winjim
Straddle the line, discord and rhyme
An interesting study into perception and expectation this morning.
I was early to work today so there were a few more cyclists on my route than usual. One in particular caught my eye. I was waiting at the lights where I join the dual carriageway, having filtered towards the front so I was now two cars back and would safely make it through on the next phase of the lights. A cyclist comes through on my right, weaves through the cars in front and plonks himself right at the head of the queue, over the stop line. Now that's not a position I'd choose myself but neither is it the worst crime in the world. However, I also notice he has a massive camera stuck right on top of his helmet. Two thoughts spring to mind. Firstly, he may have weaved past me but I bet I'll 'ave him on the dual carriageway. Secondly, I'm just going to keep my eye on him and see what he gets up to. That weaving manoeuvre and road positioning combined with the camera have got my spidey senses tingling.
So the lights change and off we go. This section of dual carriageway is two lane, 30mph limit, lots of traffic lights, so if you're canny with lane changes and filtering, and know where to rest and where to sprint, you can make good progress through the traffic. We can't have got more than 50yds down the road, matey with the camera is in lane one. The traffic in that lane is slowing, so he takes a big swing out to the right, towards a narrowly closing gap as a car approaches from behind in lane two. I can't remember if he looked but he certainly didn't signal, and I don't know if he was aiming for a filtering position between the lanes or actually trying to join lane two, but the move did look rather sudden and exaggerated to me. Cue the driver of the approaching car sounding the horn and the two of them travel side by side for a short while arguing until the cyclist moves back into secondary position in lane one and the driver pulls away in lane two.
Now I can't say that the incident was definitely the cyclist's fault. I can't say that the driver didn't overreact. I can't even say that during a momentary lapse of concentration I might not have done a similar thing. But what is interesting is that it only took a few minor clues for me to mark the cyclist as someone to keep an eye on, and after I had it took less than a minute for him to become involved in some sort of confrontation, on a road I ride every day filtering and changing lane without incident.
So be mindful of clichéd prejudice, it may be right after all.
I was early to work today so there were a few more cyclists on my route than usual. One in particular caught my eye. I was waiting at the lights where I join the dual carriageway, having filtered towards the front so I was now two cars back and would safely make it through on the next phase of the lights. A cyclist comes through on my right, weaves through the cars in front and plonks himself right at the head of the queue, over the stop line. Now that's not a position I'd choose myself but neither is it the worst crime in the world. However, I also notice he has a massive camera stuck right on top of his helmet. Two thoughts spring to mind. Firstly, he may have weaved past me but I bet I'll 'ave him on the dual carriageway. Secondly, I'm just going to keep my eye on him and see what he gets up to. That weaving manoeuvre and road positioning combined with the camera have got my spidey senses tingling.
So the lights change and off we go. This section of dual carriageway is two lane, 30mph limit, lots of traffic lights, so if you're canny with lane changes and filtering, and know where to rest and where to sprint, you can make good progress through the traffic. We can't have got more than 50yds down the road, matey with the camera is in lane one. The traffic in that lane is slowing, so he takes a big swing out to the right, towards a narrowly closing gap as a car approaches from behind in lane two. I can't remember if he looked but he certainly didn't signal, and I don't know if he was aiming for a filtering position between the lanes or actually trying to join lane two, but the move did look rather sudden and exaggerated to me. Cue the driver of the approaching car sounding the horn and the two of them travel side by side for a short while arguing until the cyclist moves back into secondary position in lane one and the driver pulls away in lane two.
Now I can't say that the incident was definitely the cyclist's fault. I can't say that the driver didn't overreact. I can't even say that during a momentary lapse of concentration I might not have done a similar thing. But what is interesting is that it only took a few minor clues for me to mark the cyclist as someone to keep an eye on, and after I had it took less than a minute for him to become involved in some sort of confrontation, on a road I ride every day filtering and changing lane without incident.
So be mindful of clichéd prejudice, it may be right after all.