Dunedin volunteers start DIY bike workshop

Simon Hellyer adjusts some cables on a bike, while Chris Schmelz looks on in their bicycle workshop. Photo by Craig Baxter.
Simon Hellyer adjusts some cables on a bike, while Chris Schmelz looks on in their bicycle workshop. Photo by Craig Baxter.
Three community-minded Dunedin men have started a do-it-yourself bicycle workshop with the aim of encouraging a bike culture in the city.

The idea of Chris Schmelz, Simon Hellyer and Rory Harding, The Crooked Spoke is a not-for-profit venture, run entirely by volunteers.

At their Buller St workshop, they have all the space and tools anyone would need to fix their bike and a collection of parts to help get bikes and people back on the road.

Taking broken or discarded bikes that would otherwise be rusting away, the men open the workshop on Friday afternoons to anyone who wants help fixing up a bike.

"People think fixing a bike is beyond them, that they have to go to a bike shop to get their bike fixed, but it's not, and they don't."

People might not realise they did not have to spend hundreds to fix a bike.

"This $5 bike here will do just as good as a $500 bike and you can have it going in a few hours. It's 20 years old and it will last another 15 years."

The workshop had been running for about three months and people who had used it seemed pleased with what they learned.

For example, one woman had learned how to replace her old bike's brakes, after being told at a bike shop the bike was not repairable.

The idea was to help people learn how to fix and look after their bikes, rather than have it done for them, with an emphasis on people sharing their skills with each other, Mr Schmelz said.

"We grew up around bikes, our families rode bikes, but we are still learning how to fix them and we want to learn off other people too."

They wanted to encourage everyone to learn to love cycling and to try to encourage a culture which would eventually see Dunedin attitudes to cyclists and cycling change.

"Dunedin is really intolerant of cyclists," said Mr Schmelz, who was recently the victim of a hit-and-run incident in Mailer St.

His collarbone was broken when he was knocked off his bike.

Cycling was fun, free, fast, there were no parking costs and it was good for people and for the environment, he said.

To contact the workshop, call 03) 477 8546.

Do these guys have a website?

What about an address were I can drop some old bikes off to?

Great news - good luck to them

It's great to read about these guys and the bike work shop. It gives me a bit more hope and optimism about Dunedin.I get around Dunedin more by bike than I do by car and I've found that though there are some pretty inconsiderate motorists out there, a small majority of motorists seem pretty considerate. While out cycling on the Otago peninsula some motorists have been far too impatient and have passed too closely, whilst others have waited patiently and given me plenty of space.Cyclists have got to be considerate too. I've been out on group rides on occasions where I've actually been quite embarrassed by the cocky attitude of some cyclists - blocking the whole lane, making no effort to move to one side etc.

Intolerant motorists

Dunedin motorists are indeed remarkable for their intolerance of, and sometimes open aggression, toward law-abiding cyclists. I don't understand why, but it's been remarked on by every serious cyclist I know who has moved here from another country. I hope this group is successful in encouraging people to ride and maintain their bikes and helping to raise the profile of cycling in the city, and I hope the DCC's current transportation planners get with the program, too.

Intolerant motorists

Having lived and cycled in a few countries I must admit that I have also found cycling in Dunedin dangerous and unpleasant. I find that motorist are intolerant of cyclists although I am a very careful, considerate cyclist who obeys the rules of the road. Having said that I find the driving standard in Dunedin to be generally poor. Motorists in Dunedin do not use common courtesy.
Of course there are also many cyclists who cycle for transport, not as a pass-time or sport and do not think that road rules apply to them.
For such a small suposedly communty focussed city there is not that much community spirit.
Well done on setting up this workshop, I think it is an excellent idea. Perhaps we can educate drivers and cyclists on how to use the road in a courteous, considerate manner?

Cycling volunteers message peddling

Great to see a revival of the grass-roots efforts to improve knowledge of and skills in cycle maintenance and more recycling of unwanted but functional equipment. More power to their elbows. However I would take issue with the reported comment that Dunedin motorists are intolerant of cyclists. Given the careless behaviour of many cyclists, I think Dunedin motorists are surprisingly tolerant of cyclists. In fact I would like to take this opportunity to thank the very many Dunedin motorists who have extended the usual courtesies of the road to me over the last 30 or so years that I have been using a bike in Dunedin - and been basically accident-free. Of course there have been some careless drivers and the occasional hostile one and the consequences of an accident are mostly more severe for the cycling participant rather than the motorist. But the point I would make is that I encounter these unfortunate drivers about as often while I am driving a car as while riding a bike. I believe that motorists are not intolerant of cyclists per se, but that many may be frustrated by careless or stupid cycling - like the stealth cyclist who passed me on the South bound one-way last Wednesday night. Virtually invisible to the casual glance, the effect was only spoilt by the pale light reflected from his unclad legs. Cyclists would better serve the cause by targeting specific behaviours, their own as well as those of motorists, rather than inveighing against motorists in general.