There's another view on this:2. My workplace is in a really awkward location for public transport.
2. Your home is in a really awkward location for public transport.
Move home, save time, protect badgers.
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There's another view on this:2. My workplace is in a really awkward location for public transport.
Haven't been on here for years. Good to see you're still active Flecc.There's another view on this:
2. Your home is in a really awkward location for public transport.
Move home, save time, protect badgers.
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Yup, 86 years old and still at it !Haven't been on here for years. Good to see you're still active Flecc.
Just not an option for a lot of people.There's another view on this:
2. Your home is in a really awkward location for public transport.
Move home, save time, protect badgers.
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It's always possible, as the Queen often shows when she insists someone should be her guest for few years.Just not an option for a lot of people.
So to solve his transportation issues, you suggest he commits a crime and gets locked up?It's always possible, as the Queen often shows when she insists someone should be her guest for few years.
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No, I'm saying it is always possible, just very inconvenient at times like Her Majesty's invitation. Coming out of the army very long ago I had seven years of constantly moving and hated it. But it was necessary so I bore the costs and hardships involved which ultimately paid off handsomely.So to solve his transportation issues, you suggest he commits a crime and gets locked up?
I've also witnessed the good and bad cycling behaviours you describe, but only to a very limited extent since almost all my movement now is in South London and the immediate home counties of Surrey and Kent,As our roads have become more crowded, there also seems less 'give and take' by motorists / cyclists and in some cases, a strong (and misplaced) sense of entitlement.
You've made assumptions. I can't move house every time I have a new contract, not knowing where it will be. It's cheaper to build large offices in the middle of nowhere. Perhaps you have been out of work too long? One job for life is no longer the norm.It's always possible, as the Queen often shows when she insists someone should be her guest for few years.
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I do, all the time now. It's funny how some newspapers call cyclists with cameras "Vigilante cyclists", when all they are doing is going about their normal lives, with the addition of a camera just in case one of the many drivers who couldn't give a damn about their safety, do something dangerous they can be prosecuted for. And about time!Use a helmet cam.
Send any dangerous driving video to the rozzers and (so long as the number plate is legible) the motorist will get a fine and points on their license
lt certainly works in London, perhaps too well, but other cities are following the lead.
I'll continue to do whatever I can to avoid problems. That first close pass video was really disappointing, given that I was using a side lollipop reflector. I really should have reported this pre-lollipop close pass, but it's been over 14 days. Too late. A second rear-facing camera would have been useful.I have a friend who like I used to commutes by bike (acoustic) from Middlesex I think into central London. He is tech savvy unlike myself and post clips of his bad experiences. I think it might just be the volume and intensity of the traffic that means you are going to encounter poor driving more often. My own 10 mile minimum commute between two towns was connected by a B road that is regarded as dangerous. What I realised was that the timing of when you used the road in relation to the volume and impatience of the drivers varied almost by the minute. I was a shift worker with daily variable start times. I knew how the volume of traffic changed and when to avoid it. I also bought an electric mountain bike and developed a beautiful mostly of road route to work, that took longer but pretty much avoided cars. I still had to on acasion use that road when it was busy, and coped in the way you have, with a high Viz jacket, and bright flashing rear light, and on my road bike a rear view mirror. I knew the pinch points and was not afraid to move out to stop an impatient vehicle pass me at a dangerous for me point. I quickly moved over when it was safer. My previous job was all about minimising risk. You should ride where ever you need to but thinking hard about any ways you can to reduce your personal risk is very worth while. I still got overtaken very badly on accession.
The assumption is yours, that is completely the opposite of my life, since I made the decision at 16 to never to be bored by sticking with just one job longer than necessary to perform it well. Given the simplicity of so many jobs, I lost count of how many jobs I've had very long ago. That jnb swapping even included leaving management jobs three times to start again from the floor in different employments.One job for life is no longer the norm.
That was very dangerous passing, way beyond lacking due care and attention.I'll continue to do whatever I can to avoid problems. That first close pass video was really disappointing, given that I was using a side lollipop reflector. I really should have reported this pre-lollipop close pass, but it's been over 14 days. Too late. A second rear-facing camera would have been useful.
It will never happen of course, all we ever get from government is half cocked measures that are ill thought out and often then ignored, forgotten or withdrawn.The law should change, and its been long overdue. Drivers are the cause of cyclists deaths. Just how many drivers have been killed by cyclists ?. I think none is the answer there.
So to facilitate this, having an exact law that states a minimum overtaking distance of 1.5m must be written into the statutes and enforced rigorously.
No guidance of the highway code(that some won't recognize as being law), no maybe's no should.
....and the badgers.....So should women not go out at night too? Let's not get into victim blaming. It's the drivers who need to change their behaviour, not vulnerable road users.