Monday, 28 May 2012

Cycle of Crime


TH has, for many a long year, been a cyclist. He is getting a bit long in the tooth, and although I’ve seen a great deal worse, he’s probably well past the age where lycra brings out the best in him. Nevertheless, I’m almost as proud as he is of the seven or eight medals he amassed on his annual outing on the London to Brighton bike ride for the British Heart Foundation. We’ve laughed with him and at him: the latter, especially, when he fell victim to an irreparable puncture several miles from home, and had forgotten his mobile phone. I don’t think he enjoyed the walk back in his cycling shoes, but you’re never too late to learn a life lesson.
                                                                                       Bicycle Marathon by Vojko Kalan                                          
                                                                                   Image from http://www.publicdomainpictures.net
                                             

Then, about four years ago , he had an unfortunate experience in France whilst out cycling, where he was poleaxed by the Very Strong Gust of Wind. 

Having brought his pride-and-joy racing bike out to France, he set out one sunny afternoon, leaving me lounging by the pool, with the promise to return in time for us to go into the local town for a stroll and an early evening drink. I settled down with a book to await his return.

Some time later, my mobile phone rang.
“It’s me” said TH “Can you come and get me? I’ve fallen off my bike”
“Where are you?” I asked, fearing all sorts of things “Are you OK?”
“Yes, I’m fine, but hang on….someone wants to have a word”

With that, TH passed his phone to a Frenchman, and the conversation went as follows:
“Bonjour madame. Your husband had a nasty fall. We picked him up, but when we got to him, he wasn’t making much sense, so we rang for the SAMU”
( I did think, rather uncharitably, that the “not making much sense” might have been a little matter of language problems, but I was becoming increasingly concerned).

The Frenchman (or men, for there were two of them) had been working on a chantier next to the road, where a new dual carriageway was under construction. They gave me directions to the spot, and told me that the ambulance was on its way. I hastily gathered together my clothes, bag and wits and jumped into the car to hurry to the scene.

Upon my arrival, I found TH covered in blood, his cycle helmet looking as if someone had attacked it with a cheese grater, and his lycra top looking somewhat shredded. The SAMU had also arrived. TWO lots of them, for it appeared that TH had selected a spot for his accident that fell exactly halfway between the jurisdictions of two hospitals, so he was being largely ignored whilst the two crews had a chat about who was going to take him where. I managed to establish from TH that he thought he might have broken his collarbone, but that he was now pretty sure he hadn’t. I got the story from the two Frenchmen and thanked them profusely for their help, and then spent several minutes whilst waiting for the medics to make up their minds who was in charge, persuading TH that no, he was NOT OK, and yes, he did have to go to hospital and get checked out. Eventually, after I had answered all the necessary questions and forms had been filled in on TH’s behalf, the ambulance drove off with TH impressively strapped onto a spinal board, wearing a neck brace and a helpless expression.  His almost total lack of French, rather than his injuries, was the main cause of this helplessness.

I’ll spare you the blow-by-blow. Some few hours later, discharged from hospital and wearing an impressive neck brace, with a prescription for a year’s supply of Doliprane and Betadeine, I helped OH to the car. We did both wonder why, amid all the x-rays, examinations and ministrations, no-one had offered or tried to remove ANY of the blood in which he was covered, but never mind.

Anyway… Since that episode, TH has done very little riding outdoors. The bike – quite an expensive road bike – had suffered no lasting damage from the fall, and when we came back home, TH invested in a gadget which enabled him to use the bike as a static machine. This was installed in the garden shed, to which he has disappeared on at least 3 evenings each week, and cycled a good 30 miles or so on the spot. Something known within the family as the “Tour du Shed”.

Alas, overnight on Friday, and after having already over the last month broken into the garden sheds of both of our neighbours, the local  thieves finally decided it was Our Turn.

Up early on Saturday morning, I popped out to put some rubbish in the dustbin and noticed that the garden gate was ajar. Walking through the gate to the back of the house, I saw the shed door open and ran down the garden to check. The locked door had been forced open, and the beloved bike was gone. It had been chained to a huge wooden tool chest and fixed into the static rollers, but the chain had been forced apart with a screwdriver (ours) and the bike was no more, along with a few other items of equipment and tools. Luckily, and largely as a result of precautions taken since the neighbours’ burglaries, another three bikes, including a nice new road bike recently purchased by TH, were still there: he had had the presence of mind to chain all three together using some really heavy chain AND a D-lock. The police were called, and came to look. That’s all, just look. They won’t be doing anything – they said so. 

Things could, of course, been a lot worse. However, TH is bereft. There is unlikely to be much money from the insurance, as a separate insurance for a bike is almost impossible to obtain, but although this is not a piece of expensive jewellery or a family heirloom, that bike was an old and trusted friend. TH and the bike have been through a lot together. No more Tour du Shed….



10 comments:

  1. One wonders why the police bother to come out sightseeing if they're not going to do anything...it's probably some mad 'community friendly' scheme.

    Your tale of the accident made me giggle (sorry) with the poor chap being fought over by two ambulance crews....

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    1. I think that, more than anything else, it's the resigned acceptance of this sort of crime that really gets me down, Fly. Driving to work last night, I heard that in London the MEt have just made a pledge that EVERY victim of crime, no matter how minor the crime involved, will receive a visit from a victim support officer, supposedly to make the public feel that their case is "being taken seriously". I was driving along, almost shouting at the radio "So, if you want us to believe our case is being taken seriously, CATCH THE PERSON WHO DID IT!!"
      Oh, we've all laughed about the whole rather "Keystone Kops" situation of the accident. They were so busy discussing who should take him where, that poor TH could have been bleeding to death and they wouldn't have noticed!

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    2. Yet one more example of image not action....

      But it's not new.
      Years ago when Mr. Fly was in business he noticed an unmistakable fraud being perpetrated and went to the Met. Police. They pooh poohed him and sent him away.
      Only when a planeload of fare paid passengers turned up at Gatwick to find no 'plane awaiting them did they deign to take notice....

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    3. I'm not sure the Met, or indeed the Thames Valley police, have considered that their image would, in fact be enhanced no end if they solved a few crimes......

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  2. Hello:
    One tale of woe, fortunately with a happy outcome, followed by another which, we fear, if petty theft remains undetected as is usually the case, will remain unresolved. Poor TH - we are really sorry for the loss of the bike and well done for all of those miles of cycling to raise money for charity. There just ain't no justice!!

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  3. Hello Jane and Lance! No, unfortunately, there isn't. TH has spent much of the remainder of the weekend installing a HUGE padlock, and has purchased all manner of additional security gizmos. It's unlikely we'll be burgled again, and it seems a great expense for what is, after all, shutting the stable door, etc., but it now feels somehow necessary...

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  4. So sorry to hear your sad tale, CB. It's just not fair that TH has lost a bike that means so much to him. However I wouldn't be too sure they won't try again. Sometimes the little toe-rags wait until they think you'll have replaced whatever it was they took and then come back for that too. I know, it happened to a friend and her TV, also in the Met area. :-( TH is very wise to beef up security even though no-one wants to have to do it. As for the police inaction, I can hear the grinding of your teeth from here....

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    1. I know, Perpetua.We seem to be in the midst of our own little local crimewave at the moment. Son#1 is also quite convinced that a savvy policeman with access to the internet and an account on Gumtree will find the bike in seconds. It's quite distinctive...

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  5. How very sad. I mean the bike being stolen, of course. No, the police do nothing in such matters. Our garden shed was broken into while we were still in Herts. - No joy from the cops there either. Here in Shropshire such things as thefts are practically unheard of.

    I really enjoyed your account of TH's cycling adventures, you write well.

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    1. Thanks, Friko, and thank you for reading! Today, the enormous padlock has been joined by a floodlight which would probably illuminate Wembley stadium, a motion-activated alarm and a few more chains. I am now so baffled by the security measures that I dare not venture anywhere near the shed....

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