On the ride in this morning, a taxi driver hit the back of my bike as we both moved on, from a stationary position, to a roundabout.
I turned round and shouted "you've just hit me", he starts shouting back saying I pulled out in front of him, more shouting from both of us and he drives off. I get back on the bike and see that the rear wheel is buckled, though still ridable.
If I'd been smarter, I would have got off the bike, walked over to him calmly and discussed the situation in a sensible manner and asked for his details. That's common sense. The problem was the adrenaline kicked in, heart racing, anger and shouting. Which achieved nothing, except a likely trip to the LBS to get the wheel trued.
How do you prevent this from happening? Its easy to say stay calm and be rational, and I'd give the same advise to others, but I find it very hard in practise, especially with aggressive drivers who probably have a strong dislike of cyclists.
I turned round and shouted "you've just hit me", he starts shouting back saying I pulled out in front of him, more shouting from both of us and he drives off. I get back on the bike and see that the rear wheel is buckled, though still ridable.
If I'd been smarter, I would have got off the bike, walked over to him calmly and discussed the situation in a sensible manner and asked for his details. That's common sense. The problem was the adrenaline kicked in, heart racing, anger and shouting. Which achieved nothing, except a likely trip to the LBS to get the wheel trued.
How do you prevent this from happening? Its easy to say stay calm and be rational, and I'd give the same advise to others, but I find it very hard in practise, especially with aggressive drivers who probably have a strong dislike of cyclists.