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Post By Tim Cullis
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19 Feb 2013
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Join Date: May 2010
Location: Bristol, UK
Posts: 336
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Re: Do you cover your bike whilst parked up?
I wouldn't take a purpose made bike cover if it was me however, they just weigh too much and take up too much space and they have no other uses. We're taking a couple of ponchos and in situations like cities we'll use them as bike covers.
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19 Feb 2013
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Join Date: Dec 2004
Location: London and Granada Altiplano
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You don't have to worry about the theft of largish capacity bikes, I've never heard of that at all in Morocco, but if things aren't secured they could go missing. But the concept of a bike cover is a bit flawed, if someone is determined and it's quiet, then all you'll end up with is a bike cover in tatters. In Morocco you should generally always park the bike within a compound/building, or under the watchful eye of a night guardian (10dh).
Having said that, I've been parked up in Sidi Ifni for the last few days with the bike just outside the hotel in the street (under my bedroom window). It has an alarm which helps.
In Fez also I park the bike without a guardian outside Pension Campini but then the police station is just 80m away and there's armed troops permanently stationed guarding the royal palace across the road.
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"For sheer delight there is nothing like altitude; it gives one the thrill of adventure
and enlarges the world in which you live," Irving Mather (1892-1966)
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19 Feb 2013
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I always take a very thin, lightweight bike cover. It weighs nothing and just tucks under one of my bungees. It doesn't have to be kept clean or dry.
I rarely use it, but there are times where you can sleep easier at night knowing that the local kids aren't eyeing up things they can snap off.
Barcelona was a good example of this. My mates 'uncovered' bike lost his throttle rocker, bungees and other cheap but annoying to lose things.
Mine was parked next to his under a dirty old cover and was untouched.
I used my bike cover to sit on damp grass, lay my tools out on etc. You could even use it as a make-shift tarp with a little forward planning.
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Did some trips.
Rode some bikes.
Fix them for a living.
Can't say anymore.
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19 Feb 2013
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Join Date: Jul 2007
Location: Bellingham, WA, USA
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Lightweight, ratty-looking bike cover, yes. For all the reasons above, plus you can take naps under it in the rain. Nothing "single-purpose" about this--it's infinitely easier and more flexible than carrying ponchos, then trying to figure out how to securely attach them at the end of a long, tiring day.
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