hackbike 666
Guest
No I wouldn't want to tar all drivers with the same brush.There are some good eggs out there.
Sorry, but why? Out of tribal loyalty? Ok, I wasn't there, but I stand by my first assessment - that from everything I see and my experience of how roads & black ice work, 2-3ft out from the kerb was the safest, as well as the most considerate, place to be.Crackle said:you have to assume that Maggers chose the right line
Origamist said:A two month hiatus and look what I come back to… plus ça change!
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I wouldn't. If he'd 'ridden that stretch in a secondary position and had suffered a similarly close pass' I'd have been 100% on his side. The reason I'm less gung-ho on his behalf is because it seems to me his riding was a contributory factor in what happened, and that the kind of attitude it at least appears to exemplify makes life more difficult for us, as well as for other road users.Origamist said:If Magnatom had ridden that stretch in a secondary position and had suffered a similarly close pass the same people who are “constructively criticising” him would be squealing at him to ride in primary, or in the gutter, or even more to right, etc etc etc.
Bollo said:Yeah! O's back. I was worried you'd gone for good. That's a fine-looking cedilla you've got there.
And just to prove its not tribal, I'm going to agree with your last post!
swee said:If he'd 'ridden that stretch in a secondary position and had suffered a similarly close pass' I'd have been 100% on his side. The reason I'm less gung-ho on his behalf is because it seems to me his riding was a contributory factor in what happened, and that the kind of attitude it at least appears to exemplify makes life more difficult for us, as well as for other road users.
By the way, welcome back, easy on 'squealing' and the like, eh? There's no call for it...it just sours what can and should be a perfectly reasonable discussion.
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swee said:If he'd 'ridden that stretch in a secondary position and had suffered a similarly close pass' I'd have been 100% on his side. The reason I'm less gung-ho on his behalf is because it seems to me his riding was a contributory factor in what happened, and that the kind of attitude it at least appears to exemplify makes life more difficult for us, as well as for other road users.
By the way, welcome back, easy on 'squealing' and the like, eh? There's no call for it...it just sours what can and should be a perfectly reasonable discussion.
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Origamist said:I think you've missed the thrust of my post. Riding in a secondary position could also have contributed to a close pass.
How so?
The fact that this happens to be your favoured coping strategy in this instance is neither here nor there.
'coping strategy' strikes me as uncomfortably close to 'squealing'. Pejorative and uncalled for.
"Squealing" sums up some of some of the responses on here. What's more, the thread is littered with examples that are not of the "perfectly reasonable" type.
True. Don't make it right tho', do it?
Good to be back, thanks.
BentMikey said:Why not be honest and blunt, and tell us who's "squealing"?
I never said I could. I can't. But, again, not the point.beanzontoast said:I'm not sure I'd have handled that layout any differently / 'better' than Mag did.
Well, which of us could 'be sure'? But that's not the question. The question is, 'could it have been handled better?' And to that question, the answer seems to me to be yes.
Haven't we all had at least one near miss when we were sure we'd done the right thing? You can line up 100 cyclists, get 99 of them to agree on the 'correct' approach to a given road layout and still get knocked off following their advice, because road users of all kinds are unpredicatable and make mistakes.
All true, all irrelevant.
If you can keep totally calm, feel, say and do nothing when you've just been near-missed, I admire you for that.