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Some stranger "moved" my bike.....what would you do?

  • Thread starter Thread starter 1_v8_merc
  • Start date Start date
A friend in South Carolina wanted a Harley, but wife said no, he talked her into it a year later, but he ordered special wheels for it which took more time, a year and a half later he finally gets the bike, his first drive was to Myrtle Beach in South Carolina. He parks it outside a Harley shop and chains it to a light pole. He comes out of the shop an hour later, bike stolen.

Moral of the story, don't park outside of bike shops, it could mean trouble.

When I'm out and about in places I don't know, it is rare that I will park my bike anyplace that I will not be in constant sight of it.

Earl
 
No offense meant to the OP but were I the Harley guy (or ducati or MV or Honda or whatever..) I'd be a little irritated you blocked me in. It's happened to me a time or two at work. I try not to be a douche and take up and entire space. Usually I'll leave room for another bike to occupy the same space. But sometimes I come out and there are three bikes packed into my space because Johnny badass and his sweet biker gang of weekend warriors have decided they can't possibly walk an extra ten feet so they pack into my spot blocking me in.
Now, because I'm not a dick, and because I don't want to be responsible for someone elses bike should I bump into it trying to get out, or worse drop it trying to move it out of the way, I have to take time to go in inside and find the jackwads who decided that it was cool to stuff four bikes in one space. Then I have to wait while jackhole one drags his other buddies away from their busch light to go move thier bikes.

Yeah, I can see your point. But at the same time I see his point too.
However, if someone moved my bike without my consent, I might be tempted to punch him in the throat and then urinate in his mouth while he gasps for air.

Ok, so that might be a little over the top....

:p ;)
 
I had my bike moved once without permission. A utility crew had come to my block and was doing some work on the street. I came home from work and my bike had been moved. The front forks were locked, so they basically rolled it so it made a u-turn and the front wheel was pushed against the curb.

I was ****ed! The way I figured it, they should have notified me that they were going to be working on my block and I would have left the street clear.

Then, I took a deep breath, and let it go. The bike was fine. No harm done.

But still, there's something about the thought of a stranger touching my bike that makes me see red. So, I get how the OP felt about his bike being moved.

OK - I don't know if the same holds true for scooters. Once, in my younger days when I could be kind of a jerk, I picked up a scooter with a friend and carried it off the street and put it on the sidewalk so I could take the parking space.

I know. I know. I said I could be a jerk!
 
Yeah he's probably one of those 100 mile a year "bikers". parking on the sidewalk is one hint he thinks he's special. If you see it again maybe walk along texting and trip over his hawg. Then sue his arse for parking where he did causing you to hurt yourself.

You are vicious.
I like it.
 
I think its a matter of perceived space and a view of personal possesions. However, its in a public space and place and everybody uses it. Leads to road rage.
Let it go, no harm done.
I always choose my parking spot and one time it cost me a parking ticket. I was hopping!
 
Why didn't he just roost across the grass, do a little tails riding through the garden, hop the curb on one wheel and be gone in a cloud of blue smoke like a real motorcyclist?

What a loser.
 
I once pushed a pick-up about 20 feet into the roadway of a parking lot. I had parked my van with 20ft boat attached across 6 or 7 spots, with the front of the van even with a No Parking sign, so I knew I could get out later. The @$$hole backed right up to the front of the van, him parking in the No Parking zone. No way I could get the van out with the boat. I just put the van in low gear and pushed his truck to a point where I could get out.


I love moral dilemmas.

FLHGSRay.....and where were exactly were YOU last Saturday? ;)
 
Most of the comments have been regarding "no harm, no foul" and for the most part, I agree with that (my original comment about heavy chain was in jest).

BUT... All of you who commented seem to have forgotten this bit...

Well I'm walking around in the store, and I suddenly hear a piece of **** harley fire up.....and think nothing of it.

I walk out of the store maybe 5 minutes later and All of the bikes are gone, except for mine...

Now, to my mind, it would take a little more than a few seconds to approach your bike, see it's "penned in" and decide to clear a path for your grand exit...

In the time it took him to decide to move the GS, physically get astride the thing, move it out the way and "park it up", surely the other three bike owners would've got on their bikes and moved off in some manner.

If that's the case, the Harley owner coulda just angled his front wheel by using that handy thing called the "handle bars" and just driven around the GS, right?

Unless the Harley owner doesn't know what those bar thingies are for and just goes in straight lines, leaning to one side or the other to go around corners/bends...?

Maybe the other three bike owners were his friends/posse and they helped him dump the GS out of the way...?

Then again... Maybe there was a gravitational paradoxical irregularity that occurred in those few precious minutes and, as the world rotated on it's axis, gravity surrounding those few square metres of ground simply "failed", resulting in the other four bikes being carried off towards space but the sheer weighty coolness of the GS meant that the "anti-gravity effect" was only sufficient to raise the bike a couple of inches off the ground, then rest it back onto the ground in a different spot due to the planet having rotated that distance beneath the floating bike...

Jus' sayin'.
 
Well I'm walking around in the store, and I suddenly hear a piece of **** harley fire up.....and think nothing of it.
I walk out of the store maybe 5 minutes later and All of the bikes are gone, except for mine...and someone ****ing MOVED my bike like 15ft BACK into the parking lot roadway....it was a direct insult!
Then it hit me....that "cruiser" I saw parked up on the walkway, was an idiot customer that thought his HD was special and could park there!
So HE was the prick that moved my bike.
Assuming an awful lot, aren't you?
 
Most of the comments have been regarding "no harm, no foul" and for the most part, I agree with that (my original comment about heavy chain was in jest).

BUT... All of you who commented seem to have forgotten this bit...



Now, to my mind, it would take a little more than a few seconds to approach your bike, see it's "penned in" and decide to clear a path for your grand exit...

In the time it took him to decide to move the GS, physically get astride the thing, move it out the way and "park it up", surely the other three bike owners would've got on their bikes and moved off in some manner.

If that's the case, the Harley owner coulda just angled his front wheel by using that handy thing called the "handle bars" and just driven around the GS, right?

Unless the Harley owner doesn't know what those bar thingies are for and just goes in straight lines, leaning to one side or the other to go around corners/bends...?

Maybe the other three bike owners were his friends/posse and they helped him dump the GS out of the way...?

Then again... Maybe there was a gravitational paradoxical irregularity that occurred in those few precious minutes and, as the world rotated on it's axis, gravity surrounding those few square metres of ground simply "failed", resulting in the other four bikes being carried off towards space but the sheer weighty coolness of the GS meant that the "anti-gravity effect" was only sufficient to raise the bike a couple of inches off the ground, then rest it back onto the ground in a different spot due to the planet having rotated that distance beneath the floating bike...

Jus' sayin'.

Hahaha wow you just blew my friggin mind....

But I think I've come to the conclusion that he was just too afraid of turning Japanese if he touched my bike any longer...so that's why he didn't move it back.
 
When I'm out and about in places I don't know, it is rare that I will park my bike anyplace that I will not be in constant sight of it.

Earl

I thought I was the only one. I don't feel quite as paranoid/obsessive now.
 
Next time chose a different parking spot and there will be no problem !!!!!!

My thoughts exactly.

I have never owned a bike that hasn't fallen over on me so I make sure that I have room around me for that reason. Sandy, John, Charlie G, Carter Turk and Rich can attest to that. But that's my reason, it has been a habit for a lot of years now.

Personaly, parking tooooo close to a Harley can cause your Suzuki to start leaking.
V
 
if I'm ever witnessed getting riled up about anyone touching either of my near 30yr old 'buckets of bolts' .... someone please put me out of my MISERY!
 
Personaly, parking tooooo close to a Harley can cause your Suzuki to start leaking.
V

If thats the case wouldnt it work the other way around as well?
My Harley dont leak but my Suzuki does.:cool:
 
The day will come as you drive by or are there that youll see the bike. I mean its a Harley so it will frequent shops quite a bit. Then you can enquire as to who owns this here bike and remind him of the biker etiqette of you dont even touch anyones bike unless you ask or are invited to. I had a buddy that died in his sleep and he had a bandanna tied in a loop with a padlock on it. He told me it was his educator in case he ever caught anyone screwing with his bike. A few swats across the skull and they would be educated.
 
LMAO...No it makes things wear out which then will leak. You must ride the Zook more than the Harley.. eventually they all will leak somewhere.
 
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