Cyclists in London - aaaaaargh!
#91
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Sep 2001
Location: A powerslide near you
Posts: 10,261
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
I note that ages 11 and under can do so if accompanied by adult cycling (and the adult must be on the road!). Also 5 & under can cycle on pavements anytime.
#92
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: RS6 heaven. 505/445 Scooby Eater (whilst watching TV)
Posts: 1,022
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Last Wednesday I hit a pedestrian in Islington who walked out on a 'Red Man' without looking.
Hit her at 20mph+ full on (nowhere to go).
Police and ambulance were in presence and all details taken. Luckily another cyclist stopped who backed up that I had gone through a green light.
Not once did anyone ask if I was alright despite a cut leg, a totally fooked front wheel and bent forks. I was just left to hobble off and buy a new front wheel. It's always the cyclists fault.
This morning just missed a girl with headphones on in Islington who just walked out 20 feet infront of the pedestrian crossing without looking (cars on red) and then again a bloke on the Farringdon Road did the same thing!
It's a dangerous world out there and 'always the cyclists fault'. The crash last week has cost me £100 to fix for something that wasn't my fault so I hope she's still hurting!
Hit her at 20mph+ full on (nowhere to go).
Police and ambulance were in presence and all details taken. Luckily another cyclist stopped who backed up that I had gone through a green light.
Not once did anyone ask if I was alright despite a cut leg, a totally fooked front wheel and bent forks. I was just left to hobble off and buy a new front wheel. It's always the cyclists fault.
This morning just missed a girl with headphones on in Islington who just walked out 20 feet infront of the pedestrian crossing without looking (cars on red) and then again a bloke on the Farringdon Road did the same thing!
It's a dangerous world out there and 'always the cyclists fault'. The crash last week has cost me £100 to fix for something that wasn't my fault so I hope she's still hurting!
#93
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Oct 2002
Location: Sunny Cheshire Xbox Gamertag: Mog Uk
Posts: 2,305
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
#94
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Aug 2000
Location: Where age and treachery reins over youthful exuberance
Posts: 5,275
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
On a push-bike it is very much harder work accelerating, slowing and accelerating again so every cyclist tries to maintain speed at all times.
Some cyclists have yet to learn that falling off or being knocked off, no matter whose fault, is painfull and expensive at the very least. Often much worse.
Not all cyclists are mad and a well-ridden bike slips along almost invisibly. That's why the ratio of ***** to good riders is, apparently, so high.
Richard.
Some cyclists have yet to learn that falling off or being knocked off, no matter whose fault, is painfull and expensive at the very least. Often much worse.
Not all cyclists are mad and a well-ridden bike slips along almost invisibly. That's why the ratio of ***** to good riders is, apparently, so high.
Richard.
#95
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: same time, different place
Posts: 11,313
Likes: 0
Received 4 Likes
on
2 Posts
Regarding the "London" or "central London" thing. Everyone learns to behave utterly ruthlessly when trying to get from A to B. If you don't, if you act politely or deferentially, the "pack" scents weakness and before you know it you're unable to move anywhere.
It's a personal armour one dons when entering a sh*thole. Central London is overcrowded, over polluted, overpriced and by modern standards, underdeveloped.
J.
It's a personal armour one dons when entering a sh*thole. Central London is overcrowded, over polluted, overpriced and by modern standards, underdeveloped.
J.
Or even "People in London". I remember walking down Oxford Street the Saturday before Christmas one year; I'd barely got 100 yards before I started thinking that the geezer in Hungerford some years back might not have been so wrong after all.
#96
Scooby Regular
Join Date: Feb 2002
Location: Nobody knows how to tie the simple knots that I know
Posts: 8,010
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Brendan - you're mad going down Oxford St that close to Christmas but I agree with your sentiments!
FWIW I do ride my bike on the pavement when going to work or to get down to the cycle path along the Grand Union Canal for the simple reason that the roads are in an appalling state near to the kerbs and most car drivers our way try to bully their way past. I am concious that I shouldn't really be on the footpath so I don't tank it and never expect pedestrians to get out of my way - if I catch them up, I will hop off and walk around them with the bike and if they do move then they always get a big smile and a thanks.
FWIW I do ride my bike on the pavement when going to work or to get down to the cycle path along the Grand Union Canal for the simple reason that the roads are in an appalling state near to the kerbs and most car drivers our way try to bully their way past. I am concious that I shouldn't really be on the footpath so I don't tank it and never expect pedestrians to get out of my way - if I catch them up, I will hop off and walk around them with the bike and if they do move then they always get a big smile and a thanks.
#98
Scooby Regular
On a push-bike it is very much harder work accelerating, slowing and accelerating again so every cyclist tries to maintain speed at all times.
Some cyclists have yet to learn that falling off or being knocked off, no matter whose fault, is painfull and expensive at the very least. Often much worse.
Not all cyclists are mad and a well-ridden bike slips along almost invisibly. That's why the ratio of ***** to good riders is, apparently, so high.
Richard.
Some cyclists have yet to learn that falling off or being knocked off, no matter whose fault, is painfull and expensive at the very least. Often much worse.
Not all cyclists are mad and a well-ridden bike slips along almost invisibly. That's why the ratio of ***** to good riders is, apparently, so high.
Richard.
#99
Scooby Regular
Thread Starter
iTrader: (1)
Join Date: Jan 1999
Location: UK
Posts: 15,271
Likes: 0
Received 0 Likes
on
0 Posts
Last Wednesday I hit a pedestrian in Islington who walked out on a 'Red Man' without looking.
Hit her at 20mph+ full on (nowhere to go).
Police and ambulance were in presence and all details taken. Luckily another cyclist stopped who backed up that I had gone through a green light.
Not once did anyone ask if I was alright despite a cut leg, a totally fooked front wheel and bent forks. I was just left to hobble off and buy a new front wheel. It's always the cyclists fault.
This morning just missed a girl with headphones on in Islington who just walked out 20 feet infront of the pedestrian crossing without looking (cars on red) and then again a bloke on the Farringdon Road did the same thing!
It's a dangerous world out there and 'always the cyclists fault'. The crash last week has cost me £100 to fix for something that wasn't my fault so I hope she's still hurting!
Hit her at 20mph+ full on (nowhere to go).
Police and ambulance were in presence and all details taken. Luckily another cyclist stopped who backed up that I had gone through a green light.
Not once did anyone ask if I was alright despite a cut leg, a totally fooked front wheel and bent forks. I was just left to hobble off and buy a new front wheel. It's always the cyclists fault.
This morning just missed a girl with headphones on in Islington who just walked out 20 feet infront of the pedestrian crossing without looking (cars on red) and then again a bloke on the Farringdon Road did the same thing!
It's a dangerous world out there and 'always the cyclists fault'. The crash last week has cost me £100 to fix for something that wasn't my fault so I hope she's still hurting!
sorry to hear of your misfortune. If I may I would like to make a couple of comments. If you had hit her in a car or from a motorbike, the response would have been the same. There would have been no sympathy AND no-one would have asked you if you were OK. It wasn't just because you were a cyclist.
Secondly, if it really was her fault as you suggest you should have taken details and claimed from her for your damages. You are well within your rights to do so. She may have even been covered by insurance.
Rannoch
Thread
Thread Starter
Forum
Replies
Last Post