What 'parts' do you carry?
An idler pulley that some say breaks now and then. Be prepared.
What 'parts' do you carry?
I cant tell you how many times I have stopped to help riders that have a problem, and no patch kits, tubes, tools, or pumps. Strangely one tool that I carry is a 6" crescent wrench, and it is the tool that it seems that I have used the most to help other riders. I sometimes think that the riders that carry nothing to get them going again, think that someone like me will always come along and help.
As we're talking about risk assessment, I will not stop to help a female cyclist on her own, and I'd hesitate to offer help to a group. My male colleagues in social care operate in the same way. All it takes is one comment about "he made me feel unsafe" and everything I've built for the last decades could potentially be destroyed in a few hours.
I was driving today and saw several cyclists, dressed in all black!
"It's a difficult world to navigate.."
Yes it is, but not one we should be afraid to navigate, for to do otherwise we disenfranchise the vast majority of the female population who do not buy into the notion that all men a bastards.
No, but the vast majority of bastards are men. And they're not easy to distinguish from non bastards just by looking at them."It's a difficult world to navigate.."
Yes it is, but not one we should be afraid to navigate, for to do otherwise we disenfranchise the vast majority of the female population who do not buy into the notion that all men a bastards.
I fully understand and share your concerns. The safeguarding policy at my club stated there should be two other people present if a female was in need of help. Whether anyone applied that or not I don’t know. I've ridden solo with female riders on more ocassions than I could count. How does that work?
I'm involved with our local u3a. From time to time this requires me give some of our female members IT support. Our safeguarding policy is strictly enforced and I can only do this if two people are present or the member comes to my home and my wife is in the house.
The whole issue was brought home to me 25+ years ago. My son was on a one day sailing course on a local reservoir. A young girl of 12/13 fell in. She didn’t want to continue and was left to sit with me on the jetty. After a while she got very cold and was very distressed. I gave her a hug, asked if she'd like to get changed and when she said yes I took her back to the changing rooms..........completely out of sight of the reservoir.
When I got home my wife was chatting with a good friend and neighbour, a social worker. I told them the story. Both were horrified at the danger I had put myself in. Until that point I thought I'd done no more than the natural reaction of a parent to a distressed child.
My PT is a woman. I'm alone with her for an hour in a small gym. I ride solo with women. I go out for coffee with female friends.
It's a difficult world to navigate......
No, but the vast majority of bastards are men. And they're not easy to distinguish from non bastards just by looking at them.
No, but the vast majority of bastards are men. And they're not easy to distinguish from non bastards just by looking at them.
Statistically, that's not as cut and dried as people think.
Either way a woman with a punctured tyre on the road is highly unlikely to come across one of these b*stards. Most violence comes from relatives and acquaintances, and the actual breakdown is fairly unclear, but the generally accepted figure at the moment in social care, is a bit less than 6 : 4 male : female perpetrators.
Certainly in Germany, more men are victims of violent crime than women, so I should be more scared if I'm approached by helpful cyclists.