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View Full Version : Hmm. What's With the Honking???



Python
05-06-2007, 01:25 PM
I've noticed since I've started cycling the amount of drivers who honk their horn at me. This happens whether I'm in a cycle lane or on the road.

Are they for example:

1) Trying to phase me.

or

2) Saying. Good on ya. Wish I had the bottle to cycle.

Any guesses? No prizes will be awarded for answers:p

pinkychique
05-06-2007, 02:23 PM
They are appreciating your pretty rear end. I was once waiting at a stoplight on the sidewalk, when an assumingly very very drunk man (didn't really feel the need to turn and look) decided to yell and obsess over how nice my *** was....needless to say I was very ready to move when the light changed! :D

I think we're just easy targets when we are on bikes!

Eden
05-06-2007, 02:37 PM
Some people do it so say get the f out of my way, but a lot of people think that they are doing something nice for you by letting you know they are coming up behind you - like you can't actually hear their big loud car or something.....

Kimmyt
05-06-2007, 02:48 PM
Someone honked at me the other day, I wasn't even taking up the road. It didn't seem like a particularly angry honk, but honks never sound nice. I want to tell people that by honking at us, they're just increasing the likelihood that they'll startle us and we'll swerve a bit into the lane. We know you're there, you're a car, we could hear you a mile away, you don't need to honk.

I gave the girl who honked at me the finger and hollered at her, even if she did mean well, maybe she'll realize that it freaks cyclists out a little to get suddenly honked at on a busy road.

K.

MomOnBike
05-06-2007, 03:20 PM
I may be dating myself, but I remember watching a film in Driver's Ed that instructed all us budding young motorists to honk when passing bicycles - to let them know we (superior beings that we would soon be) are there.

Like much of my social instruction, I've always ignored that piece of advice. :p

So, at least some of us have, indeed, been formally taught to honk at bicycles.

lph
05-07-2007, 07:41 AM
What a strange piece of advice.

Logically it should be the other way around - all budding cyclists should be given a large, powerful air horn, and told to honk loudly when approaching cars, to let them know that we (superior beings and all) would soon be coasting by with a big fat grin on our face.

;)

quint41
05-07-2007, 08:39 AM
What a strange piece of advice.

Logically it should be the other way around - all budding cyclists should be given a large, powerful air horn, and told to honk loudly when approaching cars ...

;)

LOL! Best thing I've read in a long time!!! Truly!!!

SouthernBelle
05-07-2007, 10:28 AM
I may have to get an air horn. Just so I can honk back.

Jenn
05-07-2007, 11:30 AM
Uhh... I wanna get honked at!:(

Kimmyt
05-07-2007, 05:10 PM
What a strange piece of advice.

Logically it should be the other way around - all budding cyclists should be given a large, powerful air horn, and told to honk loudly when approaching cars, to let them know that we (superior beings and all) would soon be coasting by with a big fat grin on our face.

;)


Hahah this really makes me giggle, because I KNOW that grin!

It is usually accompanied by outright, joyful laughter, and a loud, 'Haha, Suckers!!' as I zoom past the standstill traffic.

:D

csr1210
05-08-2007, 12:22 PM
It's generally pretty friendly honking (or I'm just totally oblivious!). I ride acess roads running along the (rural area) interstate, and mainly the honkers are either locals who recognize me, truckers, and ocassionally the TRAIN. (I really like when the train honks and waves - just seems kinda cool :o ) I think in my area, it is the complete novelty of seeing a cyclist (I've never seen another one except dh) and a comrade-ship of the road. I don't think it's complaining because I'm not on their road, and for some reason it never strikes me as sexual (as in construction worker hooting) - maybe because there is a fair amount of distance between us):confused:

I figure somewhere along the line, someone will be rude to me, but so far I've been pleasantly surprised. (though I've only got a couple hundred miles under my belt, errr wheels so far.)

Someone honking directly behind me would scare me to death!

Deanna
05-08-2007, 01:09 PM
For me, my reaction depends on the honk. Laying on the horn is just rude. A light tap is either trying to be nice or warn me of something (like the time a very wide load was coming up behind me) or it could be somebody who knows me.

Thorn
05-08-2007, 01:27 PM
If it is a short honk, I always interpret it a "I'm here" and appreciate it. Sometimes the wind can be blowing so hard I cannot hear myself think let alone the car crusing up behind me (especially if it is a hybrid).

In some countries it is a given. On Mallorca, the cars always give little honks when they're passing you. Initially I found it disconcerting, but I guess I adapted because now I actually appreciate the short honk-ers.

Geonz
05-08-2007, 02:38 PM
I've gotten so I swear I can discern a "Get out of My All-Powerful Way!" honk from a "tweetoot... I'm here..." honk from a "Hey! Is that Sue?!?!" from a "You've got something dangling...." honk. I think it is the harmony of the honk with the engine sounds (how fast, slow... the 'wanna accelerate but can't sound) that tells me. I was in church and heard sirens and thought, "Hmmm... they sound like they matter!" ... and thirty seconds later the emergency guys were helping somebody out of a back pew. Maybe just coincidence...
At any rate, I don't let 'em faze me :)

limewave
05-09-2007, 07:15 AM
I've been getting honked at alot lately too. Much more than last year. And it always seems to be when I'm riding with DD. I always ride in the bike lane or on roads with wide shoulders. I don't understand why they need to blast their horns to scare the bajeebers out of me and DD.

Yesterday I was rollerblading with DD in the jogger down a neighborhood road right by the elementary school. Speed limit is 25 mph and there is a generous shoulder. A car came behind me and blared the horn before speeding around us (again, we were well to the right of the white line--he had to swerve off the road to get behind us). What was that about? I'm pretty sure it has nothing to do with my behind either.

Deborajen
05-09-2007, 10:16 AM
Same here on getting honked at a lot more lately. Usually it's the quick blast right when the car gets right up beside me. The car can be either passing from behind or going the other way, but it's almost always a male driver.

For some reason, a lot of men seem to think it's wildly hilarious to make a woman jump - which of course I do. -

Deb

cosc
05-09-2007, 07:26 PM
Finally I can vent a little frustration about rude drivers. Vehicles that honk at me are coming from behind. It is usually a 1 or 2 seconds before they pass. Yesterday I was going up a long hill and watching my rear view mirror to see if a slow semi would give me space. No one was coming from the front so I figured -no problem. You guessed it, he didn't scoot over a inch:( and honked while passing.:mad: :mad: Good thing our prevailing crosswind wasn't blowing.

Geonz
05-14-2007, 09:38 AM
I had a man/boy bark at me yesterday. Okay, he barked "Yes!" but the whole point was to make me jump. I'm afraid taht, without thinking, I barked "A..." right back... but happily my poor judgement didn't escalate things. I prefer not to stoop to their level...
Still, 'round here, the nicer ones are far more common.

rheidis73
05-14-2007, 10:31 AM
I Feel for you...I feel that I am in a not very friendly biking area and it shows!There isn't a ride that goes by that I don't hear a honk! It is so annoying! I get the huge chicken trucks, travelling at 70 plus mph, staying as close as possible to me, and then just cranking on the horn! I have jumped out of my skin a few times. I know it is that they are just being jerks! But nothing I can do about it...Don't let them stop you from riding though :)

Laterider21958
05-14-2007, 11:51 PM
Well girls, just think - if a motorist has to honk at cyclists just to have a laugh and feel superior, they must have VERY sad lives (and probably underdeveloped brains).

rheidis73
05-15-2007, 02:58 AM
I am with you on that! I can't even walk into Wal-Mart with out a car passing me (slowly) in the parking lot and honk at me! It is quite pathetic....I can't even do yard work without a honk, or walk to the mail box, pick up litter! I guess the honking is just part of the town :) Good or bad....But it sounds like it happens everywhere...

mausland1981
05-24-2007, 05:03 AM
As a cyclist i've noticed alots of drivers who doesn't know how to appreciate people on their bikes and since they have their cars which is bigger and faster well they passed you without any respect and honking you because they don't have enough patience to wait atleast for a few seconds.

I totally agree of giving finger to those reckless drivers.I guess they don't understand anything at all.


Someone honked at me the other day, I wasn't even taking up the road. It didn't seem like a particularly angry honk, but honks never sound nice. I want to tell people that by honking at us, they're just increasing the likelihood that they'll startle us and we'll swerve a bit into the lane. We know you're there, you're a car, we could hear you a mile away, you don't need to honk.

I gave the girl who honked at me the finger and hollered at her, even if she did mean well, maybe she'll realize that it freaks cyclists out a little to get suddenly honked at on a busy road.

K.

Deanna
05-24-2007, 08:21 AM
I am completely against giving the finger to drivers. It makes us look as a bad as them. That and the one time I did, I spend the rest of the ride wondering if I really set them off and would they be waiting around the next bend in the road. Turns out they were pulled over further on my route. They were out of the car and one of them made a lunge at me as I rode by. Luckily their car was busy giving another car a jump and they couldn't give chase.

I always smile and wave. It makes me feel better knowing I'm doing it in sarcasm, but it gives them no excuse to escalate the encounter.

onimity
05-31-2007, 07:37 AM
Most of the time I get honked at it seems to be accompanied by whistles or the like, annoying but flattering I suppose ? :o

Of course there are the occasional 'get off my road' honks, I usually encounter these on my commute home where I have to cross several lanes of traffic on a busy road. It is a steep hill so I am usually going fast enough to change lanes easily, but I am really cautious, signal and never even come close to a car while changing lanes.

Still, I get honked at all of the time there and just about jump out of my skin each time. And it may just be coincidence, but they all seem to be SUV drivers. I take these to be 'get off my road' honks due to their duration. These make me mad but I try to keep my middle fingers on my handlebars.

This particular road is such that I am often stopped waiting to turn left next to the people, going straight, that have just honked. Sometimes they just ignore you. One girl glared through her window glass at me a few weeks back and I raised my hands, shrugged my shoulders and gave her an inquisitive look as in, why the honk? She looked at me kind of sheepishly and turned away.

Often I think that cyclists scare drivers, especially young and inexperienced drivers. They don't want to hit us (a good thing) but fear is often so close to frustration. From my perspective, I did everything I could to be safe, to be visible and to let drivers know what I'd be doing, but perhaps she was talking on the phone or not paying attention and I took her by surprise. Many people honk when they are surprised and do not consider the louder sound to ears unprotected by a large metal box. And yea, like I said, I was mad. But I figured if I'd flipped her the bird, like I was tempted to, it would just reinforce to her the idea that she had been correct to honk at that a$$hole cyclist.

I never get angry because of 'I'm here' honks. I live in a bike-friendly area so they are rare, but I often don't hear cars until they are close when it's windy and hybrids can be hard to hear on even a still day, riding slowly. I know a lot of hybrid drivers that are accustomed to honking in conditions (like parking lots) where people often depend on their sense of sound to know that a car is coming. So I do appreciate it when hybrids honk (from a decent distance). It's scary to be passed by a car that you haven't heard too.

Anne

lph
05-31-2007, 11:19 AM
I got honked at today. It's quite rare actually, considering how much I ride in traffic, so I guess drivers here are pretty civil.

This guy passed me, on a road otherwise empty for several hundred yards in either direction, honked, and pointed slowly and obviously at the cycle path next to me. So I smiled and waved prettily back.

The rest of my ride I spent making up the great conversation I could have had with him if I'd managed to catch up. It went something like this, all with a big friendly virtual smile ;) :

"Why, hi there! You honked at me, you want me to use the bike path, right?" (...)
"Let me ask you - have you ever ridden a bike on that path?" (...)
"I thought not. Let me tell you something about this path! You've never ridden a bike with tires like this either, have you?" *pointing at my skinny tires* (...)
"Well, this path starts right over there, with an edge sharp enough to crack a wheel and certainly puncture my tires. Unless I stop and carry my bike over it, which is about as much fun as you having to stop your car and roll down the window to talk to me. *merry laugh*
Anyway, the path goes on past several driveways where cars come out in a helluva rush, ready to run me over in a heartbeat. And over there it passes a construction area, so I have to veer out in the road anyway. And 200 yards later it does it again! Can you beat that?" (...)
"Anyway, dearie - THAT is why I'm in the road, it's not because I enjoy your company. Have a nice day!"

:D

ATL Laura
06-06-2007, 08:53 AM
I got a rude honk accompanied by a “get off the road” from a motorcycle once :eek: …what’s up with that? I know he had plenty of room to get by me.