cycle helmet - no
appropriate clothes - yes
light-cloured clothes - not consciously
reflective clothing - unless it's too warm
lights - yes
rear reflector - no
pedal reflector - yes
keep to segregated side of cycle tracks - not really, as the pedestrians don't and it's more logical to queitly go around them than head straight for them screaming 'you're on the wrong side of the segregated path'
cycle on pavement - I have done this when riding with my son; the parents you see riding in the road with the child on the pavement look very silly IMO. In my area a lot of pavement is now legal for cycling anyway.
pass on left side of bus - never
keep both hands on handlebars except when signalling or changing gears - or adjusting lights, GPS, drinking, or various other things
never ride more than two abreast - true
not ride close behind another vehicle - except when stopped at traffic lights
not carry anything which will affect balance - once or twice I have done, and then I keep off the main roads
ride under the influence of drink - not sure exactly what this means, but I don't really get drunk
obey traffic signs and traffic lights - most of the time, not always though. I ignored the 'no right turn' sign here once:
http://maps.google.c...,333.68,,0,9.38 (note how the right turn is actually a signed cycle route, and cyclists are supposed to dismount, cross the road,when it makes more sense to just turn right) Also generally ignore 'cyclists dismount' signs, although these have no legal force.
cross the stop line when the traffic light is red - I've gone through empty pelican crossings a few times, after the pedestrians have crossed (this does seem to wind car drivers up), but also it makes sense to cross the stop line when the ASL box is full or if there isn't one - the space between the stop line and the bumps marking the pedestrian crossing are a good place to stop.
Do not ride across a pelican, puffin or zebra crossing. Dismount and wheel your cycle across. - I have ridden across pelican crossings a few times, it seems a bit silly to have 'shared use' pavement on both sides and then dismount on the crossing.
From what I've seen I'm less lawless than average - I don't really ride on the pavement or go through red lights, but then the enforcement of these issues varies from area to area. In London things are a bit different, I am more careful there, although I was riding somewhere near Waterloo Bridge, pulled up at a red light which three motorists proceeded to go through, and then thought 'sod it', and went with them....