OK, so I'm still back in the prairies as far as posting the trip highlights, and I think a lot of you will appreciate this one:
I took a Southern detour on the trip through Alberta to check out the wind farms in Taber. But that didn't become the highlight of Taber at all. Imagine what I thought riding into town in the evening and seeing a house like this, with a giant Bicycle on the roof?
I had to find out this was about. So the next morning rode back to get the scoop and lucky for me the inhabitants had just come home that morning from celebrating their 50th with a 2-week trip to the East Coast.
Meet Richard Pitre. I thought that Joshua Goldberg was going to be the only Santa-Clause looking bicycle character I'd be meeting, but not so. This guy was like Joshua's alter-ego, a genius in mechanical aptitude and completely illiterate.
The bicycle on his roof was not just a prop, it is the world's largest functioning and rideable bike, you can see where the rider sits and the pedal cranks and imagine a person sitting there to get a perspective on the size, the wheels are some 10-12 feet in diameter. This was built and successfully ridden around town in 1984. However, you won't see it in the Guinness record book because he didn't want to pay the fee!
Richard's story is this. When he was growing up in New Brunswick he was picked on a bit by other kids and he put out a challenge that he could beat any of them on a bicycle. In order to get the fastest bike, he made himself a giant 72 tooth front chainring entirely by hand, became unreachable on the roads, and has been building and modifying bikes ever since. He wasn't in school long enough to learn to read or write, and spent most of his adult life working for CP rail by day and welding up contraptions in his workshop by night. Also a legendary hockey coach, and quite a family man.
Out in the back was a rusting collection of pedal vehicle creations he had built throughout the 70's and 80's that would put our modern chopper creators to shame. This includes a 16 wheel tall bike (seen here on its side):
A front pedal lean to steer trike, which I've seen a few of recently but this was built decades ago:
There were numerous cargo trikes and rickshaws and Penny Farthings, and inside a shed were some of his more prized creations. The bike with a Tractor Wheel he said he made when his grandson challenged him after seeing the wheel in his yard with "I bet you can't make a bicycle out of that!" .The bike with the giant hoop around it, I have no idea on the story.
There were also some pieces of Antiquity, including this bicycle from the 1932 where the cogs on the sprockets go into every 2nd link on the chain, and he had the chain breaking tool for it as well.
Oh, and a bicycle he built entirely out of hockey sticks!
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He and his wife were both collectors; dolls, lanterns, bottles, but the most interesting to me was a skateboard collection, with this "Dominion Surf Skate" at the very top, I dunno when they stopped making skateboards with metal wheels but I suspect it was a very long time ago:
Unfortunately Richard is now in fairly ill health, with trouble walking even, and so he doesn't really build things any more. I thought that there would be at least some reference to the guy on the web though so far no luck, so I'm posting all this here because I think he's a local legend who deserves a bit of modern exposure. Justin