Not sure if this sort of thing has been raised before....but here goes: Why, oh, why do some cyclists insist on not using cycle lanes. I've lost count of the number of times I've seen a cyclist on the road, going up a hill, with a queue of cars waiting to overtake when, RIGHT NEXT to the cyclist, is a cycle lane! To be fair, I've never seen an electric bike doing that - in most cases its a cyclist (or group of cyclists) in all the (Lycra?) gear. I can only guess that they see it as a "matter of principle" or, in some way, see cycling on a cycle lane as beneath them. Fine - each to their own BUT - the problem is that it is giving all cyclists a bad name and is undermining moves to get more cycle lanes into the transport network. Just a thought!
The ideal cycle path is well signed, easy to find, and allows me to ride with the same comfort and close to the same speed as if I was on the road it wants to get me off. For clarity, that's typically 12mph average.
That means a proper surface, as good as the road, not the patchwork quilt of individual barrow loads of green tarmac I experienced on the approach to I think Preston, from the Liverpool direction. Not the gravel covered, bumpy parts of the route from Balloch to Tarbet on Loch Lomond side. Not the thorn covered paths next to shorn thorn hedges that nobody thought to clear up seeing as it was a cycle path, in Stirling, and just outside Ormskirk, which were the causes of my only two punctures so far on this bike.
And of course not those silly windy pavement based idiocies, where I have to bounce over kerbs, make frequent sharp changes of direction, cross every driveway and side road as the give way vehicle, adding significantly to my journey time.
I have missed many starts of cycle routes because I passed the signs before I saw them, and there was no second way in. The designers seem to think I'm at walking pace, with nothing else occupying my attention!
I missed others because the signs were not clear where they went. If I'm passing through on a long journey, I need the signs to confirm the name of somewhere on my route to give me confidence in where it goes - sort of like a road sign. I need the signs to be readable at cycling speed, from the direction of approach - sort of like a road sign. Not high up on a pole, parallel to my direction of travel, where I can't see them!
I will happily use a proper cycle path, but on a long day I will not waste time or distance hoping something's right, and I will not put up with more than about 10% added journey time or distance, and I have suffered enough on inadequate surfaces.
and finally...finding the start of a cycle path in a city centre is harder than it should be! I have ridden into Glasgow from north and south, but never yet found my way out the other side easily!