I'm sorry Flecc, a pass at less than 5 feet from a cyclist's handlebars is not a safe pass. If there isn't room on the road to do this, YOU SHOULD NOT TRY TO PASS, just WAIT.
I'm not quite sure you addressed me when you were replying to Guerney?
However, I wish you'd been in my car with me this morning on a South London trip between South Croydon and a part of Beckenham. This being London and the day sunny and pleasant, there were quite a few cyclists about and the traffic was as heavy as it always is in London.
All the drivers I saw were being careful with cyclists and all the cyclists were obviously content with how they were being treated, but at no point were any of them given 1.5 metres passing space. A metre when there was space was common, but often barely 2 feet. That was because it was all that was possible, due to the road widths, frequent quite closely spaced pedestrian road islands, cars densely parked both sides of many roads and bus, truck and van widths.
Like me with my over half century cycling and driving here, nobody was finding any problem with this situation, they were all just making the best of what we have. The closeness wasn't just due to the drivers anyway, since as traffic slowed the cyclists were riding into confined space alongside vehicles, meaning as the vehicles accelerated again they were technically passing with very little space and the drivers often not even aware of their presence.
The cyclists could hang back and wait of course, just as the drivers could with a cyclist ahead, but it's obvious that most find that unnecessary so carry on anyway. The accident figures for London show they are not wrong.
From around 22 deaths per year being common when there was little cycling in London four decades ago, 8 per year is now more common with hundreds of thousands commuting every day by bike.
A 2019 survey of recent years revealed there were
0.68 fatalities per 100,000 cyclists in London. This compares to 1.77 in Amsterdam, 1.04 in Copenhagen and 0.75 in Paris. That's pretty good considering the amazing segregated cycling facilities in Amsterdam and Copenhagen.
And something to reflect on. Look at the hordes of cyclists around the motor vehicles in the London photos I've been posting. Do you really think a driver or their driving can be aggressive or bullying when surrounded by 20 or 30 fit cyclists?
Simple answer, they can't, and that is another reason we usually get on ok together. There's lots of both of us.
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