Sometimes I just holler "On your right!" as they go by.![]()
Sometimes I just holler "On your right!" as they go by.![]()
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I do that too!! I also make faces at the ones that pass me ;-)
My friends and I, all old time roadies, always call out. But we have noticed the younger riders don't - like it's not cool or something. I always yell to someone who passes and doesn't shout out "Don't forgot to call!!!!". The other day my guy and I were hiking in a local mountain bike park and noticed all the riders were calling out, being very friendly and polite. My partner then observed, "No wonder, they are all old dudes!" - obviously their moms taught them better!!!
I figure its my mission to teach those young kids better. Some of the ones I ride with make fun of me but no matter, it's just right to do.
BCIpam - Nature Girl
Me too! Only one time I did that, and at the next light when I caught up with the guy who passed me, he said, "I guess I didn't call out loud enough," which made me feel like a jerk.
For the record, I'm one of the young cyclists, and I invariably slow down and call out, often loudly, before passing on the trail.
I have noticed this in the local park where I have ridden so much. To date NOT ONE CYCLIST has called out to me when they passed. It should also be apparent that I am a new cyclist as I am still working on riding a straight line... though am much better than I was![]()
Really? HP is 2 lanes wide (one way). It's not a bike trail. There's usually a very safe passing distance to be had where you shouldn't need advance notice. It's also so crowded that if I would never shut up if I had to call out to every person I passed. Also, everyone knows that on Thursday nights, there is a huge peloton speeding around and sprinting every lap, making it more crowded than usual. Ride as you would on any road and keep an ear out for others.
One of the big reasons I stopped riding on Beach Dr was because too many cyclists were passing me with only a couple of inches of clearance and they never ever warned they were passing. And I never ever heard them coming or knew they were there until I saw them next to me. Keeping an ear out is not enough to hear some bikes coming up from behind.
"Everyone" knows?! No, everyone does NOT know. Sorry. The huge peloton speeding around is NOT exempt from showing common biking courtesy, despite what most of them seem to think. Sure, Hains Point is two lanes, and there usually is a very safe passing distance to be had, but some people -- some of whom are passing me -- don't use the "very safe passing distance" and are happy to get within three or four inches of me, maybe because they are riding many-across and there isn't an empty lane next to them.
I ride in crowded areas sometimes, and call out "bike passing on your left" and/or use my bell as often as necessary, even continuously if that's what it takes.
That Hains Point is NOT a bike trail, but is used not only by cars, but bikes, walkers, skaters, runners, and parents taking a stroll with their kids in a stroller, is all the MORE reason why someone passing should call or ring out. And if cars are blocking the road -- trying to park -- I think the "huge peloton speeding around" should act like traffic and STOP rather than weave around the car.
If bikes want to be treated as traffic, bikes need to act like traffic!
Last edited by owlice; 05-07-2010 at 11:57 AM.
It might help your comfort level if you got a mirror... Not that that excuses the inconsiderate cyclists - I don't like people passing close by without telling me either, but at least with a mirror I know they are coming.
Three little words that mean so much...I don't know why it's so hard to say.
Audible signal to pass is the law in some states (including Ohio). In motorized vehicles most people ignore it except on one-lane roads. When I mentioned this being the law, someone here thought it was "nonsensical." I don't think so at all. I agree that it's common courtesy regardless. If there's a peloton, no, every rider doesn't have to call out, but the point rider should say it's a peloton. If I'm point in a small paceline, I'll usually call out in advance, and then when I'm beside the person, I'll tell them how many riders behind me.
Speed comes from what you put behind you. - Judi Ketteler
I'm all about calling out too. But on the flip side, when we were riding the Seattle to Portland ride last year with 10,000 other riders it got a little annoying after the first few thousand "on your left". We decided on just saying "passing" and then only to the riders who didn't look very alert. bikerHen
Well.... cars don't honk at one another when they pass.....
I don't know the area in question, so I don't know the particular situation, but as it is a road and not a MUP, I'm more inclined to agree with aicabsolut. I don't call out to cyclists when I am passing them on the road, just as I don't want to be honked at by cars. Then again I don't buzz them either. I give them the 3 feet or more that should be given by a car.
While some states may have an "audible signal" law, others have a prohibition.... its actually illegal to honk at cyclists for no good reason (ie an actual dangerous situation that requires use of a horn) in this state. I prefer it that way. For the most part I can hear cars unless it is very, very noisy. I know full well they are there. When they let out an ear piercing honk right off my side, it just makes me jump and that's not good.
"Sharing the road means getting along, not getting ahead" - 1994 Washington State Driver's Guide
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