Sick of cars! Lack of indicating, pavement mounting,lazy drivers etc etc

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BorderReiver

Veteran
Driving (often badly) is seen as a right rather than a privilege. The driving test needs to be made harder and repeated at regular intervals (10 years? 5 years?). It should also be a requirement to pass a medical- a proper one, not just to see if you are still upright and warm. Simple way to reduce the number of drivers on the road and improve the quality of the ones that are left.
 

jayonabike

Powered by caffeine & whisky
Location
Hertfordshire
That can't be Accys bike, it's upright.
 

Profpointy

Legendary Member
Errr no!!! She was stoopid. I need (and have) an intelligent partner to do the thinking for the household

There was a tale from another newsgroup (appologies if it was someone here) where the poster owned an old scammell or some such army truck and someone parked across his drive "for only a minute". His response was "up to you mate" and he let the handbrake off and climbed out of the cab as the truck very slowly satrted to roll down the drive. The parked car was moved pretty quickly.
 

martint235

Dog on a bike
Location
Welling
There was a tale from another newsgroup (appologies if it was someone here) where the poster owned an old scammell or some such army truck and someone parked across his drive "for only a minute". His response was "up to you mate" and he let the handbrake off and climbed out of the cab as the truck very slowly satrted to roll down the drive. The parked car was moved pretty quickly.
I'm a poor civil servant, my drive isn't big enough for a Scammell.
 

pauldavid

Veteran
I see no problem with that per se, but where did you get a car that runs on water?

I havent got a car that runs on water, but you already knew that your just being a bit of an smarty!

It runs on good old fashioned fossil fuels, and it runs lovely thank you.
 
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Brandane

Legendary Member
Location
Costa Clyde
Totally agree. There is a woman 2 doors down from me who seemingly drives everywhere. A few weeks back, I was doing a bit of gardening in my front garden. In the 2 hours that I was out there she must have made at least 5 short journeys, where she was gone for less than 10 minutes on most of them.
Drug dealer delivering her phone orders? She could always do it by bike, but is that tax deductible?
 

tyred

Squire
Location
Ireland
This thread reminds me I must book the Lamborghini in for a service. There is a little hesitation when you floor it above 100MPH.
If she was driving a black BMW I would tend to agree. But it is a blue Corsa, and she must be 60-odd years old. Maybe the drugs are sonatogen?

It's really irritating when you leave your lovely Corsa in for a service and you get a BMW courtesy car. xx(
 

Psycolist

NINJA BYKALIST
Location
North Essex
It's coincidental that I have seen this thread today. I was driven to a funeral today by an old work colleague. I noticed while making our way out of town, that he was very competent at letting other traffic know what his intentions were. Eye contact, indicators and general road positioning. I commented to him that as a cyclist I found drivers not doing so well in this area when driving around our town centre. It turned out that he had recently been on a "driving awareness course" that avoided him getting points on his licence. His view was, that as with everything in life, 'familiarity breeds contempt' and that people doing a regular short journey, that is repeated many times, tend to switch off their normal driving skills and rely on instinct to get them to and fro. This is born out by statistics showing that the majority of minor RTA's happen within 3 miles of the home address. He was very open about him being one of these 'robots', as he put it, until the shock of being found speeding, made him realise what he was doing. The cyclist, being so vulnerable, may not be so liable to fall into this trance like state, but with so many journeys taken by car being with only the driver on board, I can understand how this is happening. I can be at work all day, and be on automatic pilot, with out really having to think about what I am doing, I can get through an entire days work, and then when asked what I have been doing today by Mrs Psycolist, often, cant tell her a dam thing I did. I have never been a car driver, but I see this type of driving in family members and friends all the time. I usually try to bring it into the conversation without appearing to be judgemental, but it never really seems to sink in or have any lasting effect. When I ride my bike, I ALWAYS make sure other road users and pedestrians know what I am intending, where I am going, and I try to make sure, with eye contact, that they have seen me. I still have cars pull out on me as though I am invisible, pedestrians walk off the pavement in front of me, and have their dogs and/children to walk into my path of travel. When riding, road, trail or cycle path, I have learned to assume that every one else is a d%*k head, that they do not know what they are doing, or where they are going, and to expect the unexpected. 50 years of riding, off and on, and I am still in one piece, just about.
:biggrin:
 

gavroche

Getting old but not past it
Location
North Wales
Not too bad here in Wales, apart from the A55 at 5pm or week ends when all townies from Liverpool and Manchester invade us.
 
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Accy cyclist

Accy cyclist

Legendary Member
An elderly disabled woman i know rides around on a mobility scooter. One of her routes is constantly blocked by some staff who work at a car home. It's a busy road so they say they have to park their vehicles on the pavement to save their wing mirrors and stuff,even though most leave their mirrors out. One day she saw a gap on the pavement so she tried to squeeze through, scratching a car as she did so. The owner of the car saw her scratch his car. He ran out threatening this and that, demanding her name and address. I told her to contact the police and see what they said. According to her they said she'd done nothing wrong as the car shouldn't have been blocking a public highway. So why are they still using the pavement next to the care home as a car park?
 
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