johnridley (
johnridley) wrote2010-05-09 04:51 pm
For the newer cyclists here
From Bicycling magazine, The Five Most Common Causes of Bike-Car Collisions and how to avoid them
Not surprisingly, all five of them are the fault of the car driver, the advice is how to avoid in the first place, or how to get out of the situation if it happens.
I don't personally think the advice is really aggressive enough, but it's not bad as far as it goes. It's good to at least know what the biggest hazards are. They're mostly not the things most people worry about who haven't much experience in traffic.
Not surprisingly, all five of them are the fault of the car driver, the advice is how to avoid in the first place, or how to get out of the situation if it happens.
I don't personally think the advice is really aggressive enough, but it's not bad as far as it goes. It's good to at least know what the biggest hazards are. They're mostly not the things most people worry about who haven't much experience in traffic.
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Yeah, I got the flashing lights on front & back, and use them, too. Maybe it's because I'm bigger than K, but I also do mental projections to make myself even bigger. My intention is to scare a driver enough to realize that if she hits me, I'm going to make a hell of a mess of her car.
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Not surprisingly, he got trashed on the forum. If you come up behind someone on a blind curve, there's only one even vaguely reasonable thing to do, and it's NOT to pass them. As I said, the only thing the cyclists did wrong was that if it were me, I'd have been very far left, nearly to the center line, to make absolutely sure that the driver knew I was there, I wasn't moving, and he'd better just slow the hell down and wait 10 seconds, and I'd move back right as soon as sight lines were clear again.
People get hurt on bikes when they're A) not behaving like vehicles (riding on sidewalks, riding the wrong way, not being visible to drivers, sneaking between lanes, running lights, etc), or B) being too timid, inviting bullying. You need to control your lane, if you can't dominate the space that you're entitled to, then you're going to get walked on. It's unfortunate that roads in this country are run by intimidation, but that's the reality.
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As for being a driver, I always wait behind the cyclist on a blind curve or double yellow going uphill--and good cyclists signal the driver when it's safe to go around--by moving over and/or with an arm wave.
no subject