from Charlottesville, Virginia who sells IT solutions to the government. His ride streak is completely self-motivated