There was a time when the world was painted in hues of black and white. Right and Wrong were separated by lines painted in such a thick, heavy paint that even to wander close was to already alter your very nature. The Elders taught us on which side we were to dwell and what evils would descend upon us if we were to transcend into the void. Little was known of what dwelt on the other side; the mind imagines the most horrific beasts in the unknown.
As Cyclists, we dwell in the space between black and white; everything we know is confined within the shades of gray that exist between two absolutes. Nowhere is this more true than when we subject ourselves to the roads to ply our craft at the mercy of motor vehicles, pedestrians, and the department of transportation’s ability to place potholes and manhole covers in the most inopportune locations. A moment’s inattention and our fortunes could shift dramatically.
The bike lane is shrouded in an air of false security. The white line painted a few meters from the edge of the road offers little by way of providing a barrier or any other kind of physical protection. Nevertheless, we wrap ourselves in a blanket of wishful thinking and pedal merrily along our way. The biggest problem with the bike lane is the total disregard that people, traffic, and road crews have for how few options we have outside of our narrow strip of tarmac in the event that the way is blocked, often unaware of the dangers their behaviors impose upon us. These are normally not intended as threats; it is simply a lack of exposure and appreciation of the risks we as Cyclists endure. In the spirit of Rule #3, I will outline some of the greatest risks.
Too many Cyclists are being killed doing what they love. We all understand what we risk and accept those rather than not ride our bikes, but I think I speak for all of us when I say I’d rather live to ride again tomorrow. We all have to come together with our fellow motorists to understand how best to work together. But most of all: be careful and diligent, my fellow Cyclists.
Vive la Vie Velominatus.
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@Teocalli
Having been a hood ornament with a taco'd front wheel to show for it, as well as crashed by a foolish non-cyclist riding on the wrong side of my local bike trail, I can say, unequivocally: the only truly safe road is one that's closed, generally for a race. Bike lanes, bike trails, whatever, if there are other people, on bikes or in cars, danger lurks...constantly
We like to make it just a little more tricky in Belfast
but this is my favourite, just across the road from my surgery - I just ride on the road where it is safer
This a nice little snapshot of bike lane blockage in Washington D.C.
http://whosblockinglsttoday.tumblr.com/
I like the cop cars in the lane the best...
First point to the individual that thinks riding in London isn't dangerous. I appreciate there are plenty of bad bicycle users out there. I add those to the list of numerous hazards I should be wary of every second of the circa 2 hours I spend commuting in and out of our great city every day. There should be greater education and stiffer penalties for those caught riding badly. However the ineptitude by motorists or the simple lack of the value of life by motorists can ultimately result in a life changing event for a cyclist, or pedestrian for that matter. How on earth do you begin to justify:
Passing a cyclist at way beyond the legal limit just inches from me.
Passing at high speed just to then make a turn right in front of me.
Pulling in to my path, whether I'm in a cycle lane or not, because the car in front of you is making a right turn. Indicating optional (obviously!)
Speeding past me to the traffic at standstill in front only then to close the gap so you know I can't pass you.
Driving, at speed, with your bumper just inches from my side or my rear wheel because your life is soooo important and you MUST get passed.
Rant over.
@Soxfan04 When the police are stopped in the lane it's possible they're doing something urgent where parking is not the absolute priority , like '' shall we detain the violent offender , no not until we found a bay to park in , oh while we were doing that he got away ''
@Ron
Interesting! I have share the road plates and Velominati stickers on my car; I always feel extra foolish after I disrespect a Cyclist in my gas guzzler.
I take the lane a lot; any time I feel uncertain about the shoulder, the path, or whether a driver will have the insight to judge when it is safe to pass me, I take the lane.
@Triathlete
This boulevard in town has the bike lanes in the middle, along the nice grassy bit. You have to cross the lane of traffic on your way in and out. I appreciate them trying to make it nice and pretty but fuck me if that doesn't cause a load of problems of its own!
@Ccos
Why thank you, good sir.
@sinikl
Quite enough to make anyone shit, I believe.
@Souleur
So..........Velomitopia is in Southwestern Wisconsin?
@Nate
I asked for that, didn't I?
@Cogfather
Racer pose their own threat. The only safe place is on your sofa.