Bike shops that fix wheelchairs for free?
#1
The Drive Side is Within
Thread Starter
Bike shops that fix wheelchairs for free?
My mother passed along this link. It mentions a bicycle mechanic who works at a shop where they tune up wheelchairs for free. Seems like another great way for a shop to give back to its community.
https://www.ucc.org/feed-your-spirit/...-for-gods.html
Yes, i's a Christian devotional, but don't be scared, the UCC isn't too in your face preachy...
I wonder if anyone knows about specific shops that do this.
https://www.ucc.org/feed-your-spirit/...-for-gods.html
Yes, i's a Christian devotional, but don't be scared, the UCC isn't too in your face preachy...
I wonder if anyone knows about specific shops that do this.
Originally Posted by UCC
A Blessing for God's Handy-Persons
September 19, 2011
Excerpt from Exodus 31:1-11
"...and I have filled him with the spirit of God, with ability, intelligence, and knowledge in every kind of craft."
Reflection by Maren Tirabassi
Until my son Matt became a master bicycle mechanic, I didn't know there was such a trade. Not a job, a trade. The technology, tools and technical expertise translate as well to most gym equipment . . . and to wheelchairs. At his shop they tune up and repair wheelchairs for free.
God asked Moses to set aside and consecrate Joshua's nephew Bezalel and his friend Oholiab because of their gifts of stone-cutting, woodwork, metallurgy, and fabric arts. They were going to create the tent of the ark of the covenant and its furnishings. Five chapters of Exodus are devoted to the details of their crafts. They shaped furnishings, vestments, curtains, a table, a lampstand, and a mercy seat. God said, "I have given skill to all the skillful."
This is a wonderful day to celebrate the spirit of God in every kind of craft. All around our churches and our communities are quilt makers and auto body mechanics, plumbers and watercolorists, potters and pipe fitters. Some of us use God's handy skills for amateur activities; some of us use our gifts for employment. Many of us are fortunate enough to be able to do both. Let's give ourselves a hand!
Prayer
God, take my hands and let them be – consecrated to you, every bit as much as my head and my heart. Amen.
September 19, 2011
Excerpt from Exodus 31:1-11
"...and I have filled him with the spirit of God, with ability, intelligence, and knowledge in every kind of craft."
Reflection by Maren Tirabassi
Until my son Matt became a master bicycle mechanic, I didn't know there was such a trade. Not a job, a trade. The technology, tools and technical expertise translate as well to most gym equipment . . . and to wheelchairs. At his shop they tune up and repair wheelchairs for free.
God asked Moses to set aside and consecrate Joshua's nephew Bezalel and his friend Oholiab because of their gifts of stone-cutting, woodwork, metallurgy, and fabric arts. They were going to create the tent of the ark of the covenant and its furnishings. Five chapters of Exodus are devoted to the details of their crafts. They shaped furnishings, vestments, curtains, a table, a lampstand, and a mercy seat. God said, "I have given skill to all the skillful."
This is a wonderful day to celebrate the spirit of God in every kind of craft. All around our churches and our communities are quilt makers and auto body mechanics, plumbers and watercolorists, potters and pipe fitters. Some of us use God's handy skills for amateur activities; some of us use our gifts for employment. Many of us are fortunate enough to be able to do both. Let's give ourselves a hand!
Prayer
God, take my hands and let them be – consecrated to you, every bit as much as my head and my heart. Amen.
__________________
The bicycle, the bicycle surely, should always be the vehicle of novelists and poets. Christopher Morley
The bicycle, the bicycle surely, should always be the vehicle of novelists and poets. Christopher Morley
#2
24-Speed Machine
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My mother passed along this link. It mentions a bicycle mechanic who works at a shop where they tune up wheelchairs for free. Seems like another great way for a shop to give back to its community.
https://www.ucc.org/feed-your-spirit/...-for-gods.html
Yes, i's a Christian devotional, but don't be scared, the UCC isn't too in your face preachy...
I wonder if anyone knows about specific shops that do this.
https://www.ucc.org/feed-your-spirit/...-for-gods.html
Yes, i's a Christian devotional, but don't be scared, the UCC isn't too in your face preachy...
I wonder if anyone knows about specific shops that do this.
I don't know of any bike shops' that do this. But it would certainly be an excellent business avenue that would potentially draw business from the disabled community.
Because, Every time I have gone into the two local bike shops I use for repairs, I have never seen a physically disabled customer buying a bike, or getting one repaired. I also have never seen either shop work on recumbent bikes.
#3
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We have over 10 bicycle shops here, but only 1 would go the extra mile and buy several of those gray wheelchair tires for me. Of all those bike shops that is 1 out of 3 that will work on recumbent trikes.
#4
i LIKE it!
rarely do i see manual w/cs around here. most are electric and there are
specialty shops that handle those repairs.
odds are that folks in manuals don't have much $.
i knew a fella years ago who was a shuttle dispatcher for national jewish
hospital in denver. in his spare time he repaired manual w/cs for a non-
profit that got git around devices (walkers, w/s, canes, 4-footed canes)
donated to them and they would re-furbish and distribute to whoever
needed an item, gratis.
i found a w/c in a dumpster one day and strapped it folded to the side
of my motorbike.
lemme tell ya, NO cars would get close to, or pass, me.
gonna take it home and deliver that evening via a
co-worker who had a birthday party that evening.
when i showed up with it she got mad (was turning 40) and
wanted to know who it was for.
'you'.
ooooo, bad answer. time for clarification. 'it is for you...to take to
work and give to _______(insert name. i don't remember it) to
fix up'.
was still not happy, especially when others showed up bearing a
bed pan, dentucreme, geritol, depends, a cane, etc.
rarely do i see manual w/cs around here. most are electric and there are
specialty shops that handle those repairs.
odds are that folks in manuals don't have much $.
i knew a fella years ago who was a shuttle dispatcher for national jewish
hospital in denver. in his spare time he repaired manual w/cs for a non-
profit that got git around devices (walkers, w/s, canes, 4-footed canes)
donated to them and they would re-furbish and distribute to whoever
needed an item, gratis.
i found a w/c in a dumpster one day and strapped it folded to the side
of my motorbike.
lemme tell ya, NO cars would get close to, or pass, me.
gonna take it home and deliver that evening via a
co-worker who had a birthday party that evening.
when i showed up with it she got mad (was turning 40) and
wanted to know who it was for.
'you'.
ooooo, bad answer. time for clarification. 'it is for you...to take to
work and give to _______(insert name. i don't remember it) to
fix up'.
was still not happy, especially when others showed up bearing a
bed pan, dentucreme, geritol, depends, a cane, etc.
#5
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Location: Grid Reference, SK
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Bikes: I never learned to ride a bike. It is my deepest shame.
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I used to love working on Wheelchairs. Always interesting problems that were just not quite like bicycle problems, and so often the customer was stuck sitting in a chair in the shop and give me some company while I fumbled through.
We always charged, though.
We always charged, though.