Saturday, August 14, 2010

Friday 13 2010, Port Dover: A Contrast

Yesterday, I was in Floradale for Thursday the 12th, and today I went to Port Dover for Friday 13th. I am going to suggest that Floradale and Port Dover get together and enter a competition to find the world's most dissimilar towns. Floradale is a bit smaller than Port Dover, and is in a Mennonite area where you can find lots of horses and buggies. People dress like Mennonites, and the general store sells whatever you need to look like that.

People in Port Dover dress in T-shirts with skulls on them, and leather jackets and assless chaps, with tattoos up and down their arms and probably a lot of other places I didn't look. And you can also buy all the stuff you need right there in Port Dover. I got a Friday 13th t-shirt with a skull on it for $20.

In Floradale I did not see a single police person. But I was pulled over at a checkpoint 80 kilometers from Port Dover, to make sure my papers were in order and my bike was safe. Nobody seems to care if I have a safe, documented bike when I visit Floradale.

There was not much of a line up for food in Floradale. But the lines for Tim Hortons in Dover went around the block (probably more than once). In Floradale, there is no one holding up a sign, telling you to park on their lawn for $10.

There is one place in Port Dover where you might actually think you were in Floradale, if you ignore the hordes of bikers pressing by like sardines outside the window and the huge yacht docked in front. The place is called "Apples" a family business that sells apple fritters with real apples, just peeled on a real 19th century apple peeler. And it may be the only place in Port Dover today where there is no lineup to get service. Maybe I was just lucky to get there at the precise moment where there was a lull. But I have never had that kind of luck at Tim's. There is no Tim's in Floradale.

http://www.boatbookings.com/yacht_search/yacht_view.php?pid=3252

We were walking back to the bikes and I got separated from my friends for second, when I got cut off by a Gold Wing. I was walking behind this Gold Wing that was trying to cut a path through the crowd in the middle of the street. I followed it on the theory that it would help me walk more easily through the crowd to have a wide motorcycle in front of me shoving people to the side. But then it turned out that Gold Wings are no good at getting through crowds because their engines are too quiet. Then I started to suffer from exhaust fume inhalation, so I decided to pass, (I feel the same way whether walking or riding) just when the Wing made a turn in front of me. Those things are so heavy it could have killed me even at half walking speed. I got out of the way, but by that time I lost track of the rest of the motorcycle gang. So I had to meet them back at the bikes.

For the rest of the day, our entertainment was watching Garry try to stuff his jacket under the seat of his Honda Firestorm. After many tries, and a huge amount of pressure, he finally got the seat to latch. But if that seat catch ever lets go when he is sitting on the bike, he will need a parachute on the way back down.

Picture: You can see Alex in front of the Wing with the ZRXOA t-shirt (ZRX Owners Association), and the Goldwing making no impression on the crowd in the middle of the street. I am trying to pass but just then he made a right turn and I had to step back and lost the group. The red arrow points to the GPS that is being no help whatsoever. Maybe it should be programmed to yell "Get out of the way!" in various voices and accents.

More Pictures: http://picasaweb.google.com/rbezeau/PortDoverFriday132010#




7 comments:

  1. Well, it'd appear that I missed a classic Friday 13th in Port Dover, with the Hamilton Spectator estimating 20,000 bikes and 150,000 people.

    So, you mention, 'But I was pulled over at a checkpoint 80 kilometers from Port Dover' ... just as well you got that front tire replaced!

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  2. I thought about the tire as he was taking a long hard look at my rear tire (that I did not replace).

    I also posted a link at the bottom of the blog to my album on Picasso. (10 pictures)

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  3. So ... I was wondering, what reason did the cop give you for pulling you guys over? Or did he even bother going through the motions on that?

    Technically, the Ontario Highway Traffic Act does not grant police the power to arbitrarily pull you over. Although, if you fail to do so, you can be charged with Failing to stop when signalled/requested by a police officer.

    In the absence of legitimate 'probable cause' (articulable cause), being stopped (detained) by the cops is a violation of one's Section 9 Charter rights - with the exception of the Supreme Court decision in the case of RIDE stops.

    Ironically, the Metro Toronto Police website clearly states, 'Officers may stop people who are driving to ensure compliance with traffic laws and safety standards such as sobriety, possessing a valid driver’s licence and insurance, and the mechanical fitness of the vehicle.' [emphasis added]

    That, in fact, is arrogation of powers that they do not hold (cf. Hufsky v R., Ladouceur v R., Dedman v R>, &c.).

    Of course, cops being cops, will argue that they are doing so 'in the interests of public safety' (and your Charter rights be damned!) and, if pressed to show cause, will no doubt contrive something.

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  4. I think it's a case of "give an inch, take a mile". We have tolerated stops on motorcycles going in to Port Dover on Friday 13th for years. This checkpoint was merely a test of how far away they could move the checkpoint before someone would complain.

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  5. As I said yesterday, too bad we didn't have Frank (KD bro) along on the ride--my answer to show me you insurance/license/ownership could have been "talk to my solicitor"

    Glad I went--wasn't nearly as crazy as I thought--

    thanks again Robert for the great route down...

    Looking forward to Friday May 13, 2011!!

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  6. hey Robert--good pics...but where ismy shot? can you email it to me?

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  7. Well you seemed to have as much luck as us. When you go to Port Dover on Friday the 13th from the states, you get stopped just before the Peace Bridge in Buffalo. They check safety items like measuring how high you license plate is. (it has to be 12 inches or more off the ground) A guy I know got a ticket since while on the kick stand the plate measured just under 12 inches. The plate was over 12 inches when on the road only on the stand it was just under 12. STOCK Victory. Oh well.

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