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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Dallas
    Posts
    1,532

    Locking Your Bike

    I have yet to lock my bike anywhere because no place I've been has a bike rack. I never leave my bike outside, though -- I either take it in with me or I just don't stop.

    It has been suggested that I lock it to signs or posts. If you lock your bike to something like that, do you do anything to keep it from getting scratched up?

    The shopping center near me has huge brick pillars. No way to lock to them. But they do have handicapped parking signs. That seems rather awkward, though....

    “Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Nov 2005
    Location
    Chi-town
    Posts
    3,265
    I always lock my bike unless I can have my hand on it at all times! When you're looking for a pole to which to lock the bike, remember that a thief can lift a bike + lock right up and off a pole that doesn't have something wider at the top. I lock the front wheel and frame with a Kryptonite lock (one of the new ones), and put a Kryptonite cable through the back wheel and the lock. I'm sure a dedicated thief could still get most of what he wanted off my bike, but I sure as heck am not going to make it any easier for him.
    Run like a dachshund! Ride like a superhero! Swim like a three-legged cat!
    TE Bianchi Girls Rock

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    Seattle
    Posts
    8,548
    Quote Originally Posted by pooks
    I have yet to lock my bike anywhere because no place I've been has a bike rack. I never leave my bike outside, though -- I either take it in with me or I just don't stop.

    It has been suggested that I lock it to signs or posts. If you lock your bike to something like that, do you do anything to keep it from getting scratched up?

    The shopping center near me has huge brick pillars. No way to lock to them. But they do have handicapped parking signs. That seems rather awkward, though....
    are there any trees? sometimes there are pipes coming down from the roof that you can use.

    If you are gentle, it won't scratch the bike!
    Mimi Team TE BIANCHISTA
    for six tanks of gas you could have bought a bike.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
    Location
    Riding my Luna & Rivendell in the Hudson Valley, NY
    Posts
    8,411
    You can put a bandana between the bike frame and the post you are locking it to.
    I lock my bike to a wrought iron park bench sometimes on Main St where there are no parking sign poles. There is almost always SOMETHING you can lock to if you think outside the box. Do ask the store to consider a bike rack- tell them more and more people are biking to save gas and you will shop there more often if you can lock up your bike outside safely.
    Lisa
    My mountain dulcimer network...FOTMD.com...and my mountain dulcimer blog
    My personal blog:My blog
    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Albuquerque, NM
    Posts
    3,099
    I don't even own a lock. If I can't take mine in with me - I don't go there. I know that isn't the answer to your question but it's my only way home so I can't afford the even remotest possibility of having it stolen. I have yet to have anyone tell me I Can't take it in somewhere and it's actually been a conversation piece on more than one occasion while I was shopping. I did have 1 friend told that she couldn't bring her bike into Wal-Mart coz they don't have any way of telling if it's hers or if she bought it there so she and I went back there together on our bikes and waltzed right in like we belonged. Guess it was either something that Wal-Mart greeter had made up...or the 2 of us together with our bikes were very intimidating (I thinketh not lol).
    Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, champagne in one hand, strawberries in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming: "Yeah Baby! What a Ride!"

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Dallas
    Posts
    1,532
    Okay, good info -- forgot about trees and yet another use for a bandana!

    Corsair, I'm afraid I'm a bit like you. If I could sit inside and eat and still see my bike locked up outside I might do that without worrying so much -- but the idea of chaining it up and leaving it still leaves me a bit nervous.

    Today I took it into the doc's office. Our group of docs left the larger group they were with and opened their own small clinic, which happens to be a few blocks from me. I couldn't remember their new phone number and so decided to ride up there while I was out riding other places. I have to admit those women on staff there gave me the most disapproving looks I've gotten while taking my bike indoors. They didn't say anything though. I scheduled my appt. and left, no harm/no foul.

    I'm debating actually riding my bike to my appt, but probably won't because there's no place to look it and I doubt it would fit in the exam room! But it's funny that the women gave me such "looks" because I'd already told the doc I might ride my bike to my appts. when they moved, and she said, "Go ahead!"

    “Hey, clearly failure doesn’t deter me!”

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2004
    Location
    Albuquerque, NM
    Posts
    3,099
    yeah - I do drive to my doc appts........my rationale there is what do I do with the bike while I"m having my exam??.....I don't want to leave it in the waiting room and most of those areas aren't big enough for the ppl waiting. But for my shopping sprees = oops...I meant trips, restaurants, even the convienence store for their "convienences" - I take the bike in with me.

    as for the disapproving ladies?.....they were probably just jealous coz you were out riding while they were trapped in an office! :-D
    Last edited by CorsairMac; 09-08-2006 at 01:18 PM.
    Life should NOT be a journey to the grave with the intention of arriving safely in an attractive and well preserved body, but rather to skid in sideways, champagne in one hand, strawberries in the other, body thoroughly used up, totally worn out and screaming: "Yeah Baby! What a Ride!"

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Aug 2005
    Location
    Philadelphia
    Posts
    144
    I leave mine at the train station locked with a u-lock almost every day. I don't worry so much because it's an obvious WSD (with that lowered top bar -- yuck, won't make that mistake again) Trek comfort bike. Not sexy at all (except to me). The bike bag is locked to the seat post and rack with a seat post cable and combo lock. I try to take the rear light off the back, but don't worry about the first aid kit or minimal tools in the bag.

    I left our fifteen-year-old Nishiki road bike on a cable/key lock at another commuter train station outside Philly for about two months without moving it (I got pregnant and exhausted). When finally rescued, someone had almost cut through the cable lock, but the bike hadn't been stolen.

    Peak commuter trains don't allow bikes (although Philly buses now have the cool front bike racks), plus I've nearly fallen backwards carrying my bike up the train stairs. Taking the bike with isn't really an option. There are usually two other bikes in the rack, sometimes a whole half dozen! For a few days, there was a green WSD (that lowered top bar again) locked to a small, pink bike, locked to the rack at the train station. How cool is that?

    (One day my husband forgot the key to his U-lock, and managed to lock both bikes to the rack with one U-lock. It looks like my bike tried to bunny hop his bike crosswise and fell on top. He's an amazing man.)

    I've also left my bike, unlocked, on my car rack for days on end. Worst that happened was some idiot driving into the bike (on the car) and bending the wheel and scraping paint. Husband had his hitch-mount bike rack stolen off his car in our driveway though.

    Now, if I got the bike downtown, that's another story. I wouldn't leave the bag on the bike, and would either lock it with the dozens of other bikes outside my building, or would take the front wheel with me. A co-worker had his bike stolen from the scene of his bike accident.

    --SJ

 

 

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