Yeah, sorry, I meant cycling.
Is it really a lot though? It seems a lot on here because every time someone gets told to get off the road they post it on here. If we all posted every time a car passed us without saying anything then things would look slightly different.
My reality is that in 4 years of daily commuting I've only had one driver tell me to "get out of the way because you don't pay road tax". And there wasn't a cycle path in sight. I'd suggest that those drivers will hate you whether there is a path there or not and want you off the road, and if there is then it's just something that they can point you at.
No-one has ever told me I should be on the cycle path. And I've never noticed any different behaviour from drivers when I'm on a road which has a cycle path.
I think I'll try a poll...
I think that, as discussed in the poll thread, it is very location specific. There are plenty of useless pavement paths in Oxford that are ignored by everyone without comment, because there are so many cyclists using the road that the uselessness of the path is evident to all.
On the other hand, every day on my commute I use a heavily trafficked road in a place where there is a fairly low level of cycling. The visible presence of a cycle path on the pavement acts as a constant irritant to drivers who can't understand why the few cyclists mostly use the road rather than the (obviously expensively provided) cycle path, which surely is what cyclists want... Overt hassling only occurs occasionally, but I see this as the tip of an iceberg, as only a miniority of drivers will be agressive enough to shout, or do V signs etc. But that doesn't mean there aren't a lot more drivers quietly fuming about those selfish cyclists in their way, and personally I'd rather their attention was on driving and passing safely. I know from comments overheard at work that there are a lot of drivers who find it very irritating that cyclists don't use the path. So, at that location at least, and others like it, the only effect the 'cycle path' has had has been to worsen relations between drivers and cyclists.
That isn't to say that I am opposed to adjacent cycle paths in principle, but an awful lot of the ones we have, pavement conversions in particular, have IMHO contributed more problems that they've solved.