Sweeping statement alert.
In a previous life, I was fortunate enough to attend only one cyclist fatality, and that involved a tipper truck. Of course, 'one swallow does not a summer make'.
Sweeping statement alert.
So many cycle alongside anything and everything. Today on my way home was cycling along, almost blinded by another cyclists top of the range catseye lights(asked what they are as they are awesome) then not long after we come up along traffic behind a big tesco truck and he takes the gap at which point I stop and turn to my side and myself and a driver share a disappointed and understanding look and they hit the horn before the truck pulls away. A couple of sets of lights ahead when I mentioned it "what truck?"Having watched the TV at the incident, maniacal driving wasn't the issue here though, It was a very tight right angle corner where high speed was out of the question, and the truck had stopped instantly on the corner apex so could not have been travelling fast.
There's moves now to ban all HGVs during the day as they have in Paris for similar reasons. However, Paris is a small city compared to London and I understand the Paris ban is widely flouted anyway. In addition, some of the "heavies" have been buses, and they can't be banned of course.
Maybe a rush hour HGV ban would be an effective compromise since most deaths have been of commuters.
Meanwhile though, I wish cyclists would stop cycling alongside the left of trucks on junction entries, it just isn't necessary. I get around London ok without doing it, but often have idiots squeezing past me at the rear of trucks to do it.
Saving two seconds in exchange for possibly losing one's life doesn't seem a sensible deal to me.
Having so much road paint in London where the deaths are the worst, I doubt it adds any safety. The all-blue painted Cycling Superhypeways are of course the most dangerous of all, going by the outcomes, so if anything paint has increased the risks pro-rata to the amount used.The council have plenty of paint for yellow lies, why not use some of it for cycle paths ?
...c'mon Wakefield council what's a few litres of paint compared to cyclist's lives ?
And many of the sites spout nonsense, this one in particular.Quite agree Flecc - I was just trying to find an example of the original letter, and was unable to
There are an amazing number of blogs regarding cycling and the law, many written by lawyers of one sort or another, once you start to look.
Would be useful, I could get some of my business competitors out of the way for a while.Correct me if I'm wrong, but I seem to recall that in Holland a car driver, who is involved in an accident with a cyclist, is automatically put in jail on the assumption he is guilty until proved otherwise?
Not in jail necessarily, but there and in some other countries they are assumed to be guilty until they prove their innocence. It's a way of enforcing extra care on the part of drivers.Correct me if I'm wrong, but I seem to recall that in Holland a car driver, who is involved in an accident with a cyclist, is automatically put in jail on the assumption he is guilty until proved otherwise?
Difficult in Holland where most cyclists ride very responsibly, but not difficult here in Britain where so many cyclist behave so badly and where juries are predominantly pro-car and often have strongly anti-cyclist members.The driver must thus prove that none of the blame falls on him, which is extremely difficult in practice.
Doesn't Big Brother have our every move in cities on CCTV though ... along with recording all our phone calls / texts and reading all our e-mails ?It's not easy to note a number plate as one performs a graceful arc through the air over the handlebars.
They wouldn't be much good here anyway, too much obscured by trees in this leafy borough. The word forest is part of the name of the large estate I live on, and seeing it you'd well believe it!Good to know !