Driving in Portugal is even worse, pedestrians at crossings have right of way - hence they have no need to signal they are crossing or to look for traffic. Very different to UK where pedestrians are expected to check it's safe. https://portugaldrivinglaws.com/pedestrians.php
Thats why I have kept the inoffensive tho penetrating (on quiet roads/paths) ding of a bell.. I have considered a horn,, even bought a 2a truck horn.. Yep its loud.. and it may still find its way on the bike for emergency hollering.Looks like school going-home time. Younglings are concentrating on going home. Your bike is silent, they weren't aware of you.
They were in the wrong but you were going too fast. You should have antipated the movement and been prepared to stop.
Beep your horn at the wrong people and they'll kick you off your bike.
Honestly, give someone, anyone, motorised transport and immediately they're beeping and blowing off at any more vulnerable road user in their path.
Looks like school going-home time. Younglings are concentrating on going home. Your bike is silent, they weren't aware of you.
They were in the wrong but you were going too fast. You should have antipated the movement and been prepared to stop.
Beep your horn at the wrong people and they'll kick you off your bike.
Honestly, give someone, anyone, motorised transport and immediately they're beeping and blowing off at any more vulnerable road user in their path.
UK highway code has changed , vulnerable road users (that includes pedestrians etc on footpaths have right of way at crossing points/junctions whether light controlled or not.Sad but not surprising
I've had a pedestrian on mobile phone step off a footpath without looking and walk in front of me when I was driving a large family car though a town center. The look on her face when I blasted the horn and she looked up to see 1 ton of car heading her way almost made up for the scare she gave me.
Driving in Portugal is even worse, pedestrians at crossings have right of way - hence they have no need to signal they are crossing or to look for traffic. Very different to UK where pedestrians are expected to check it's safe. https://portugaldrivinglaws.com/pedestrians.php
Denmark is similar, if a motorist hits a cyclist at a junction the motorist is at fault regardless of the cyclist behavior .
Driving in Denmark - General Rules | The Copenhagen Book
www.thecopenhagenbook.dk
If you had hit them then you would likely have been found at fault for not being fully aware and ready to stop. The guy in London who nearly lost his house when he hit a woman sounded his horn/ bell , and the judge said he had plenty of time to stop instead or trying to warn the woman.
It is, that is the law.If anyone has a link saying it's now acceptable for pedestrians to - without looking - step off a pavement (not at a junction) in front of cars driving on the road, just add a link and I'll read it
Wish it was like that here in the UK, we cyclists crush easier and flatter than motorists. As flat as crushed pedestrians in many cases I imagine. Perhaps a bit more ridged because of broken bike frames poking out through the flattened flesh either side. Carbon frames will probably shatter and crush down flatter, making us easier to scrape off the road with shovels... thus cyclists crushed into street pizza would be more of cohesive pancake shape, which would be more convenient for emergency services to roll like tacos, for easier packaging/body bag insertion. A crêpe experience for all concerned.Denmark is similar, if a motorist hits a cyclist at a junction the motorist is at fault regardless of the cyclist behavior .
If two people walk into each other @ say 2.5 mph - they'll just bounce off each other and remain standing, no harm done, sorries all round.10 mph TOO FAST ? are you serious
That's exactly what happened to the guy in London with one small difference. The people were crossing when they shouldn't, so the cyclist sounded his loud horn, which stopped the new people from crossing and left a gap as the stragglers already on the road, ran to the other side, then a female panicked and tried to run back. He hit her and injured her arm. The judge said that he knew she was there because he sounded his horn, so he should have stopped until it was clear. The only difference was that the female ran back, which we know often happens, especially if their child or partner is left behind. You were very lucky. The other guy was ordered to pay a massive amount, like around £100k IIRC. Are you insured?
I gave you the link above, but I will copy/paste relevant fragment for your convenience.If anyone has a link saying it's now acceptable for pedestrians to - without looking - step off a pavement (not at a junction) in front of cars driving on the road, just add a link and I'll read it
Of course nobody ever will advice you to cross the road with eyes closed, but you still can do that and die under truck knowing it was drivers fault.The updated code clarifies that:
- when people are crossing or waiting to cross at a junction, other traffic should give way
- if people have started crossing and traffic wants to turn into the road, the people crossing have priority and the traffic should give way
- people driving, riding a motorcycle or cycling must give way to people on a zebra crossing and people walking and cycling on a parallel crossing