I feel for you, Dan.
Thanks, All. You can imagine the embarrassment I felt at my community when John Saxby met me for breakfast at a local restaurant and I had to help him unload his motorcycle touring load and transfer it to the covered hatchback well of my car in the parking lot so it would still be there when we finished dining.
The most the police do is to chastise and warn the public against leaving anything valuable within sight in their parked cars...even pocet change, a sweater, or a book are enough to "encourage" a thief to break in to see if there's anything more of value.
It sure wasn't like this when my family returned to the area over 50 years ago from another town 60 miles away. It is such a beautiful areas with real wilderness so very close by and a wealth of outdoors recreational opportunities in stunning scenery. I'm sad it has changed so much in the last 20 years. A lot of people have moved here from out of town, the timber-based community went bust, and widespread methamphetamine addiction took hold, driving property crimes involving anything metal, which is stolen and turned in for recycling value. The phones and electrical service keep going out as a result:
http://projects.registerguard.com/csp/cms/sites/web/updates/19844158-46/story.csphttp://www.registerguard.com/rg/news/local/30336316-75/thieves-dexter-telephone-wire-cable.html.csphttp://www.registerguard.com/rg/news/local/30156438-75/centurylink-copper-wire-working-company.html.csphttp://www.thefreelibrary.com/Latest+wire+theft+gets+blame+for+Sunday's+power+outage.-a0269380206There are occupational hazards for those who engage in such acticities:
http://www.registerguard.com/rg/news/local/30283676-63/mill-fire-harris-office-panel.html.cspPeople are even stealing trees to the tune of millions of dollars!:
http://projects.registerguard.com/web/opinion/27349334-47/timber-forest-service-theft-industry.html.cspTerrible thing about your brother's bike being stolen, Jim, and especially after all that hand-work.
Is that the fireplace mantle with the shotgun above it?
Yes, Matt, it is (Not. Oddly enough, I am one of perhaps three Americans in the whole country who doesn't own a gun. Not opposed to them and all my friends have them for hunting. It is just that I don't hunt and can't think of other situations that couldn't be made worse by using one).
What's the moral of all this?
Times have changed locally, and I have to be really careful if I'm to hang onto my stuff -- bicycles, especially. Beyond that, well...I still believe in the inherent goodness of most people but I'd hate to leave it solely to them. I recall an old man watching me carefully lock my bike in a rural town of some 900 people. After I finished he nodded and said, "People here are honest and that lock will keep them that way".
Makes my blood boil!
Me too, Dave. Sounds like we're in the same boat. I think it especially grates on me 'cos I always waited to acquire something until I'd earned the money fair and square, and never stole or cheated myself. Something in my mind says, "If I can do things honestly, why can't others?"
Dan i would have taken the bike into the dealership with me, if the neighbourhoob looked dodgy theres a reason for it.
Wish could have, jags, but there wasn't room for it. The office was a manufactured building that had been trucked in and elevated on a stilt-like structure. I do wish I'd locked the bike on the *inside* of the fence, though. It would have at least required the kid to come onto the car rental lot instead of doing his work from the sidewalk.
Best,
Dan. (...who grumpily wishes bike thieves would get electrocuted whilst committing theft as sometimes happens to wire thieves)