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Thread: road rules.

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    the dry side of Washington
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    149

    road rules.

    Can someone please explain how/why people on a good bike with all the "gear" even their brain bucked is on correctly still insist on giving us a bad name by ignoring the rules of the road?! I see many "cyclists" in my town who use the road but refuse to obey traffic signs and the like. This is why drivers don't like cyclists. Truthfully, it really irritates me!!
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
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    There are a lot of commuter cyclists here who do stupid things--don't obey traffic lights or stop signs, ride against traffic, no lights or switch randomly between the road and sidewalk.

    The spandex-clad crowd (what there is of it) is actually pretty good about following "the rules", but not always good about wearing helmets...
    At least I don't leave slime trails.
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  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2006
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    Quote Originally Posted by BikingNurse View Post
    Can someone please explain how/why people on a good bike with all the "gear" even their brain bucked is on correctly still insist on giving us a bad name by ignoring the rules of the road?! I see many "cyclists" in my town who use the road but refuse to obey traffic signs and the like. This is why drivers don't like cyclists. Truthfully, it really irritates me!!
    I'll let you know as soon as someone can tell me why a motorist - with all the "gear" - fully functioning brakes, lights, and a steering wheel, and presumably a brain in their head controlling all of it - can insist on ignoring the rules of the road - speeding, blowing through stop signs, failing to yield the right of way, failing to signal a turn. The list goes on.

    You see.....a bicycle is controlled by a human (what they're wearing or not wearing is irrelevant). Just as a motor vehicle is controlled by a human. Humans will do whatever they think they can get away with - whether it's safe, legal, or otherwise. A human on a bicycle is more rare than a human in a motor vehicle. Therefore, what the human on the bike does is more obvious and therefore more visible. The frequency with which a motor vehicle operator ignores the rules of the road is just as high - if not moreso - but by virtue of their numbers and mass, it is easier for them to ignore their own transgressions and lay blame at the "other".
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    Good answer! <applause>
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Katy, Texas
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    1,811

    road rules

    as they keep saying in the movie Shakespeare in Love "It's a mystery."

    marni
    marni
    Katy, Texas
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  6. #6
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
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    2,545
    BikingNurse, I get frustrated with bad cyclists, too. And I really, really, really don't see what the behavior of auto drivers has to do with it.

    When a cyclist ran down a 73-year-old women in Central Park, the road was closed to cars. When cyclists grumble at me for stopping to let pedestrians cross the bike path (required by law in a crosswalk), there are no cars present.

    When a cyclist bumped me while I was photographing a bird nest last week, there were no cars around. It was just plain, no-excuses rude biking. Nothing to do with cars.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Location
    West MI
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    I had TWO cyclists nearly take me out, today (both in the same group of riders). I used the public MUP for a few miles to avoid a busy and risky stretch of road (the path in this area is generally pretty quiet, though not in great shape for riding a road bike), but I think I would have been safer on the road with the cars.

    They were riding 2 across...no problem, but when another cyclist (me) approaches from the opposite direction wouldn't it seem appropriate to go single-file to let the other cyclist pass? So I squeezed past while they refused to give me an inch (and they actually glared at me...WTF?!). Then the next pair in the group was a woman and a guy. The woman looked right at me...the guy was looking at the ground immediately in front of his bike--did not see me (and the woman didn't in any way alert him to my presence). As we got closer I yelled "heads up, heads up, heads up!" He nearly lost control of his bike and crashed with the woman as he darted over to avoid colliding with me.

    Flippin' morons. These idiots make the rest of us look bad. They were all on road bikes, so one would assume that they have some knowledge of proper riding etiquette. My dad (not a cyclist) has had it with the touron (tourist moron) cyclists in their area. They ride on the wrong side of the road, weave all over, won't go single-file when they obstruct traffic, run stops, don't watch for cars, and just generally put everyone on the road at risk. THESE "cyclists" are the ones who stand-out to non-cyclists and cause so much ire to be directed towards those of us who are following rules appropriately.
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  8. #8
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    Sep 2007
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    What 7r was trying to say, and what I agreed with, is that it doesn't have anything to do with cars OR bikes.

    It has to do with PEOPLE.

    I see just as many rude and oblivious pedestrians ... we all have.

    Nothing to do with cycling or cyclists.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Tucson, AZ
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    I get that. The problem is, nobody ever says "drivers don't follow the rules" or "pedestrians don't pay attention." It's often "cyclists don't follow the rules, so they shouldn't be on the road and if I hit one, I shouldn't have to face the consequences."

    We don't have the protection pedestrians have, nor do we have the strength of numbers or (in many, if not most) places to constitute a political force. A few bad apples...
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  10. #10
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
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    I agree that people, generally, are rude.
    But, what I think the op was trying to describe is that bad feeling I get when I see another cyclist do something rude, illegal, etc. Because I am a member of that group, it makes me feel like I am going to be judged or compared to the cyclist who is being rude. While i do get mad other drivers, it's not the same feeling; I think it has to do with being a member of a "minority" group, that others always are not so keen on. The best thing I can compare it to is the way I feel when another Jewish person is accused of a crime or something immoral. It's like his/her actions speak for the whole group.
    Perhaps not everyone who rides gets this "feeling," when observing other cyclists behaving badly, but I know that my DH and several of my riding friends do
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  11. #11
    Join Date
    Dec 2005
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    WA State
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    Quote Originally Posted by OakLeaf View Post
    What 7r was trying to say, and what I agreed with, is that it doesn't have anything to do with cars OR bikes.

    It has to do with PEOPLE.

    I see just as many rude and oblivious pedestrians ... we all have.

    Nothing to do with cycling or cyclists.
    +++1

    And it certainly has nothing to do with spandex.....

    People like to generalize about those who look different from themselves and ignore those who seem to similar. Why else would it be perfectly fine to perform a California stop in a car (I *rarely, rarely* ever see a car come to a full and actual stop behind a stop sign here) and then turn around are totally rail about the cyclist who did the same thing?
    "Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide

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