Young aspiring motorcyclists can now indulge their imaginative minds with Spokester, a noisemaker that snaps to a bicycle’s front fork to make motorcycle sounds.
Spokester’s design is simple: It consists of a circular clip and a square paddle. When kids clip it onto the front fork of a bike, the paddle faces inward and bumps against the front wheel’s spokes when it spins, creating the distinctive sound of a motorbike engine.
Spokester is manufactured in North Carolina, and comes with free shipping when parents order two or more. Kids can choose from five different colors: blue, green, purple, red, or black. This noisemaker is tested to last more than 2 million cycles, so kids no longer have to make-do with less durable alternatives like baseball cards and clothespins, or damage their bikes by jamming empty plastic bottles in the spokes.
Because of its loud noise, Spokester also serves as an alarm of sorts for bicycle safety, informing parents where their kids are when they’re biking nearby, and notifying pedestrians of incoming bikes the same way a bike bell would.
Kids can snatch these noisemakers up on Spokester’s website.