Tired
Active Member
Afternoon all.
First off, I don't ride.
However all the girls that keep their horses at ours do. One of them had an 'incident' that she was recounting to me, when out hacking when she encountered an HGV.
The short version is, she was riding, heard something coming. Stuck her right hand out and moved it up and down to tell the vehicle to slow down. He didn't, blasted past her, she was ok, no real harm done. Driver still sounds like a bit of an arse to me but there we go.
I questioned her arm signal though, as that actually means "I am slowing down" not "I want you to slow down".
Or at least, that's what it means in the Highway Code, both theory and all 3 practical driving tests I've sat, as well as my cycling proficiency test from primary school.
The girl was adamant however, that the BHS rider training teaches it as she was using it. Can anyone here clarify? Are there any representatives of the BHS, or any instructors here that can confirm this? Seems odd that different road users are taught different meanings of the same signals?
Sorry if this has been covered before, I'd imagine it probably has.
First off, I don't ride.
However all the girls that keep their horses at ours do. One of them had an 'incident' that she was recounting to me, when out hacking when she encountered an HGV.
The short version is, she was riding, heard something coming. Stuck her right hand out and moved it up and down to tell the vehicle to slow down. He didn't, blasted past her, she was ok, no real harm done. Driver still sounds like a bit of an arse to me but there we go.
I questioned her arm signal though, as that actually means "I am slowing down" not "I want you to slow down".
Or at least, that's what it means in the Highway Code, both theory and all 3 practical driving tests I've sat, as well as my cycling proficiency test from primary school.
The girl was adamant however, that the BHS rider training teaches it as she was using it. Can anyone here clarify? Are there any representatives of the BHS, or any instructors here that can confirm this? Seems odd that different road users are taught different meanings of the same signals?
Sorry if this has been covered before, I'd imagine it probably has.