scouserinlondon
Senior Member
- Location
- streatham, London
My non cycling friends often look in horror when I tell them of my London commuting experiences; when you’re on the road you are engaged in ongoing communication with other road users, asserting your position, anticipating things which may go wrong and keeping moving. When you’re in the thick of it I think it’s not as scary because you’re concentrating and being part of the melee.
Last night I had one of those ‘OMG’ moments as a ped watching a cyclist/HGV interaction and thinking ‘he’s going to farking die’. It was in the evening rush approaching evil Vauxhall from the Oval approach road. As the one way system opens up there’s a three lane road with a right spur for vehicles to do a hard right down Kennington lane. There was an HGV approaching this right hand spur very slowly, he’d indicated before moving and started the right hand turn manoeuvre. When a plucky cyclist decided to dive up his right after the HGV had already decided to move.
Fortunatley the guy hit the brakes and the cyclist had a right old shout. But for a second I honestly thought the cyclist was toast and it scared the hell out of me. The cyclist had a quick shout and got on his way, although in my opinion he was in the wrong totally (whether legally or not, from a pure self preservation point of view the HGV was indicating right before the cyclist decided to come up the right hand side).
The HGV guy looked a bit non-plussed as I’m sure the cyclist was in his blind spot most of the time. But it really gave me a shock and made me re-double my efforts to stay out of the way of wagons.
Last night I had one of those ‘OMG’ moments as a ped watching a cyclist/HGV interaction and thinking ‘he’s going to farking die’. It was in the evening rush approaching evil Vauxhall from the Oval approach road. As the one way system opens up there’s a three lane road with a right spur for vehicles to do a hard right down Kennington lane. There was an HGV approaching this right hand spur very slowly, he’d indicated before moving and started the right hand turn manoeuvre. When a plucky cyclist decided to dive up his right after the HGV had already decided to move.
Fortunatley the guy hit the brakes and the cyclist had a right old shout. But for a second I honestly thought the cyclist was toast and it scared the hell out of me. The cyclist had a quick shout and got on his way, although in my opinion he was in the wrong totally (whether legally or not, from a pure self preservation point of view the HGV was indicating right before the cyclist decided to come up the right hand side).
The HGV guy looked a bit non-plussed as I’m sure the cyclist was in his blind spot most of the time. But it really gave me a shock and made me re-double my efforts to stay out of the way of wagons.