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#16 |
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Guest
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On Wed, 21 May 2008 14:00:02 +0100 someone who may be Mark
<i@getlotsofspamthankstoplus.net> wrote this:- >For example yesterday, where I used to >ride closer to the kerb and had drivers overtake too close, I got a >driver following me with his bumper less than 6 inches from my back >wheel whilst revving his engine. I'm afraid this brought out my >stubborn streak and I kept him there rather than pull in to let him >past when safe. Quite right too. The secondary position should only be adopted if it will not increase danger. That condition was not met in your case. Had the driver dropped back and stopped revving his engine then it would have been time to re-evaluate. -- David Hansen, Edinburgh I will *always* explain revoked encryption keys, unless RIP prevents me http://www.opsi.gov.uk/acts/acts2000/00023--e.htm#54 |
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#17 |
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On Wed, 21 May 2008 07:06:56 +0000, Ian Smith wrote:
> And all this occurs within three miles of my previous substantially > trouble-free commute. Sometimes, for an easy life I cycle from work > to where I used to work then on to home from there - it's 60% further, > but it's much less troublesome. I do the same since being hit by a bus in town on the 1.5 mile route to work. The routes I now do are much better. (un)fortunately it seems that the longer your route the better it gets - I'm up to 20 miles now! peter |
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#18 |
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Paul Boyd wrote:
> > I'm glad to have escaped Bristol. The general standard of driving there > is appalling - very aggressive and no-one gives a stuff about any other > road user, no matter what type. > Hmm - whenever I go home from London to Bristol I am appalled by the driving. They don't seem to expect to use the brake. That said my worst experience locally is to be signalling right on the right side of the lane and for someone to accelerate and overtake on the wrong side of the road. Happens about once in two years. Lucky I hear them coming. Paul -- CTC Right to Ride Rep. for Richmond upon Thames |
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#19 |
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Mark wrote:
<snip> > > Narrow roads and near schools seem to be the worst places and, > unfortunately, there are a lot of those on my way to work :-( > <snip> I work in a school in the SE and have an 11 mile commute mostly along narrow country roads and ending in a secondary school in a Surrey village. The narrow roads are awkward because there is no room, but somehow the traffic seems to manage. The problem areas are the approaches to the school ("I have a Chelsea Tractor so I go first you git-on-a-bike") and the built-up area at the beginning of the commute where people are negotiating road junctions and roundabouts. I have now been knocked off twice by drivers not seeing me at the same bl**dy roundabout. The only good thing about all this is the speed with which I have managed to upgrade from a Dawes Audax to a Pinarello Sestriere. Terry |
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#20 |
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"Mark" <i@getlotsofspamthankstoplus.net> wrote in message news:gr68345rd7qbmgcqom729t2ofpj7rrkr1g@4ax.com... > I'm afraid this brought out my > stubborn streak and I kept him there rather than pull in to let him > past when safe. > Hmm not sure I would have done that myself. I would rather pull in where safe and let the bastard pass and thus be well away from me, rather than fuel his anger even more by deliberatly holding him up. |
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#21 |
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Hah, you're not a real cyclist until you wake up in the ambulance
wondering who your are and what day it is. Kevin |
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#22 |
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Kevin Dublin wrote:
> Hah, you're not a real cyclist until you wake up in the ambulance > wondering who your are and what day it is. > > Kevin Almost did that 15 years ago - rode into the side of a house whilst on holiday in Belgium (long story involving an ice cream van). Broken nose in two places and blood everywhere! They have great casulty departments in Belgium. |
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#23 |
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naked_draughtsman wrote:
> On Wed, 21 May 2008 07:06:56 +0000, Ian Smith wrote: >>And all this occurs within three miles of my previous substantially >>trouble-free commute. Sometimes, for an easy life I cycle from work >>to where I used to work then on to home from there - it's 60% further, >>but it's much less troublesome. > > I do the same since being hit by a bus in town on the 1.5 mile route to > work. > The routes I now do are much better. (un)fortunately it seems that the > longer your route the better it gets - I'm up to 20 miles now! My theory, fwiw, is that there are roads on which drivers don't expect to get held up by cyclists, and will do anything not to be. On other apparently similar roads, they expect delay and are more relaxed and less aggressive as a result. Generally busier roads are in the first category, regardless of their width or speed limit. The effect may also be connected with drivers' terror of being seen to hold up other drivers. Colin McKenzie -- No-one has ever proved that cycle helmets make cycling any safer at the population level, and anyway cycling is about as safe per mile as walking. Make an informed choice - visit www.cyclehelmets.org. |
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#24 |
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Colin McKenzie wrote: > My theory, fwiw, is that there are roads on which drivers don't expect > to get held up by cyclists, and will do anything not to be. On other > apparently similar roads, they expect delay and are more relaxed and > less aggressive as a result. > > Generally busier roads are in the first category, regardless of their > width or speed limit. The effect may also be connected with drivers' > terror of being seen to hold up other drivers. I get the impression the most aggressive drivers are those that don't have a queue behind them. Some of the worst bits of driving are when there is no one else around. e.g. a few year ago when I was on a dual carriage way with two lanes going in my direction, some idiot decided I was in his way, yet we were the only two vehicles in sight. I also find drivers more aggressive on weekend mornings than weekday mornings. Martin. |
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#25 |
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On Wed, 21 May 2008, Colin McKenzie <news@proof-read.co.uk> wrote:
> naked_draughtsman wrote: > > On Wed, 21 May 2008 07:06:56 +0000, Ian Smith wrote: > >> > >> And all this occurs within three miles of my previous > >> substantially trouble-free commute. Sometimes, for an easy life > >> I cycle from work to where I used to work then on to home from > >> there - it's 60% further, but it's much less troublesome. > > > > I do the same since being hit by a bus in town on the 1.5 mile > > route to work. > > My theory, fwiw, is that there are roads on which drivers don't > expect to get held up by cyclists, and will do anything not to be. > On other apparently similar roads, they expect delay and are more > relaxed and less aggressive as a result. I think this is right - my old (good) route was on country roads between two smallish towns. No-one could have expected to blast down it - they are almost bound to meet a horse or pedestrians in teh road or something slow-moving. My new route goes from a junction of the M25 along an A-road to a junction with the dual-carriageway A3 and on into a larger town. I'm convinced some drivers 'cut the corner' from A3 to M25 (or vice versa) and get irate when their 'cleverness' doesn't work and they find themselves behind a 12mph bicycle when they could have been doing 70 on the trunk roads. Others seem to have the mindset that once they get out of the town they'll be on the A3 and properly on their way - forgetting the stretch of narrow and busy A-road. They get irate when they can't hit motorway speeds as soon as they are out of the town. > The effect may also be connected with drivers' terror of being seen > to hold up other drivers. That too - the road is busy enough that if anyone slows for a bike they will immediately accumulate a line behind them. That seems to be absolutely taboo. regards, Ian SMith -- |\ /| no .sig |o o| |/ \| |
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#26 |
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Colin McKenzie <news@proof-read.co.uk> writes:
>My theory, fwiw, is that there are roads on which drivers don't expect >to get held up by cyclists, and will do anything not to be. On other >apparently similar roads, they expect delay and are more relaxed and >less aggressive as a result. I've also found that if drivers have to take a diversion onto a slower road they are more impatient. Earlier this year the bigger faster road parallel to my commute was closed, and traffic diverted. The road I commute on is fairly wide, 30mph, a through route but with parked cars, busses, and a school with lollipop men. Around 9am it does move but with the additional diverted traffic we were basically in a queue with everybody moving at the speed of the slowest vehicle (usually a bus). Normally I have very few problems, but that week I suddenly was being overtaken by cars that then needed to brake sharply when meeting the end of the queue in front of me and things like that. Maybe these were people from further away, who would normally arrive along the dual carriage way, and then travel along the closed road at 50mph on the way through to somewhere else, and having to do this city stretch didn't really fit in with that. Roos |
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#27 |
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In news:48348eb3$0$58078$c5fe31e7@reader.usenet4all.se,
Steve C <sc99cs@googlemail.com> tweaked the Babbage-Engine to tell us: > Dave Larrington wrote: >> In news:48333d83$0$58080$c5fe31e7@reader.usenet4all.se, >> Steve C <sc99cs@googlemail.com> tweaked the Babbage-Engine to tell >> us: >>> naked_draughtsman wrote: >>> >>>> Maybe you live in an area where car drivers are slightly more >>>> tolerant of cyclists <g> >>>> >>>> peter >>> I live in the sticks (Telford, Shropshire) and to be fair most >>> motorists are really considerate, although we have our fair share of >>> cretins as well... >> >> The evidence suggest that many of your cretins are gainfully >> employed by the local ecilop... >> > > That's the place as made famous by Daniel Cadden... And PC Mark Milton: http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/...ire/4669594.stm -- Dave Larrington <http://www.legslarry.beerdrinkers.co.uk> Ernesto, give me that Kit-Kat, or I will kill you. |
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#28 |
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I think I now count myself as a real cyclist.
This morning as I was overtaking a rather fit girl, instead of [1] checking out her @rse I was checking her rear wheel to try to find where the strange noise was coming from. [2] Also I disarmed a booby trap. There is a narrow gate allowing cyclists access from the French embassy to the Hyde Park cycle lanes. Someone had wedged a large stick in the side sticking out into the cycle path in order (I guess) to catch in the spokes of an unsuspecting cyclist. But I was disappointed I missed this by a couple of hours: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/ne...icle3965065.ece LN [1] Well, alright, maybe not "instead of" ;-) [2] It was slightly buckled and was rubbing against the brakes. |
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#29 |
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On Wed, 21 May 2008 20:01:46 +0100, Terry Duckmanton
<terry@duckmanton.notthisbit.eu> wrote: >Mark wrote: ><snip> >> >> Narrow roads and near schools seem to be the worst places and, >> unfortunately, there are a lot of those on my way to work :-( >> ><snip> > >I work in a school in the SE and have an 11 mile commute mostly along >narrow country roads and ending in a secondary school in a Surrey >village. The narrow roads are awkward because there is no room, but >somehow the traffic seems to manage. The problem areas are the >approaches to the school ("I have a Chelsea Tractor so I go first you >git-on-a-bike") and the built-up area at the beginning of the commute >where people are negotiating road junctions and roundabouts. I have now >been knocked off twice by drivers not seeing me at the same bl**dy >roundabout. The only good thing about all this is the speed with which I >have managed to upgrade from a Dawes Audax to a Pinarello Sestriere. I've still got a cheap hybrid - obviously I haven't been hit enough ;-) -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Owing to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking most articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. See http://improve-usenet.org |
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#30 |
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On Wed, 21 May 2008 20:13:13 +0100, "Adam Lea" <asrl07@yahoo.co.uk>
wrote: > >"Mark" <i@getlotsofspamthankstoplus.net> wrote in message >news:gr68345rd7qbmgcqom729t2ofpj7rrkr1g@4ax.com... >> I'm afraid this brought out my >> stubborn streak and I kept him there rather than pull in to let him >> past when safe. >> > >Hmm not sure I would have done that myself. I would rather pull in where >safe and let the bastard pass and thus be well away from me, rather than >fuel his anger even more by deliberatly holding him up. I've done both. It depends on the situation I guess. In this case the aggression seemed only mild compared to what I sometimes experience. Maybe I am beginning to become desensitized! -- (\__/) M. (='.'=) Owing to the amount of spam posted via googlegroups and (")_(") their inaction to the problem. I am blocking most articles posted from there. If you wish your postings to be seen by everyone you will need use a different method of posting. See http://improve-usenet.org |
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