For Sale In Pa | 2015 Ktm Ride 250r

Elias kicked it over. The 250cc two-stroke motor didn't have the aggressive braap of a motocross bike; it had a steady, rhythmic pulse. He took it for a short loop through a section of loose shale and exposed roots. The bike felt impossibly light—under 200 pounds—and it flicked between the trees with the grace of a downhill bicycle.

When he got back to the truck, Elias didn't even try to haggle. He counted out the hundreds into Miller's hand.

The classified ad was simple, almost clinical: 2015 Ktm ride 250r For Sale In Pa

That evening, as the sun dipped behind the Lehigh Valley hills, Elias didn't head home. He stopped at a powerline cut he’d stared at for years but never dared to climb. He unloaded the KTM, clicked it into second gear, and twisted the grip. The Freeride didn't spin the dirt; it clawed into it. By the time he reached the summit, overlooking the glowing lights of the valley, Elias knew the ad hadn't lied.

"She’s a mountain goat," Miller said, handing Elias the keys. "Doesn't care about the speed limit. Just cares about how high you want to climb." Elias kicked it over

For Elias, a guy whose garage in Jim Thorpe was already crowded with mountain bikes and half-finished projects, those words were a siren song. The Freeride 250R was a bit of an oddball—a "cheater bike" that combined a trials frame with a punchy two-stroke enduro engine. It was built for the kind of tight, technical Appalachian terrain that made bigger bikes sweat.

It wasn't just a sale; it was the key to the woods he’d been living next to his whole life. The bike felt impossibly light—under 200 pounds—and it

He met the seller, a retired woods racer named Miller, at a trailhead near Reading. The bike looked like it had been kept in a vacuum-sealed bag. The orange frame was pristine, and the unique perimeter frame design looked like a piece of industrial art.