Yeah, that's one where GB (and possibly other countries we influenced too) messed up use of a Vienna convention road sign. Normally, a blue circle means something you must do (think of the turn left and keep left arrows) and a blue rectangle means something you may do, so a blue bike circle means bikes must use that bit of the highway and a blue bike rectangle would somewhere bikes could be ridden, but GB uses the circle for optional and the rectangle for any old road that is part of a cycle route where the council can't be bothered to put up a proper route or direction sign.She's flat wrong about her blue circle sighn though. It means that the route is restricted to cycles, not that cyclist must use it.
Yeah, that's one where GB (and possibly other countries we influenced too) messed up use of a Vienna convention road sign. Normally, a blue circle means something you must do (think of the turn left and keep left arrows) and a blue rectangle means something you may do, so a blue bike circle means bikes must use that bit of the highway and a blue bike rectangle would somewhere bikes could be ridden, but GB uses the circle for optional and the rectangle for any old road that is part of a cycle route where the council can't be bothered to put up a proper route or direction sign.
Two other odd/annoying things: 1. GB cycle direction signs are limited to the smallest standard sign size or two, even where other road signs are 4x as large, making them relatively difficult to spot among other road signs. 2. the end of an optional cycleway need only be marked by not putting up a sign after the route crosses a road junction. Best practice is to put a give way directing cyclists back onto the carriageway not near a junction with a 'cyclists rejoin carriageway' rectangle, but that's still rare.
If you mean the blue bike circle with "End" underneath, then they've also not been a legal sign for at least 30 years. There's a few still hidden around Cambridge, but I've not seen them anywhere else for a long time.Round here the "end of cycle path" sign are quite small
Maybe they've just been shoved up the pole because they're no longer legal but it's easier to move them than remove them?and about 9 foot up in the air
how they expect a cyclist to see them is a mystery
Well, that's completely unenforceable because obviously it's reasonable to ride from the end of the cycleway to the nearest low kerb, which seems to be the zebra crossing, and then to access the other cycleway from the nearest dropped kerb, which is the zebra... what a waste of council budget! And I bet it came from a cycling budget not general highways.mind you - the bit of road I am thinking of has no "cyclepath" signs on any kind on most of it
except for the zebra crossing where it has 2 signs - one on each side of the white lines on the road
one is "no cycling" the other is "start of cycle path"
If is rather dumb expecting anyone to take any notice of it
View attachment 802900
they are about 10 foot apart - if that
If you mean the blue bike circle with "End" underneath, then they've also not been a legal sign for at least 30 years. There's a few still hidden around Cambridge, but I've not seen them anywhere else for a long time.
Maybe they've just been shoved up the pole because they're no longer legal but it's easier to move them than remove them?
Well, that's completely unenforceable because obviously it's reasonable to ride from the end of the cycleway to the nearest low kerb, which seems to be the zebra crossing, and then to access the other cycleway from the nearest dropped kerb, which is the zebra... what a waste of council budget! And I bet it came from a cycling budget not general highways.
That's not an end of cycle route sign. That's a no-cycling sign and should only be used where there is an order or similar prohibiting cycling on the whole road, according to the Traffic Signs Regulations and General Directions 2016 SCHEDULE 3 PART 2 Item 21 - the final column indicates Schedule 3 General Directions 1 and 2, and 1 is "The sign must only be placed to indicate the effect of an Act, order, regulation, bylaw, resolution or notice which prohibits or restricts the use of the road by traffic".I think he was talking about the red circle with a cycle in it, this side of the zebra, not the blue sign with "end" underneath (which doesn't appear in his photo).
Rectangular blue signs are information, not requirements, so there's nothing to obey on that one, while it's obviously impossible to obey both the other two at the same time. I wonder what cock-up led to that mess.Only one of these three is normally obeyed by cyclists
View attachment 802919
Rectangular blue signs are information, not requirements, so there's nothing to obey on that one, while it's obviously impossible to obey both the other two at the same time. I wonder what cock-up led to that mess.
Ah, so I suspect the local council signed a cycle route across the bridge, then Notwork Rail trying to refuse permission for people to cycle across and putting their own prohibition sign up, probably unlawfully, rather than do whatever's needed to make it safe, whether making the side rails higher, or putting up give-way signs at each end so people give way to those already on the bridge.It leads to a smidge over two person wide bridge over a railway. So a dismounted cyclist is potentially going to cause an obstruction to someone coming the other way. Most cyclists consequently stay on the bike and stop or propell by foot on the ground pass someone coming the other way.