Flying_Monkey
Recyclist
- Location
- Odawa
I'll start this in the form of a little cycling safety quiz (answers at the end, no cheating):
1. You are at a crossroads. You'd like to go straight on but the road ahead is a one-way street with a 'no entry' sign. Do you:
a. Get off your bike and walk it down the side of the one-way street;
b. Turn either left or right and find an alternate route; or
c. Blithely cycle straight ahead anyway?
2. You are on a busy street which is filled with motor vehicle traffic. Do you:
a. Make your way carefully up the inside of the cars and trucks;
b. Overtake with caution on the outside;
c. Switch onto the pavement / sidewalk?
3. You come to a set of traffic lights. Red is against you. Do you:
a. Stop and wait;
b. Proceed carefully in case any traffic is coming from either side;
c. Cycle straight on regardless of the light and the traffic?
4. Approaching a junction of two major roads, you realise that the place you are going is just a mile up the road to your right and on the right of that road. Do you:
a. Turn right with the traffic and then signal and turn right when your destination approaches;
b. Turn right and then stop and cross the road at the nearest crossing to your destination;
c. Turn right and cycle against the traffic so you don't have to cross the road when you get to your destination?
5. When you want to turn, do you:
a. Make sure it is safe, signal appropriately, and then turn;
b. Look around and then turn;
c. Just turn whenever you feel like it?
Well, if your answers were all c's, you are clearly an experienced Tokyo cyclist. As far as bikes are concerned, whatever the law says, pretty much anything goes. And although it's disconcerting, there's absolutely no point in worrying about what everyone else is doing. And after a while, you start to do the same - as a rule I try to avoid doing all the c's above, but at the same time, I have done all of the at one time or another. What's more, I have never (in months of cycling here over the years) ever seen an accident involving a bicycle. There's absolutely no cycling 'infrastructure' in terms of separated routes etc., although the parking facilities for bikes at train stations are amazing. And, in the largest urban area on Planet Earth, it all seems to work. I'm not sure what it can teach anywhere else though - it largely relies on the basic politeness of people. So that's the UK out...
1. You are at a crossroads. You'd like to go straight on but the road ahead is a one-way street with a 'no entry' sign. Do you:
a. Get off your bike and walk it down the side of the one-way street;
b. Turn either left or right and find an alternate route; or
c. Blithely cycle straight ahead anyway?
2. You are on a busy street which is filled with motor vehicle traffic. Do you:
a. Make your way carefully up the inside of the cars and trucks;
b. Overtake with caution on the outside;
c. Switch onto the pavement / sidewalk?
3. You come to a set of traffic lights. Red is against you. Do you:
a. Stop and wait;
b. Proceed carefully in case any traffic is coming from either side;
c. Cycle straight on regardless of the light and the traffic?
4. Approaching a junction of two major roads, you realise that the place you are going is just a mile up the road to your right and on the right of that road. Do you:
a. Turn right with the traffic and then signal and turn right when your destination approaches;
b. Turn right and then stop and cross the road at the nearest crossing to your destination;
c. Turn right and cycle against the traffic so you don't have to cross the road when you get to your destination?
5. When you want to turn, do you:
a. Make sure it is safe, signal appropriately, and then turn;
b. Look around and then turn;
c. Just turn whenever you feel like it?
Well, if your answers were all c's, you are clearly an experienced Tokyo cyclist. As far as bikes are concerned, whatever the law says, pretty much anything goes. And although it's disconcerting, there's absolutely no point in worrying about what everyone else is doing. And after a while, you start to do the same - as a rule I try to avoid doing all the c's above, but at the same time, I have done all of the at one time or another. What's more, I have never (in months of cycling here over the years) ever seen an accident involving a bicycle. There's absolutely no cycling 'infrastructure' in terms of separated routes etc., although the parking facilities for bikes at train stations are amazing. And, in the largest urban area on Planet Earth, it all seems to work. I'm not sure what it can teach anywhere else though - it largely relies on the basic politeness of people. So that's the UK out...