This past summer I placed an ad for vintage cruisers 1950's and older in the local paper and among some duds got two nice old Schwinns, one a 1951 and the other a 1942, both step through models, but lots of good parts. A month and a half ago I got a call from a guy I knew twenty years ago saying he had a bunch of old bikes under tarps and in sheds, a garage... and needed to get rid of some stuff. Fasteddy was visiting from BC at the time and we went for a quick look. The guy had little time to spare that day due to a death in the family. We peaked in some sheds at hanging bikes, wheels, forks, you name it and peaked under the corners of a couple tarps. It was hard to tell what might be under there. Scott and I talked and came up with a plan for me to help him go through bikes in exchange for some old cruisers. I waited for a long time to hear back from him and we finally set up a work day... today in fact. The first order of business was to remove the tarps and then to start pulling bikes and sorting them into categories of what Scott want for rebuilding to sell or for parts, ones I might want and the rest to go to the metal recycler. There were a lot of bikes, all told I counted 94 and we never got to the ones inside sheds, etc. this was just the ones under tarps.
A mutual friend, a mixed blood Italian Ojibwa Indian who is a welder started dropping these bikes off at Scot's once it was announced that the city dump was closing and a transfer station was going to replace it. The bikes started accumulating and once sheds were filled they went under tarps until finally Scott said, "enough". It has been fifteen years they have been sitting there. Scott is retiring and going back into the bike repair business which was once his trade, so it is time for him to go through things and get rid of. Take a look at all those bikes...
A mutual friend, a mixed blood Italian Ojibwa Indian who is a welder started dropping these bikes off at Scot's once it was announced that the city dump was closing and a transfer station was going to replace it. The bikes started accumulating and once sheds were filled they went under tarps until finally Scott said, "enough". It has been fifteen years they have been sitting there. Scott is retiring and going back into the bike repair business which was once his trade, so it is time for him to go through things and get rid of. Take a look at all those bikes...