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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    392
    Quote Originally Posted by mimitabby View Post
    Hey Jenn, get a mirror! I have one on my helmet.

    There simply isn't enough room in my head to worry about all this stuff. The idea of riding down a road where there is NO BODY is a little frightening, because if i crashed (not likely) no one would come to rescue me.. (especially if there's no cell signal)
    Jenn, if your neighborhood is safe enough to live in and raise kids, it ought to be safe enough to ride your bike!
    I live in a big crazy city. I don't have a problem walking the streets at night,
    (the sidewalks ) or riding my bike in the daytime. I do even ride at night sometimes, it scares me because of visibility.

    I am someone who fights fear all the time. You have to, or you'll end up locked in your house, afraid to go out.
    Well, we live on the base, so we are pretty safe, but where I d my hill training, it is VERY isolated way out at the back of the base. Since I usually only get to ride on weekends while DH watches the little one, I'm out there alone. The erie thing, is last time I was out there this truck passed me 3 times, it DID make me pedal a heck of ALOT faster to get back to the main part of the base where there are "people". I've been thinking about a mirror I may have to get one.
    Surgtech, thanks for the info, I love Nashbar, so I'll take a look!!

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    392
    I just read a post...."Mace" illegal?? Are you kidding me, that is ridiculous! Ohh, yea, we need to be concerned about people that are going to try and harm us!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2005
    Location
    WA, Australia
    Posts
    3,292
    Quote Originally Posted by Jenn View Post
    Well, we live on the base, so we are pretty safe, but where I d my hill training, it is VERY isolated way out at the back of the base. Since I usually only get to ride on weekends while DH watches the little one, I'm out there alone. The erie thing, is last time I was out there this truck passed me 3 times, it DID make me pedal a heck of ALOT faster to get back to the main part of the base where there are "people". I've been thinking about a mirror I may have to get one.
    Surgtech, thanks for the info, I love Nashbar, so I'll take a look!!
    WOW Jenn Im sorry you still feel unsafe even on a military base. I often take my bike down to the base here to ride as its nice to do some flat stuff for a change. I have done some longer rides out there (60-75 miles) and to manage this without riding the same roads over and over I ride every little road I can find including the ones that head out into the boonies. I have always felt completely at ease. My husband loves it when I ride down there because he doesnt worry about me at all. Im sad that it seems not all military bases are this way.
    The most effective way to do it, is to do it.
    Amelia Earhart

    2005 Trek 5000 road/Avocet 02 40W
    2006 Colnago C50 road/SSM Atola
    2005 SC Juliana SL mtb/WTB Laser V

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Colorado
    Posts
    326
    Amanda, that would definitely drive me crazy. I may be happily ignorant but I just don't think that a woman is necessarily in more danger alone. Yes, there are the psychopaths out there looking for a vulnerable victim but to my mind that's not terribly common. I could ride by a sniper or be on a bus that gets bombed. But the risk of these things has never been enough to keep me home. I can go anywhere a man can. I just figure that if I do what I can to ensure my safety and then happily and confidently go where I please things will work out OK.

    In terms of rude behavior from cars and the like, I don't think that you are more likely to get that because you are female or riding alone. I have traveled a lot alone throughout the world. I went on a trip through Chile, Bolivia, Brazil, Argentina and Uruguay last year and people freaked out when they heard I was traveling alone. I did occasionally travel with others throughout the trip but I honestly felt safer alone than with, particularly, a male traveling companion. With a male, I'd get ripped off, argued with, etc. Alone, people bent over backwards to help me and went to extraordinary lengths to ensure my safety. I think that males, excluding of course serial killers/rapists, are much more likely to be aggressive toward other males and they often feel sorry for and protective of a woman alone. I have nothing scientific to back that up, it has just been my experience.

    Python, I trained in Taekwon-Do (ITF) up to my high green belt. I moved at that point and couldn't find a place to train. We had a strong self-defense bent to our training as well, we did self-defense as a part of every class and our belt testings. We practiced releases for all sorts of grabs and then more detailed routines for different scenarios. I had three at my rank, a grab from behind (bear hug and neck grab) an attack from the front (bear hug and neck) and an arm grab from the side or across the body. We used a lot of the things that you mentioned, but I think that the most important thing they drilled into us was to get your chin to your chest so that you can breathe and get blood to your brain. Our instructors would regularly come up behind us when we least expected it and go for a neck grab to drill it into us (with pushups if we failed). We learned a sequence of attacks with the idea that you took off whenever you got the attacker off of you. We learned some tactics that would potentially be deadly if executed correctly but of course those were further along in the sequence. We also did an elbow to the lower ribs for an attack from behind and practiced with boards so we knew we could break them. Also they taught us to slam the rear of our heads into their face as it is disorienting to the attacker. We followed that with a throw. The foot-stomping trick is a good one. A few times partners executed that too accurately and it really hurts. I can't imagine the pain of a full-force attack with a nice pair of heels on!

    For those using mace/pepper spray, it is good that you are taking precautions to protect yourselves and it should go without being said but make sure that you know how to use it and when. I think it is important to practice scenarios and realize when it can help you and when it is pretty useless. What is the point where you use it? And remember that it can be taken from you, it can be used on you as well. The benefit of learning how to protect yourself and working through scenarios is that it gives you confidence that you can take care of yourself and that confidence in turn makes you less likely to be a target.

    Anne

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2007
    Posts
    392
    Wow....well, If I am conscience after being run down, I pray to the "higher power" that I have at least enough strength to protect myself.

    Once again, I am a source of debate.....which was my FAVORITE topic in college....but on here.....dang it's a scary world.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    Anne- Well, I know I can go anywhere a man can and my husband is far from the type to tell me not to. Personally I don't want him out alone on the roads by our house but I can't stop that either. He simply agreed that my concerns about how rural the area I would be riding in warrants my concern of riding alone. It could be something like an attack (unlikely) or simply a wreck where it is quite a long time before anyone knows it happened.

    And the rude people come up on me first and have done it when I am riding alone. They are rude to who ever they want to be rude to, but I tend to startle easy and that is what I don't like. The county roads are narrow and there are times the large trucks around here intentionally crowd me off just for a juvenile laugh.

    I don't think there are people out there praying on me. Although, the incident with Jenny Ewing last proved it could happen and that is the sad part. It is personal preference and I prefer a riding buddy now that I live in a rural area. Luckily, it is rare that I do not have that option.

    On a side note- My former boss was an avid MALE cyclist who said he would not ride alone. Simple reason, his friend got hit by car and no one knew for quite some time. No one could even tell him what happened.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Seattle, WA
    Posts
    1,764
    This is a fascinating thread. It makes sense that some of the risks wouldn't be from cars or other people but from other hazards. I tend to ride on well-traveled MUTs but don't carry any kind of ID with me which is bad. I always have my cell phone but I guess that doesn't help if someone was trying to figure out my emergency contact.

    I always tend to lessen the risk on myself by saying (when DH gets concerned) "oh, I do this ride all the time. I'm ok" while I know I would get concerned if DH was riding far away on his own.

    I guess a lot of what we're learning here could be used in planning for rides, such as contacting someone to let them know we're going and knowing what to do should something happen.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
    Location
    Blessed to be all over the place!
    Posts
    3,433
    From The Great Gatsby a dialogue between Tom and Daisy:

    "you're a rotten driver", [Tom] protested, "either you ought to be more careful or you oughtn't drive at all"

    "I am careful"

    "No You're Not"

    "Well, OTHER PEOPLE ARE", she said lightly

    "What's that got to do with it?"

    "they'll keep out of my way" she insisted, "It takes two to make an accident"

    "suppose you met someone just as careless as yourself"

    "I hope I never will" she answered...

    Those familiar with the book know that Daisy met that random person that triggered a tragic chain of events later in the book...substitute a few words and you summarize this debate in a nutshell

    Please, Please, Please: Be prepared for the worse that society has to offer. It may be a random event, and a small probability...but violence is rampant in our world.

    Forget worrying about a scratch on the bike, carry something that helps to keep you safer. All you're trying to do is make yourself a more difficult target.
    If you don't grow where you're planted, you'll never BLOOM - Will Rogers

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Sierra Foothills, CA
    Posts
    800
    Quote Originally Posted by teigyr View Post
    I tend to ride on well-traveled MUTs but don't carry any kind of ID with me which is bad. I always have my cell phone but I guess that doesn't help if someone was trying to figure out my emergency contact.
    I have a hard time remembering to bring my ID with me on rides, so I made a photocopy of my Driver's License and my health insurance card and wrote all my emergency contact information on the same bright colored piece of paper. I put it right in the back of my seat bag so it practically falls out when you unzip it. Of course, you can't be sure someone would look in your seat bag, but at least it's always there. I also have a little label inside my helmet with basic emergency info. And I carry my cell phone (although it doesn't work worth beans around here!).

    99% of my rides are solo. I ride rural roads and feel pretty safe...but I certanly don't take it for granted. I've been screamed at, honked at, and even had someone reach their arm out the car window and grab at me (now THAT about scared me to death!). Sometimes I think the poor pavement conditions are actually my biggest danger. I also live alone so no one would miss me if I didn't return from a ride. Friends and family know which roads I ride but I don't necessarily let someone know when I'm out riding. I try to be careful and aware, but I refuse to let fear keep me from doing things alone. Some of the worst injuries and accidents over my lifetime have been while doing what would be considered safe activities. I do get scared out there on the road though. My biggest fear is dogs and I'm going pepper spray shopping this weekend!

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Sep 2006
    Location
    Wiltshire, England, UK
    Posts
    509
    Quote Originally Posted by onimity View Post
    Also they taught us to slam the rear of our heads into their face as it is disorienting to the attacker.

    The benefit of learning how to protect yourself and working through scenarios is that it gives you confidence that you can take care of yourself and that confidence in turn makes you less likely to be a target.

    Anne
    Only snag with that is if you are like me, 5ft zilch and the would-be attacker is 6ft 6in...ain't goin' to reach so I tend to aim low. Another good place to get someone if you can is down the inside of the thigh. Nerve runs down there. Good hard kick can drop an assailant. That's where I kicked one of my assailants when I was a taxi driver and followed it up with another kick to the back of the same leg. He limped off down an alleyway and disappeared. Helped that I'd steel toe-cap shoes on too

    I think that confidence does make you less likely to be a target. Most attackers/muggers will pick on people who either are vulnerable or look vulnerable.

    Over here in the UK we're not allowed to carry mace sprays or anything that could be interpreted as an "offensive weapon". Our laws are completely useless, thanks to the present government and their hangers-on who favour the criminal above the victim. Here, if someone breaks into your house and you catch them, if you hit them you will be arrested and charged with assault That then lets the criminal sue you for damages! There have been many cases of that happening in recent years.

    There is a policy at the moment of not jailing criminals - even those with a criminal record longer than your arm so criminals are sticking two fingers up at the law (and everyone else) and getting away with it. Life imprisonment here doesn't mean life. It means getting out after 4, 5 years or whatever some do-gooder decides. Criminals know they can do what they want and get away with it - even committing murder.

    Law and Order in the UK is a farce at the moment
    There are a lot of unwanted, unloved bikes out there - go on give a bike a good home

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Jun 2005
    Location
    Portland, OR
    Posts
    1,253
    I highly recommend that you read The Gift Of Fear, by Gavin De Becker. He talks a lot about the power dynamic that comes into play as attackers select their victim, and how to spot some early warning signs. Also, how to use your fear as positive motivation to avoid/escape a dangerous situation, as opposed to being paralyzed by it. It should be required reading for men and women alike.

  12. #12
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Posts
    2,059
    I do not want to start a firestorm here, but I am curious if anyone carries any weapons aside from mace or pepper spray?
    "The best rides are the ones where you bite off much more than you can chew, and live through it." ~ Doug Bradbury

  13. #13
    Join Date
    Mar 2007
    Location
    Sierra Foothills, CA
    Posts
    800
    Quote Originally Posted by Starfish View Post
    I do not want to start a firestorm here, but I am curious if anyone carries any weapons aside from mace or pepper spray?
    No, but my friend jokes around about carrying a handgun...kept in plain sight on the left hip, of course!

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2007
    Location
    Southeast.
    Posts
    241
    Quote Originally Posted by Starfish View Post
    I do not want to start a firestorm here, but I am curious if anyone carries any weapons aside from mace or pepper spray?
    My bike. Sucker is made of steel- one hell of a weapon to wield.
    I enjoy it all.

    See Susan Ride Like A Girl.
    http://susancyclist.wordpress.com/

  15. #15
    Join Date
    Jan 2006
    Location
    Pacific Northwest
    Posts
    3,436
    I 100% agree with Dianyla. It is an excellent book. Also, see if there's a class around in basic safety. The Redmond Police Department did one last year taught by a cop that was great. And if you want to carry something, make it pepper spray, not mace--cop's recommendation. But make sure it's one that is powerful enough to shoot out the spray 6-8 feet. I think Halt may do that. Bear pepper spray is what you'd want to look for.

    Quote Originally Posted by Dianyla View Post
    I highly recommend that you read The Gift Of Fear, by Gavin De Becker. He talks a lot about the power dynamic that comes into play as attackers select their victim, and how to spot some early warning signs. Also, how to use your fear as positive motivation to avoid/escape a dangerous situation, as opposed to being paralyzed by it. It should be required reading for men and women alike.
    "My predominant feeling is one of gratitude. I have loved and been loved;I have been given much and I have given something in return...Above all, I have been a sentient being, a thinking animal, on this beautiful planet, and that in itself has been an enormous privilege and an adventure." O. Sacks

 

 

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