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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Location
    Shannondale, WV
    Posts
    8
    I think the weirdest almost-collision with a pedestrian I ever had when I was biking years ago was when I was coming up on a woman on the Mt. Vernon bike trail and I called out "Passing on your left!" and pulled to the left, as had always been standard practice. Instead of just letting me go by, she yelled "No! Right!" and stepped into my path. I was able to jerk the bike to the right and not hit her, but it was a near thing.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Uncanny Valley
    Posts
    14,498
    Quote Originally Posted by WVGeo View Post
    I think the weirdest almost-collision with a pedestrian I ever had when I was biking years ago was when I was coming up on a woman on the Mt. Vernon bike trail and I called out "Passing on your left!" and pulled to the left, as had always been standard practice. Instead of just letting me go by, she yelled "No! Right!" and stepped into my path. I was able to jerk the bike to the right and not hit her, but it was a near thing.
    Wow, that is bizarre.

    But it points up what I was saying in the other thread. It's obvious which lane cyclists are supposed to be in on a MUP. But for pedestrians, it's unnatural to be in the right lane with their back to traffic. If there are no posted rules stating that all traffic should keep right except to pass, it's no wonder if pedestrians get confused about that.
    Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jul 2007
    Location
    Bothell area, WA
    Posts
    564
    Quote Originally Posted by WVGeo View Post
    I think the weirdest almost-collision with a pedestrian I ever had when I was biking years ago was when I was coming up on a woman on the Mt. Vernon bike trail and I called out "Passing on your left!" and pulled to the left, as had always been standard practice. Instead of just letting me go by, she yelled "No! Right!" and stepped into my path. I was able to jerk the bike to the right and not hit her, but it was a near thing.
    That is totally bizarre!

    I actually had an experience similar to that, but I was the ped. When I was in junior high, I was rollerblading along with my dad, who was training for a marathon. Dad was on the right and I was on the left. Rollerblading, as you probably know, takes up a lot of side-to-side space, so I spent a lot of time moving to the right when bicyclists came up behind and called "On your left." I did it so many times that it became habit: I heard somebody call anything behind me, and I immediately moved right.

    Then came the bicyclist who called "Down the middle!" and started to ride right between me and my Dad. I, however, had heard a voice and had started moving to the right to get out of the way. Of course we crashed: Dad got out of the way, but the bicyclist hit the ground and so did I. I was a little scraped up but not terribly so, thanks to all my knee-, elbow-, and wrist-pads; the bicyclist wasn't badly injured but he was bleeding. (Now I wonder if his bike was damaged -- probably so.) Most of all, he was incredibly pissed off at me for running into him. I distinctly recall how angry he was that I had moved to the right when he clearly said "Down the middle" or "in between" or something like that.

    Being 13 years old, I took it deeply to heart and burst into tears. The bicyclist went on his angry way, and Dad and I went home. I still have never forgotten the cyclist, though, and I think of that experience every time I go to pass somebody going slower than me. Clearly sometimes -- like in the OP -- you can't be predictable enough for some peds. But sometimes a little predictability goes a long way.
    Almost a Bike Blog:
    http://kf.rainydaycommunications.net/

    Never give up. Never surrender.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    May 2004
    Location
    NY, NY
    Posts
    397
    "Down the middle"
    This is a strange thing to call out and expect any particular response. Who or what is down the middle?

    I can imagine a 13 year-old thinking "but I was so good keeping to the right! why is he yelling at me?"

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Jul 2009
    Location
    Black Hills of SD
    Posts
    698
    Around here the most interesting MUPs are on the North side of town. There the pedestrians are most likely to be inebriated, very unpredictable, and sometimes panhandling. Once I crashed going around a couple (I misjudged the edge of the path getting back on). I was pretty banged up. They at least made sure I was okay before asking me if I had any money.

    Deb

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Aug 2006
    Location
    pleasant hill, ca
    Posts
    52
    wow, thanks for all of the replies. i'm feeling a little better about it now, mostly. my handlebars weren't bent, just the shifter, which a nice person at the lbs clicked back in place in about 2 seconds.

    i've been even more cautious with the peds now. i was grateful for that today when on my ride i slowed down a great deal for parents with a 4 yr old girl. the mom had pulled her to herself but the girl saw me, and literally broke away from her mom to run right into my path. why do they do that? it was ok tho because i was prepared for it and stopped easily. a little later i passed a family with a 2 or 3 yr old boy, i was walking the bike by him because his dad had to literally grab him by the arms to keep him from running into my path. i am so glad i am not a parent. i don't know how you parents do not go insane. well, it actually appears that some of you do sometimes.

    after hearing some of your stories, i am even more glad that no one got hurt in my little incident.
    "Doubt is not an agreeable condition, but certainty is an absurd one."

 

 

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