ester
Not slacking multitasking
the amount that die at the hands of drivers would refute that.
I've complained to a club who hold non-competitive time trials around here on a Tues evening over the summer. Not horse related but in slow traffic I've been undertaken by one, had them swerve out in front of me at junctions and had them swerve around each other to overtake on busy roads without even a glance over their shoulder.As a cyclist, a pretty whizzy one at that, and one that is regularly part of a Pelton I am astounded at the stories on here. Complain to their Clubs. The will have the name on their jerseys. Or better still, complain to British Cycling. Complaints get handled pretty quickly and the penalty will be loss of insurance for the Club if they don't behave - in many instances.
We have to abide by the rules of the road. We are also supposed, in Groups, if part of a Club, have a ride leader and they are supposed to instruct to slow down past horses. I am a ride leader, it is part of my briefing. As an ex horse person, this is one thing I stress to extreme. It is very easy to get bogged down in chasing Strava segments but it should never be at the cost of safety.
we need to add to the law by taking action against cyclists who use roads when there is a cycle track by the side of it. (nothing to do with horses)Oh, all too easily believable, cyclists are above the law and invincible....
I’d have been even more succinct than you.I would not have been able to compose such an eloquent response. Mine would have been more like "do you intend to take your teeth home with you or leave them here by the roadside?"
Oblivious walkers stepping out in front of youWhat are the reasons for a cyclist not using a cycle path ? - genuinely interested. Our LA have spent millions on cycleways in my area but they never seem overly busy.
well this cycle path is lovely. There is no risk whatsoever to a cyclist. In fact there is far less risk to them than from cars on the road. If cyclists are unwilling to use them what is the point of the tax payer funding them? total waste of money. The traffic has suffered badly on that particular road both whilst it was constructed and with the now much narrower road. They are still suffering due to the failure of cyclists to use the facily that has, at considerable cost been constructed for them. No bins, no rubbish, perfect surface, very very few pedestrians, no driveways. I have cycled on a lot of cycle paths in towns and cities and this one is lovely. There is no way I would risk riding in traffic on the road anywhere when there is a cycle path to protect me from the traffic. Strangely around here (ie within a 30 mile radius of me) the cycle paths have lovely surfaces, a pot hole is rare. The roads OTOH are a mass of pot holes and uneven surfaces.Pretty much every time someone puts up a wHy areN't thEy uSing the cyCLepath photo on twitter the cyclists come along and explain
So round here:
crossing driveways/dropped kerbs with no clear view of sight to see if anyone will be exiting driveways, sometimes for extra fun these sometimes come with give way markings for the cyclist at every driveway when there is one every 15 meters.
not having priority at junctions leading onto the path, often t-junctions but going across motorway slip roads is fun too. .
vehicles parked on path
round here 9/10 its actually a shared use path and suggested speed limit is usually 15mph, in reality anything more than 12 can be problematic. See also pedestrians/dogs etc, particularly fun in the pitch black with not a reflective between them.
insufficient on-ramps to access the path (sometimes you come off for a parked vehicle and if you're not a keen bunny hopper you can't get back on) poorly positioned off ramps where you have to rejoin the road are also an issue too.
path on one side of the road only which would mean crossing the road twice to access it
glass/nails/screws/holes/brambles/nettles/wet leaves/council have resurfaced road and the path is covered in grit for 9 months (true story) always more of an issue if there is no grass 'protective verge'
Oh bin day/night before is always fun too.
Ice (I've been hollered at for not using a path very obviously covered in ice)
Currently in a lose lose in that the same people that don't want me cycling on the A10 also don't want a housing developer ('wasting our money') to build me a bridge with a greenway either side that means I won't have to.
The vast majority of people on bikes are running a risk assessment on where/how to ride while just trying to get somewhere, I have an 8 mile commute through villages and it is rare I complete it in either direction without at least one reportable incident. I definitely have more bike incidents than I do horse ones and it's sad as I love it but it does take the shine off. I was quite upset last year when someone ran down 4 cyclists on one of my favourite 'quiet' routes.
They built 2 bridleway bridges over the new A14 and I've had people recently say they've never seen anyone on them when they cost ££- while they are driving at 70mph underneath themthey get used a lot!
The other off road routes we have they are also having issues with muggings from e-bikes so that's fun too.
I have also had my own f ups, had one incident with a lambourghini on a long ride in essex once, thankfully bike bailed me out somehowand they just asked if I was ok.
Some paths are lovely but IME they are few and far between and are often a compromise. Some of the not great ones I will use because my risk assessment is that the road is a total no go. Some I use because the road surface condition is even worse. I also take in the amount of road traffic into the equation, I tend to do my commute outside of peak times which helps.
Hopefully that helps!
why can't cyclists be more generous to vulnerable horse riders?would love to see a google street view
what a shame you can't be more generous towards other vulnerable road users when you are driving.
I've an equally long list of reasons why cyclist's don't pull ingiven that they aren't tractors or horses.
I am VERY genuine in my question as to why they don't pull in for cars. Totally genuine. I do. It would never occur to me not to. If there is a wide part on the left coming up it is easy enough just to pull in and slow down to let people past.I don't think you really want to know why they don't pull in, you will just poo poo it like you have with everything else. I made the list for Dam as I thought they were geniune in their question.
As I said everyone makes mistakes, most people learn from them even cyclists. I have incidents with them too but I try and educate and certainly don't turn them in to a single group of people like most seem to manage.
I can see the problems with painted lines which are a lot more dicey. The ones I am referring to, and am annoyed about, are proper cycles tracks away from the traffic and perfectly surfaced ie a car would have to leave the road and deliberately mount the cycle track so the cyclist is totally safe from traffic. We have considerable maintenance on cycle tracks in our area, a lot more than is spent on the roads.One thing not mentioned, I don’t think, is the method of separating the cyclists from cars. If it is just a painted line, which it often is, it is not very safe at all. They seem to be better on the continent at proper separation with a line of kerbs or whatever. Round us we have some tracks that are well used and separate, and others that are not and people do seem to prefer the road to these. But I think they are old, narrow, and poorly surfaced, so if you want to commute speedily the road is preferable.
Called murder lanes/strips for a reason, cars pass you much closer as they consider not being in your lane to be sufficient. They also usually are full of debris and recommended road positioning would be pretty much on the line not in the lane. I’m not sure if they or shared use paths are worse for putting cyclists in danger because drivers are annoyed that they’re not doing what they should be doing. I’ve only had once serious punishment passOne thing not mentioned, I don’t think, is the method of separating the cyclists from cars. If it is just a painted line, which it often is, it is not very safe at all. They seem to be better on the continent at proper separation with a line of kerbs or whatever. Round us we have some tracks that are well used and separate, and others that are not and people do seem to prefer the road to these. But I think they are old, narrow, and poorly surfaced, so if you want to commute speedily the road is preferable.
I have a question about Glasgow as that’s where I spend the most time. Are cyclists supposed to follow traffic laws with regard to lights etc? And why are so many on the pavement? Is that not illegal?When I lived in Edinburgh, the city had cycle lanes. Brilliant. Trouble was, they were shared with.....buses. That was ingenious. I don't know how it is now -- the city has upgraded its cycle infractucture....hopefully they've made it less sh1t.
Glasgow's cycle infrastructure is comedically terrible. There are separate cycle lanes, but they are only for short-ish stretches, so you have to dodge cars anyway. I wish they'd put more lights on the bloody canal; that's a great off road link, but dodgy at night.
Clearly!You're in Glasgow? We should have a pint.
They are supposed to follow traffic laws, but they do whatever they want.
Sweet. Leeuz know when you're next over.Clearly!
Not officially yet. Racking up those airline miles though! Doing my visa in spring.
We have that in Cambridge too and some bus overtakes are terrifying, one of the main arteries (to much complaining) has been altered recently to have segregated lanes that I think suffer from the junctions and drives issue and started with some really bad markings like upside down give way triangles.When I lived in Edinburgh, the city had cycle lanes. Brilliant. Trouble was, they were shared with.....buses. That was ingenious. I don't know how it is now -- the city has upgraded its cycle infractucture....hopefully they've made it less sh1t.
Glasgow's cycle infrastructure is comedically terrible. There are separate cycle lanes, but they are only for short-ish stretches, so you have to dodge cars anyway. I wish they'd put more lights on the bloody canal; that's a great off road link, but dodgy at night.