Orphaned bikes brave Montreal winter elements alone - Action News
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Orphaned bikes brave Montreal winter elements alone

It's winter o'clock in Montreal: do you know where your bike is? If your answer is "stuck in a snowbank," then your sad, abandoned two-wheeler may be a casualty of our harshest season an "orphan bike."

Rust, ice and salt wreak havoc with abandoned bikes. Who leaves them out?

Do you ever leave your bike outdoors in the winter? (Charles Contant/CBC)

It's winter o'clock in Montreal: do you know where your bike is?

If your answer is "stuck in a snowbank," thenyour sad, abandoned two-wheelermay be a casualty of our harsh winters an "orphan bike."

There are probably a few on your street. They'relocked topoles for months on end, their crooked handlebarspeeking forlornly out of a hardened snowbank, their wheels warped from too many run-ins with thesnowplow.

But who do these bikes belong to, and how can you protect your bike in the winter? Some Montrealers share their storiesand regrets.

Snow +bikes=rust

Alain Chevarier is a dedicated, all-season cyclist, with more than one bicycleto his name. But with little space in his home to store all his wheels, hestored one bike outside in the past and met thedisastrous, rustyconsequences.

"My good bike, the one I use for training, stayed outside, and I paid the price,"Chevariersaid.

"I could still use it, but considering it's a bike I bought 35 years ago, and I love it dearly, I felt like I betrayed it."

These days, Chevarier has a special bike just for winterand stores it in his yard,away from the worst of the ice and snow.

Shame and singing the snowplow blues

Janine Parkinson's bike is spending the winter in snow.

She's from Torontoand wasn't ready for Montreal-sized snowstorms. The CBC administratoris trying to find it a better home for her bike after her Montrealer boyfriend said the street just won't do.

"He's like, 'Well, I put itin the basement, of course.I store it.' So I told him that I keep my bike out, and he's like, 'Shame!'"

Janine Parkinson is facing rust on her bike after leaving it outside this winter. (Rebecca Ugolini/CBC)

Despite a little handlebar rust on her ride, Parkinson is learning theMontreal ropes quickly, and she springs into action at the sounds of the bike's natural predatorthe snowplow.

"I saw the plows for the first time last night, come out, and I panicked and did dig [my bike] out and move it, as they did all their work. I guess, from what I saw,if I left it there, it would be crushed."

Tips to keep your bike safe

Your bike is going to need some serious TLC after spending the winter outside, and that can get expensive, says bike shop owner Gene Pelletier from Vlos s'a Coche.

He suggests storing unused bikes inside for the winter.

"For several years, I actually stored by bikesin my bedroom, one at the foot of my bed and the other at the head."

Cyclists who leave their ride out in the winter can expect rust and possibly a distorted wheel after a snowplow or two passes by. ( Kim McNairn/CBC)

Prefer it out of sight? Pelletier's shop charges $100 to store a bike all winter andtune it up in the spring. Otherwise,he suggests removing your bike's wheels to make it easier to store in small spaces. You can hangit from the wall via easy-to-install hooks.

As for snowplows, it is possible to get reimbursed for damage resulting from the work of Montreal blue-collar workers,including snow-clearing crews. But it's better to keep your bike out of the way.

"Cyclists who bike during the winter may continue using bike racksbut are invited to not obstruct public space with their bikes during a snow-clearing operation," the city said in a statement toCBC.