La Vie Velominatus, Part III: Urban Riding

Not every road can be like this.

There is little in life that compares to a ride along a quiet country road. This surely is the altar of our sport, where all the greatest qualities of cycling are brought into relief by the simple act of propelling yourself along by your own power. Despite being social creatures, the experience is heightened by solitude; when no one else is witness this glorious act, we are allowed to slip further into the simplicity of the act. Our arms reaching out to the bars, the rhythm as our legs spin the pedals, the feel of the machine as it glides along effortlessly, the feeling of power as we stand to accelerate over a hill, the wind in our face, knowing it’s generated by our own speed. There is only the road, the machine, and ourselves.

Alas, for most of us, this experience is reserved for special rides when circumstance finds us within reach of such a place. Indeed, many of us spend the majority of our time riding the busy roads found in our urban lifestyles, not deserted country lanes. This reality has us facing a choice between not riding or riding amongst traffic that threatens a significant negative impact on our well-being should something go sideways – like, for example, your bicycle.

While it is inherently more dangerous than riding on quiet roads, the risk of urban riding can be managed somewhat through vigilance and discipline. We must constantly be aware of our surroundings and understand not only the risks traffic poses to us, but also the unpredictability we ourselves bring to a driver who doesn’t understand the way a cyclist thinks, and what we might do next. The bicycle and the traffic together form two parts of a dangerous equation where we control few of the variables and stand to lose a great deal should something go wrong. In light of this, we should focus on maximizing the elements we can control, and marginalize those we can’t.

  1. Ride predictably. When out training in town, consider yourself to be riding in the bunch, except the other riders are cars that can kill you. Just like riding in a group, when in traffic, hold your line, signal when there’s a hazard or when turning, and generally ride as predictably possible.
  2. Ride on the sunny side of the street. If there is a shoulder, ride in it, but if not, stay as far to the side as you safely are able to. Don’t ride so far to the side that it means you might hit something that might cause you to move erratically; there’s nothing safe about suddenly flying out into traffic because you hit something at the side of the road.
  3. Only ride through puddles you can see the bottom of. Water tends to accumulate along the side of the road, and has a nasty habit of being smooth on the surface regardless of what the bottom looks like. If you can’t see the bottom of the puddle, it’s safer to ride around it than it is to ride through it and risk getting launched by a hidden pothole.
  4. Ride aggressively defensive. If there’s a narrow section of road coming up where it will be dangerous for a car to pass, signal to the cars behind and swing out into the middle of the lane until it’s safe for them to pass.
  5. It’s helpful to be able to accelerate quickly to move with traffic if necessary. In the event that you’re riding in a lane in order to discourage cars from passing, it’s good to move at the same speed as the traffic in order to piss them off slightly less and reduce the chance that they go all gansta on your ass and hit or shoot you out of spite.
  6. Be gracious. If a car does the right thing, wave at them in thanks. If you know you are holding them up because you’re obstructing their path, move the side as soon as it’s safe and gesture your appreciation of their patience.
  7. Don’t escalate. You will invariably be placed into a dangerous situation by a driver who is either ignorant of the danger they caused you or is simply an ass. In both of these cases, screaming obscenities at them will only serve to put them on the defensive and make them hate cyclists even more than they already do. If you absolutely must say something, do your best to let them know why what they did was dangerous; if you’re polite and assertive, the message is much more likely to find it’s way home.
  8. Details matter; pay attention to the cars around you. Take note of the subtle signals the drivers are sending you. Are they overly fond of the brake pedal? Are they speeding? Are they swerving, texting, or otherwise distracted? Or do they drive predictably and use their turn signals properly? These things will tell you a lot about how safe you’ll be when they’re close to you.
  9. Avoid overly dangerous routes. Ride on the roads you need to in order to train properly, but also avoid unnecessarily dangerous areas or only ride them when traffic is at it’s lightest. Roads with good shoulders are preferable and, counter-intuitively, bike paths are not always safer places to ride; these are often filled with people of a variety of skill levels who may not be paying attention.
  10. Lastly, cycling is easier to enjoy if you’re alive and in one piece; always ride to proactively avoid placing yourself in risky situations when possible and have a plan if you find yourself needing to take a risk.

Some fantastic riding can be had on urban roads. Always be careful to understand your risks; be agressive when safety requires it, and defensive when it doesn’t.

Vive la Vie Velominatus.

frank

The founder of Velominati and curator of The Rules, Frank was born in the Dutch colonies of Minnesota. His boundless physical talents are carefully canceled out by his equally boundless enthusiasm for drinking. Coffee, beer, wine, if it’s in a container, he will enjoy it, a lot of it. He currently lives in Seattle. He loves riding in the rain and scheduling visits with the Man with the Hammer just to be reminded of the privilege it is to feel completely depleted. He holds down a technology job the description of which no-one really understands and his interests outside of Cycling and drinking are Cycling and drinking. As devoted aesthete, the only thing more important to him than riding a bike well is looking good doing it. Frank is co-author along with the other Keepers of the Cog of the popular book, The Rules, The Way of the Cycling Disciple and also writes a monthly column for the magazine, Cyclist. He is also currently working on the first follow-up to The Rules, tentatively entitled The Hardmen. Email him directly at rouleur@velominati.com.

View Comments

  • Just a quick one. First of all I've found this site recently and think it is absolutely fantastic thanks to all fantastic Velominati (hope this is correct) contributing to it.

    Secondly to the point, I've been commuting to work in London, UK for a while now and found that vast majority of drivers have perfect cycle-friendly manners. It's been pedestrians and other (fuckface as someone said) bikers who cut across or stepped on a road in front of me not looking, etc.

  • @Jeff in PetroMetro

    Laps around White Rock lake are as good as it gets here. I live in Lakewood, so it's right around the corner from me. Over the weekend, we'll ride east out to Sunnyvale - it's nice country roads, some rolling hills, etc., but you have to cruise down the access road for Interstate 30 and Hwy 80 to get out there. Some scary things happen on those access roads...

    Let me know next you're up visiting family and we'll go spin some laps.

  • Ugh, sorry, I meant Wellington. I've been to Christchurch twice, haven't made it to Welly. As a traveler passing through, can't comment too much on my impressions of Christchurch, beyond it's a pretty cool looking city with the layout, parks, rivers.

    Did get invited to a family farm stay though on a trip outside of Christchurch. Was going fishing and on a rutted road in a pouring rainstorm in an '83 Mitsubishi 'Ancer (the L had fallen off). Driving down a muddy road to a lake & camping spot. It was getting more treacherous with each k I plowed on. Finally passed a guy in a massive ute, he stopped me, asked where I was going, told me to turn back with that car I had. Invited me to his farm for a stay, dinner with the family, Scrabble with a daughter. Awesome memory for me.

  • Since we are on the topic of urban cycling & many of us put up with dangerous drivers, thought this might be good place to contribute this.

    A rally to get more people out on bikes and use fewer resources. Sept. 24, 2011 all around the globe. Throw one in your city/town if there isn't one! I'll be riding & enjoying the fun in North Carolina. Any party involving bikes is one I'll attend...

    http://www.moving-planet.org/

  • @benjamin
    Coooool! Dad and step-mom live in the bubble (University Park). So I took University Blvd. through SMU almost all the way to the lake. I can get there no prob. Lakewood. Awesome! I live in a very similar neighborhood in Houston called Woodland Heights. We can exchange contact info through Frank. Wouldn't want any of these neerdowells actually finding me.

  • @PeterP
    Welcome, PeterP. London? Don't let Jeremy Clarkson run you over. But if he does, I'd appreciate it if your last dying words to him were, "Jeff in PetroMetro really loves Top Gear." I'd really appreciate it.

  • Ooh, that's an interesting idea. Hadn't thought of doing it. I'm free that weekend. Let me think about that, make sure the schedule really is okay, find a place to stay, and whatever else I gotta do. 7am start doesn't allow for a drive up from Houston that morning. Hell, it's 3 hours from Big D. Probably shouldn't start driving at 3:30am, ride 162km from 7am to whenever (of course we'll be done by 11am), and either drive home to Houston (6.5 hours) or drive to Dallas, then to Houston on Sunday. Probably need to find a place near Wichita Falls (like there are any rooms left). I ought to do it. Hmmmmm.

    As for getting each other's email address without broadcasting it worldwide, email Frank. He's got mine. We chat like school girls.

  • Great post, frank!

    Living in a "city" and riding both therein and through the outskirts, I must say that suburban cycling is - to my experience - far more dangerous! The speeds are faster, the shoulders frequently narrower and the drivers busier with things other than driving (i-gadgets, music, Garmin-ati, cellphonage and stuffing fries into their milkshaken pie holes). Makes one miss that most traffic calming of all appliances: the urban pothole!

    Great tips too!

    I might add: Ride on the sunny side of the street when it is going WITH traffic (NEVER salmon)!

    When you reach the crest of a hill, move as far right as possible. Post crest is always a blind spot for speeding 5,000 pound potential killers. Make sure you are out of the way.

    Finally, stats that the LAB has show that most cycle/car interactions are due to the cyclist making a mistake. Don't be a douche! Think like a car, ride like you are a slow car. Take the lane. Own that space. Stop at stop signs and lights. Be predictable and communicate with drivers using more than one digit. When YOU are riding, you represent all of US.

    Durishin

  • @Rob

    It is interesting that the law applies equally to bicycles and they have as much right to the road. If they are NOT impeding the flow of traffic a bicycle can be in a lane. Therefor when I am going down 5th Ave to lower Manhattan my favorite place is the middle lane @ 50kph - no doors, easy evasive action for peds, open view for pot holes. Acting like a car is not only legal it often is a visible and safe tactic.

    Bearing in mind that you do all that on THIS BIKE.

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