Wanna know why some 'routes' are a bad thing?

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Arch

Married to Night Train
Location
Salford, UK
If i want to cycle to the coast, 16 milesd i can.

I go under!!!!!!!!!!!!! this

article-2104902-11DD2BE7000005DC-456_634x386.jpg

Well, I suppose it's good for recumbents....
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
I don't think Matthew was being entirely serious (I hope).


You can never tell. :thumbsup:
 

skudupnorth

Cycling Skoda lover


Imagine the utility cycling uptake if this was indicative of the infrastructure provided?

Keep the annotations, they're full of info.

Just watched with envy :banghead:It would be wonderful to have such a system in the UK but we know it will not happen and the motorist having to give way ??? That will never happen even if it was law !!!!
 

Fnaar

Smutmaster General
Location
Thumberland
On the other hand (though it may not be ideal, of course) the network is largely run by volunteers (I used to be one) and if we wanted the most direct route, we'd use the A roads. Sometimes I use Sustrans paths, sometimes I don't. depends on what sort of journey I'm making, and what sort of experience I want.
 
OP
OP
ComedyPilot

ComedyPilot

Secret Lemonade Drinker
I have no beef with Sustrans, as they have done a lot for cycling.

The whole point of the OP is to demonstrate why we will always have a struggle to get people cycling. No car driver would accept a 60% journey increase as an alternative to current journey length. So it is only understandable that people won't cycle as they don't feel safe on direct routes, and don't like the idea of an already physical task being made harder with unnecessary mileage.

Unless our government invest in the people and build infrastructure that we deserve.
 

Globalti

Legendary Member
Former railways will offer a much quicker route because they went straight across the valleys and through the hills at the average height of the topography.

Former canals will not because they meandered to follow the contour lines, only changing height with reluctance at locks when there was no other choice.
 
D

Deleted member 23692

Guest
The trouble with old rail lines is the massive on-going maintenance cost of bridges etc
 

asterix

Comrade Member
Location
Limoges or York
[QUOTE 2439565, member: 45"]There's one on a new canal in Droitwich, with about four inches clearance for narrow boats. Unavoidable, and better than nothing.[/quote]

Could they not have lowered the canal a bit?
 
On the other hand (though it may not be ideal, of course) the network is largely run by volunteers (I used to be one)
and if we wanted the most direct route, we'd use the A roads.
Sometimes I use Sustrans paths, sometimes I don't. depends on what sort of journey I'm making, and what sort of experience I want.
Firstly Volunteer work in anything is appreciated.
A roads being most direct? Not always. Basingstoke to Reading the A road loops all over the place while the old roman road is a country lane and shorter distance.
Oddly the Sustrans route does not follow the direct route and loops around so much that for a short while on the direct route you go the wrong way along the sustrans route. I can find no reason for the route to go more directly.
Direct cycle from my house to Reading 18 miles, A Roads 22 miles, Sustrans 30 miles.
Problem with the route is that sometimes we want a Sunday ride and sometimes we want a direct commute.
I am with the OP and generally ignore them unless they happen to coincide with the route I choose.
 
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