glenn forger
Guest
It was a pretend flounce and you fell for it. Like Hitler.
I had to do a driving standards course due to driving too early in the morning and my anticipated annual mileage at a previous job, and the first question asked was "how far down the road do you have to look?" My answer was as far as you can possibly see, and scanning from close in to as far as you can see. The instructor said that was the best answer he had heard in many years of running the course. Most of the company drivers apparently answered "the car in front"!Exactly my point, he overtook without a clear line of sight and he should have made sure there wasn't an obstruction before overtaking (like the guy in my video who nearly hit the bollard... the car in front obscured it). It's basic driving skills, it doesn't matter which position the cyclist was in, you don't blindly follow another car when overtaking.
You caught out Hitler too?It was a pretend flounce and you fell for it. Like Hitler.
I did it on purpose. I wanted to use the footage as part of training, to show what happens if you don't ride assertively. Stuck the camera on the back of my bike and rode like a novice, taking extra care not to look back or give any clues to the drivers what was going on around me. In essence, leaving it totally up to them how they behaved around me. Got my footage at the first hazard I came upon and it wasn't the only time it happened on that road! The only reason I wasn't angry was coz I got what I wanted on film. There are bollards all the way down that road and I normally take the lane. When my bosses saw the footage, they made me call the police.Why are you riding so far towards the edge of the road? Those double yellows aren't a cycle lane.
When I took my driving lessons, after the first lesson my instructor asked me if I rode a bike. Said he could always tell because cyclists have better observation skills.I had to do a driving standards course due to driving too early in the morning and my anticipated annual mileage at a previous job, and the first question asked was "how far down the road do you have to look?" My answer was as far as you can possibly see, and scanning from close in to as far as you can see. The instructor said that was the best answer he had heard in many years of running the course. Most of the company drivers apparently answered "the car in front"!
He also said that my cycling experience showed massively when driving in the simulator, as I was trying to look down side roads to see what might be coming.
You see this a lot when a bus has stopped. The person behind the bus can see that the way is clear for them to pass, so they do so. Then everyone else behind follows, just presuming that the way is clear without checking them selves.Exactly my point, he overtook without a clear line of sight and he should have made sure there wasn't an obstruction before overtaking (like the guy in my video who nearly hit the bollard... the car in front obscured it). It's basic driving skills, it doesn't matter which position the cyclist was in, you don't blindly follow another car when overtaking.
*steals for signatureParts of my commute look like a bomb's gone off in a cone factory
Sounds like a perfect reason why drivers should have to spend 6 - 12 months on a bicycle or motorcycle before being allowed behind the wheel of a carWhen I took my driving lessons, after the first lesson my instructor asked me if I rode a bike. Said he could always tell because cyclists have better observation skills.
It's got nothing to do with how the cyclist is riding or his position and everything to do with the fact that both drivers ignored more than one clear sign and the second driver followed the first driver overtaking without checking he has a clear line of sight and the way is clear...
It is victim blaming. You're an experienced cyclist, some are not, that's why there are signs. It's the classic "she asked for it coz of what she was wearing" attitude when in fact this is entirely the driver's fault. Besides the fact there were plenty of signs on the run up... Cones or no cones, signs or no signs, the twat should have looked before he overtook.I disagree, yes the drivers are at fault, but the cyclist could have done better to protect themselves. The cyclist tempted the drivers onto overtaking by poor positioning. You may scream that this is victim blaming and you are probably right, but I would rather not see the cyclist squashed under a vehicle claiming in their dying breath that they are right, it would be better to force the vehicles to wait. This is the same way as not letting my daughter walk home alone at night though an unlit park, entirely legal and we would all love to live in a society where it could happen, but in reality crazy. A simple case of self preservation and risk reduction.
It is victim blaming. You're an experienced cyclist, some are not, that's why there are signs. It's the classic "she asked for it coz of what she was wearing" attitude when in fact this is entirely the driver's fault. Besides the fact there were plenty of signs on the run up... Cones or no cones, signs or no signs, the twat should have looked before he overtook.
I disagree, yes the drivers are at fault, but the cyclist could have done better to protect themselves. The cyclist tempted the drivers onto overtaking by poor positioning. You may scream that this is victim blaming and you are probably right, but I would rather not see the cyclist squashed under a vehicle claiming in their dying breath that they are right, it would be better to force the vehicles to wait. This is the same way as not letting my daughter walk home alone at night though an unlit park, entirely legal and we would all love to live in a society where it could happen, but in reality crazy. A simple case of self preservation and risk reduction.
I disagree, yes the drivers are at fault, but the cyclist could have done better to protect themselves. The cyclist tempted the drivers onto overtaking by poor positioning. You may scream that this is victim blaming and you are probably right, but I would rather not see the cyclist squashed under a vehicle claiming in their dying breath that they are right, it would be better to force the vehicles to wait. This is the same way as not letting my daughter walk home alone at night though an unlit park, entirely legal and we would all love to live in a society where it could happen, but in reality crazy. A simple case of self preservation and risk reduction.