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A word of caution for anyone in the North Worcestershire area, I had my shed broken into last night so there is a least one bike thief active in the area at the moment.
On a positive note the security precautions in the shed did their job and the tea leaf left empty handed, so it is possible to thwart an at least semi-determined thief. They took the time to actually remove rather than rip out all 9 screws from the hinges, which I'm grateful for, so don't forget security screws/bolts on your own sheds when considering security.
I won't get the ruined night sleep back but I still have my bikes.
Stating the obvious but you really need to get them out of that shed now because they will be back.
As above, they will come back with the right tools.
Mine are all in the loft at the moment, as lots of 'activity' near me at the moment, just not worth the risk
I can't be all that far from the OP. Lots of vehicle , shed and house thefts going on round here in a recent spate.
I'm in a town, but this bloody half the street lights off at night can't be helping.
Missus and I parted company a while back, so at least I've been able to get some kit and bikes into a spare bedroom.
Beefed up the security on the garage o er the last couple of months too and am very cautious when returning home on a bike, or moving bikes from van to house / garage, checking for watching oddballs in the street or cars first.
Don't leave bikes in the shed, they are likely to be back , as has been said.
Same as treklee here, when not in use our best bikes reside in the loft and the shed is left to the also rans. Having said that my shed resembles the metal skip at the local recycling centre at the moment and any thief trying to rob it would probably sue me for injuries received.
As mentioned above OP move the bikes from the shed for a month or so the scum will be back.
Shed is empty of anything valuable and it's all in the house. I moved it all inside at 3:00 this morning.
Currently researching security fixings to prevent hinge removal in the future, although all being told it was the alarms that did the trick.
I was just about to ask for people's advice regarding this.
I don't have much space and wondered what people's outside the box ideas are for keeping bikes inside the house.
I'm thinking wheels off and frame hung to the wall in the porch.
High wall mount. Bars and saddle an inch below the ceiling. Wall side pedal up, lowest part of tyres flush against the wall.
You end up up with the bike in a leaning position, occupying and minimal sapce as possible.
Either that, out a pulley hoist in your stair well if you have a high ceiling.
Don't you love polite burglars?
Put a hungry lion in there next time.
Get the bikes insured.
Lots of vehicle , shed and house thefts going on round here in a recent spate.
It's everywhere - I reckon the scrotes have simply cottoned on to the fact that there's about a 1% chance they'll get caught, and if they do get caught with the stolen stuff after the event they can simply say "I bought it from my mate down the pub" and the police can't really do anything about it.
It's in every walk of life - people can choose to drive at whatever speed they like, let their dog sh*t wherever, fly tip etc etc - they're just not going to get caught realistically. It's only the fact the [b][i]most[/i][/b] people are in fact perfectly decent human beings that it's not utter anarchy ๐
Worcestershire here too so thanks for the heads up, have been gradually increasing garage security recently so may need to up the game a bit although only one way in and an extra car on the drive means the door is fairly inaccessible which must help act as a deterrent.