Hi
After 6 years without a bike and not wanting to waste any more time with the hour long walk to work (each way) every day, I bought a Brompton in Feb 2012 and have been commuting to work on it ever since.
I always thought cycling in central London would be too dangerous and it's proven not to be AS bad as I feared, though it is pretty bad. In my view, 90% of that danger is caused by ignorance and selfishness so I'm attempting to exact a very small change by promoting a good example both as a cyclist and as a pedestrian.
As everyone does, I make mistakes, the main one being pulling out in front of traffic when I've been too hasty and not seen something coming. Though I do pride myself on not falling foul to the 2 stereotypical cycle sins a) running red lights and b) cycling on the pavement (well, except for a 50 yard stretch of pavement that is always empty and next to a road that is so bad it's likely to wreck my bike if I rode over it regularly).
After 6 years without a bike and not wanting to waste any more time with the hour long walk to work (each way) every day, I bought a Brompton in Feb 2012 and have been commuting to work on it ever since.
I always thought cycling in central London would be too dangerous and it's proven not to be AS bad as I feared, though it is pretty bad. In my view, 90% of that danger is caused by ignorance and selfishness so I'm attempting to exact a very small change by promoting a good example both as a cyclist and as a pedestrian.
As everyone does, I make mistakes, the main one being pulling out in front of traffic when I've been too hasty and not seen something coming. Though I do pride myself on not falling foul to the 2 stereotypical cycle sins a) running red lights and b) cycling on the pavement (well, except for a 50 yard stretch of pavement that is always empty and next to a road that is so bad it's likely to wreck my bike if I rode over it regularly).