Sometimes the police will take bike theft seriously. Eventually. Spacing reports an interesting story of Heather's stolen bike, how her friend found her stolen bike on Kijiji, and how their persistance got the police to eventually arrest and return her bike. With the cops initially being uninterested in helping to get it back, Heather collaborated with her friends to confront the thief while pretending to buy it. A last minute change of heart brought the weight of the police force to bear and they did an undercover takedown of the thief.

Understandably frustrated at the cop’s apparent disinterest, she consulted with some friends and decided to just try confronting the potential thief on Tuesday with an offer of $100 along with several friends and photos to prove that it was indeed her bike.
Tuesday afternoon rolled around and sure enough, she got a call from her bike thief confirming their meeting that evening at six o’clock outside Castle Frank Station. She quickly texted several friends to meet at Castle Frank and went on Facebook to print off some photos of her riding her bike.
....

After several minutes of waiting, her phone rang again. It was the same cop, this time asking her to cross Bloor and go and sit on the very bench where her sunglasses-wearing friends were pretending to be making out. Sitting down next to them as if they were strangers, the cop then told her to hop into another tinted SUV parked on the street. The next thing she knew, the SUV took off around the corner, as her friends looked on in shock.

The SUV, it turns out, was full of more undercover cops who told her they were going to park the car and go to meet the bike thief who was already chatting to the first group of cops. They left Heather in the parked SUV and disappeared around the corner.

A paddy-wagon drove by soon after and the next thing Heather knew, the cops had re-emerged from around the corner and were walking by towards her. Casually rolling alongside on of them was her bike. The thief had been arrested, she was told, and that - other than her still missing helmet - her bike was in perfect condition. As Heather returned to Castle Frank reunited with her lost bike, her friends threw off their acts and came to congratulate her.

A friend also retrieved his bike by seeing it locked up at a post and ring. He did some quick thinking of putting his own lock on it and then reported it to the cops who confirmed the ownership and got it back. So it still does make some difference to register your bike with the police. There's always a chance it will show up.

With a push to promote cycle tourism in North Bay, you can now take the Bike Train there with a pilot starting August 7-10. It could be that the area is actually quite nice for some cycle touring, I don't know. The best person to ask is Justin Lafontaine who helped get the original Bike Train running to Niagara Falls (with over 1000 passengers so far). The North Bay-bound train will start in Toronto and take the Ontario Northland's Northlander rail service, winding through the scenic back country of Muskoka and the Algonquin Highlands.

The details:

- Adults $153 return; capacity 56
- 1 weekend: August 7-10
- Bike Train welcome event, group rides and cocktail party
- Special hotel packages starting at $120 including breakfasts and boxed lunches
- Partnership with Toronto Bike Union offers 15% off Green Travel Rewards for members

And there's more:

Through the journey to North Bay, passengers can win great prizes via an onboard trivia twitter competition. The Bike Train Twitter account will be awash with tips from passengers and locals alike on great cycling routes, refreshing swimming spots, fun attractions, and delicious dinner locales. Upon arrival in North Bay, the Honourable Monique Smith, Minister of Tourism and MPP for Nippissing will be on hand to personally greet the Bike Train in North Bay.

I'm not sure what their Twitter account is, perhaps you'll find out when you sign up. When I find out more I'll update this post.

The video is from the Bike Train website and explains how it started to Niagara Falls.

Fri, 07/10/2009 - 10:03 - www.416cyclestyle.com ©1076

(Photo: torontobikechic)

Two blogs have come out with lists on avoiding or defusing anti-cyclist road rage. Treehugger has a 6 point list and Planet Green has four. Please share your own! I find their tips a bit underwhelming:

  1. Obey all traffic laws. (Drivers hate "salmon biking" and cyclists running red lights.)
  2. Be courteous.
  3. Avoid daredeviling.
  4. Keep a low profile. (Even if the driver is wronged, don't exacerbate it. Concentrate on your biking instead. Ask yourself, are the potential consequences worth it?)
  5. Drive your bike. ("One drives a bicycle, a scooter, or a motorcycle, not rides one. People ride in things over which they don't have control.")
  6. Lobby for the Idaho stop (rolling stop).
  7. Arm yourself with a smile and a wave.
  8. Don your finest, brightest plumage.
  9. Remember biking as a bell curve. (Remember that cycling is not particularly dangerous, and in fact the health benefits far out weigh the risks. The Raise the Hammer blog looks in depth at all the cycling risks including that you're just as likely to die in an SUV crash as a bike crash.)

    So let's think of some more. My significant other suggested:

"Carry a bouquet of flowers. Everyone smiled today as a I carried flowers in my backpack to work."

I would add:

Don't keep a low profile, instead command respect. Rather you want to look like you own that lane - give people a bit of room to pass you but don't let car drivers squish you into the curb.
Take quieter roads where possible. Find an alternative route that has much less traffic and provides room for drivers to pass.
Take a cycling skills course like CAN-BIKE. A little bit of training goes a long way towards knowing how to deal with tricky driving conditions.