Come live in Milton Keynes, then! Though, even so, I do find a few things to moan aboutstevecook172001 wrote: The best solution would be a completely segregated road network for cyclists - at least in the cities.
Peter.
Moderator: Peak Moderation
Come live in Milton Keynes, then! Though, even so, I do find a few things to moan aboutstevecook172001 wrote: The best solution would be a completely segregated road network for cyclists - at least in the cities.
I don't know whether there are reasons against it, but it would have been better to have the cars go down and people go up on bridges. I suspect that it is a lot easier to maintain pedestrian and cycle bridges than it is to maintain road ones (as MK and presumably Stevanage will find out in the coming years),RenewableCandy wrote:I was simply too young, and the wrong sex, to be a regular user of underpasses.
Painted cycle lanes are indeed stupid but I have to point out that if you weren't blocking the lane you probably wouldn't get cut up. I'm not justifying either action - just telling you what you already know.stevecook172001 wrote: I get in the centre of the left hand half of a given lane and stay there till I am ready to pull off. If car can get past, that great, if they can't that's tough. The thing is, they know where they are with such an arrangement and, also, if they decide to cut me up, I have plenty of lane to my left to retreat into if necessary. I completely ignore cycle lanes.
The best solution would be a completely segregated road network for cyclists - at least in the cities.
Sorry JSD, but that's not my experience. I am, as I would hope you might guess, an extremely fair user of the public highways. That is to say, I do not consider myself to have any more right of way than any other user; be they on two wheels or four, be they human powered or powered by an internal combustion engine or any other form of assisted locomotion. I simply consider myself to have as much right of way as anyone else.JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Painted cycle lanes are indeed stupid but I have to point out that if you weren't blocking the lane you probably wouldn't get cut up. I'm not justifying either action - just telling you what you already know.stevecook172001 wrote: I get in the centre of the left hand half of a given lane and stay there till I am ready to pull off. If car can get past, that great, if they can't that's tough. The thing is, they know where they are with such an arrangement and, also, if they decide to cut me up, I have plenty of lane to my left to retreat into if necessary. I completely ignore cycle lanes.
The best solution would be a completely segregated road network for cyclists - at least in the cities.
A road is shared space for all users and I think what drives most people to stupidity is thinking that someone else is not playing by the rules.
Driving an older car with drum brakes I usually take downhill stretches of narrow roads slowly to allow for time to stop. Increasingly I pick up a bunch of cyclists immediately behind me you can't over take but seem incapable of just puling over and waiting for me to complete the section.
No idea why they get annoyed as it is often cyclists puffing their way up the hill (head down and eyes blinded by sweat) that I am most concerned about.
Many uninsured cars on the road and driving standards can be pretty crap as I'm sure you've noticed yourself. I'm surprised you haven't mentioned the non-existent "road tax" too.JavaScriptDonkey wrote:How odd.
Most drivers I know complain about cyclists getting in the way and constantly weaving across the road on machines ill-suited to the conditions.*
I suppose that because the motorists have passed a test to prove they can be safe and have to ensure their vehicles are roadworthy and insured that they think they are somehow entitled and even qualified to judge the behaviour of cyclists.
(*Mostly lycra clad leisure cyclists racing in packs who infest the roads down my neck of the woods.)
Some small measure? You have no idea. I've seen queues of 20 or so cars and buses tailing back behind hill climbing cyclists on narrow roads.stevecook172001 wrote: Cyclists have no more right to be on the road than you JSD. They also have no less right. If you don't like that and you find their presence irritating because it adds some small measure of time to your journey that you might otherwise avoid, that's just tough.
168
Being overtaken. If a driver is trying to overtake you, maintain a steady course and speed, slowing down if necessary to let the vehicle pass. Never obstruct drivers who wish to pass. Speeding up or driving unpredictably while someone is overtaking you is dangerous. Drop back to maintain a two-second gap if someone overtakes and pulls into the gap in front of you.
169
Do not hold up a long queue of traffic, especially if you are driving a large or slow-moving vehicle. Check your mirrors frequently, and if necessary, pull in where it is safe and let traffic pass.
A very real problem effectively tackled by the imposition of registration plates on vehicles, Police seizure powers and driving bans.cubes wrote:
Many uninsured cars on the road and driving standards can be pretty crap as I'm sure you've noticed yourself. I'm surprised you haven't mentioned the non-existent "road tax" too.
They may also be fully aware of the rules as they relate to high power motorbikes and HGVs but they can't drive them until they pass the appropriate test and then they still have to tax and insure them.clv101 wrote:It's also the case that most cyclists also hold a driving license (and pay their vehicle excise duty) so are fully aware of the rules of the road.
I already comply with 168. However, in anticipation of you, I would make the point that the term "never obstruct" cannot mean, as you seem to be implying, that I should deliberately ride in such a manner as to significantly increase danger to myself.JavaScriptDonkey wrote:Some small measure? You have no idea. I've seen queues of 20 or so cars and buses tailing back behind hill climbing cyclists on narrow roads.stevecook172001 wrote: Cyclists have no more right to be on the road than you JSD. They also have no less right. If you don't like that and you find their presence irritating because it adds some small measure of time to your journey that you might otherwise avoid, that's just tough.
We all have to abide by the rules in the shared spaces and the one I hold most dear is 'get out of other people's way'.
Re-phrased more politely in THC,
168
Being overtaken. If a driver is trying to overtake you, maintain a steady course and speed, slowing down if necessary to let the vehicle pass. Never obstruct drivers who wish to pass. Speeding up or driving unpredictably while someone is overtaking you is dangerous. Drop back to maintain a two-second gap if someone overtakes and pulls into the gap in front of you.
169
Do not hold up a long queue of traffic, especially if you are driving a large or slow-moving vehicle. Check your mirrors frequently, and if necessary, pull in where it is safe and let traffic pass.