Davidc
Guru
Yes. Just have a look at reports on accidents in London in particular.Any actual evidence for this? Undertaking by cyclists is not a significant causal factor in RTCs. Usually the cyclist is hit from behind or sideswiped.
Yes. Just have a look at reports on accidents in London in particular.Any actual evidence for this? Undertaking by cyclists is not a significant causal factor in RTCs. Usually the cyclist is hit from behind or sideswiped.
Kinda think that's the key.... because most people cycle they remain courteous to cyclists where they do share the road and drive carefully around them.
That argument doesn't hold water in countries with high quality segregation. Possibly because most people cycle they remain courteous to cyclists where they do share the road and drive carefully around them.
I know the vehicular cyclists are worried about losing their right to the road, but the kind of high quality cycling infrastructure that's in place in Copenhagen for example would have massive benefits for the majority of society, not just the testosterone fueled agressive vehicular cyclists.
At the minute, our children and elderly cant ride safely in this country. A massive seachange needs to happen, and arguing that an elite few wont be able to ride on the road at 45mph anymore is not a good argument against change.
Yes. Just have a look at reports on accidents in London in particular.
Unbelievable what a road layoutWhere Mr Dorling died:
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Boris and TFL should face corporate manslaughter charges.
Thanks for the explanation.I'll take a guess that it is the rapid transfer of kinetic energy from an object of great mass made largely of steel to one with much less mass and made of flesh and blood?
But I am not a physicist. One will be along in a minute to advise us all.
Yes, silly me !What's wrong with it ?
The problem is with the use of the word cyclist.
A cyclist is sometimes obvious. He has a shiny helmet, is dressed up like a highlighter pen and has a gobsmackingly expensive bicycle. He rides 20 miles to work and back every day and does a hundred at the weekend on his even more gobsmackingly expensive bike. You would hope this cyclist knows not to go up the inside of an HGV.
Or, it may be a 10 year old lad popping to football practice just down the road. He's just done bikeability so he knows he can't ride on the pavement (it's illegal). Obviously he hasn't passed his driving test yet, so he not an expert road user like an HGV driver is. There's a thin part of road with a bike painted on it next to the kerb, Surely that's where he's meant to ride? The local authority wouldn't paint a bike there if it wasn't safe to ride there would they?
Cyclists can be very experienced or very novice. And they're all legally obliged to use the terrible, life threatening infrastructure. Whats needed is proper, safe segregated cyclist friendly infrastructure that everyone who is physically capable of operating a bicycle from age 5 - 95 can use. Cyclists should not be same roads as HGV's.
Yes, silly me !
There aren't as many as there should be, is my view.Your post gets a 'like' although I disagree with your views on segregation. The point about the 10-year-old is a very good one. There are novices of all ages on all roads and many other road users seem to expect them all to be experts ands to know how to deal with traffic.
Although I'm not too sure how many unaccompanied 10-year-olsds there are... Mine were riding accompanied very young and were out on A-Roads with me at seven or eight. But none of them ventured out alone (even in this tiddly market town) much under eleven. Even among keen cycling families, I know of no 10-year-olds who popped to footie by bike alone at the age of ten.
But that's not the point... Your observation about novices and youngsters is spot on in terms of a driver's need to accept that riders may fall into those categories.
There aren't as many as there should be, is my view.
Going back 30 years, my ex-husband tells me that at our sons age (10y) he went everywhere by bike, independantly, his parents were very happy for him to go out on his bike in the morning and return home at teatime. This is as it should be.
This is not a risk I'm prepared to take with my son. He has magnificent bike handling skills, thanks to his cycle speedway training, but I don't consider it safe for him to ride alone on our roads. Whats changed in this time? Traffic. Both the volume and speed. And sadly the attitude that anyone who ventures onto our roads if they're not inside a car can be considered collateral damage.
Sadly, the culture for driving fast, inconsiderately without care for others has gone too far.Planning roads for cars/buses/lorries has gone too far. We're not going to change this overnight.
I'd much prefer to cycle on roads where drivers respect me and my safety , drive courteously around me. But it's not going to happen. I see high quality, segregated infrastructure the only safe option, if we're to get back to a culture where the vast majority can safely hop on to a bike and ride confidently.
We don't expect people to walk in the road with cars, buses, HGV's etc and think it safe.Rightly, segregated infrastructure for pedestrians is provided. Why do we expect people to cycle there? They're equally as vulnerable as if they were on foot.
There aren't as many as there should be, is my view.
Going back 30 years, my ex-husband tells me that at our sons age (10y) he went everywhere by bike, independantly, his parents were very happy for him to go out on his bike in the morning and return home at teatime. This is as it should be.
This is not a risk I'm prepared to take with my son. He has magnificent bike handling skills, thanks to his cycle speedway training, but I don't consider it safe for him to ride alone on our roads. Whats changed in this time? Traffic. Both the volume and speed. And sadly the attitude that anyone who ventures onto our roads if they're not inside a car can be considered collateral damage.
Sadly, the culture for driving fast, inconsiderately without care for others has gone too far.Planning roads for cars/buses/lorries has gone too far. We're not going to change this overnight.
I'd much prefer to cycle on roads where drivers respect me and my safety , drive courteously around me. But it's not going to happen. I see high quality, segregated infrastructure the only safe option, if we're to get back to a culture where the vast majority can safely hop on to a bike and ride confidently.
We don't expect people to walk in the road with cars, buses, HGV's etc and think it safe.Rightly, segregated infrastructure for pedestrians is provided. Why do we expect people to cycle there? They're equally as vulnerable as if they were on foot.