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Thread: Urban vs Rural

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    Weir, TX
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    403
    Quote Originally Posted by MCAP View Post
    We live on an acreage outside of town so I just head out my driveway and off I go.
    That is wonderful, isn't it? I think it's one of the best things about living where I do
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  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jul 2003
    Location
    Traveling Nomad
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    6,763
    I've lived mostly in a rural area for my adult cycling years. The drivers range from very respectful and polite to occasionally rude, but we had a lot more problems with loose dogs. Here in the rural south, there are a LOT of loose dogs. This led to my accident in '05 where I fractured my pelvis in three places and had to have surgery to pin myself back together again. Two loose dogs.

    Now that we live in Chapel Hill and ride in the 'burbs and the smaller cities of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, we haven't seen so much as a single loose dog. There are a lot more cars, but this is a very bicycling friendly area, so we haven't had any run-ins or jerks or yelling incidents. Most motorists have been just fine.

    I like both types of cycling. They're just very different.
    Emily

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  3. #3
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Columbia, MO
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    2,041
    Quote Originally Posted by emily_in_nc View Post
    I like both types of cycling. They're just very different.
    Yes. They are different. Urban has more traffic and more harassment. But rural has higher speeds. I wonder if the zone where urban turns into rural is possibly the most dangerous. That is the zone my driveway is in, where my daughter's wreck happened!
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  4. #4
    Join Date
    Apr 2009
    Location
    Tucson, AZ
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    4,632
    I have to wonder too, Melalvai, about those sorts of areas that are recent victims of suburban sprawl. You know, the ones where traffic control measures haven't been adjusted to the new heavier traffic load. Speed limits that are too high, intersections that should have a traffic light instead of a stop sign, that sort of thing. There's an area like that about three miles from my house. There's a road with multiple strip malls where the speed limit is 45+, but the traffic density is fairly high. In the older suburbs, those kind of areas have a speed limit that's 35 or less. I'd be terrified to ride there.

    Parts of Mesa, AZ are like that too, but they had the sense to put bike lanes on some of the roads.
    At least I don't leave slime trails.
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  5. #5
    Join Date
    Aug 2009
    Posts
    321
    I get it everywhere, rural and urban, in SLC, Malkin. My sister-in-law, mother-in-law, and I were out at Saltair, stopped on the side of the road, making an adjustment on MILs bike. A driver went past with his middle finger saluting us for absolutely no reason at all. I think there are jerks everywhere.

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2010
    Location
    NY state
    Posts
    17
    I ride in urban areas, because that is where I live, and it takes about 30 min (in a car) to get to the country so I would have to take a day trip to ride there.
    I think a lot of the difference is what Cataboo said. Where you have a higher density of people, you will get more harassment just because there are more of that type of people in a crowd.
    I live in a rough part of Buffalo, NY, and some of the people are respectful, and some are rude. The responses also vary depending on where in the city I ride. The places where more bikes are ridden are more tolerant, and bike-friendly (generally where the young progressive people live) than the poorer, ghetto areas.(where there is no funding for anything so we have rotten sidewalks, and rough streets)
    My brother has had a car try to run him off the road, but I have had cars wait for me to go at 4-way stop signs, so there are both extremes.
    I am comfortable riding in the city....I don't like high speeds, or high density of cars, but I rarely ride on those kind of roads.

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Sep 2008
    Location
    Beautiful NW or Left Coast
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    5,619
    I ride in Seattle most of the time. I actually like city bicycling more than riding in the suburbs. Drivers here for the most part have gotten used to bikes being around. We sure have the occasional jerk, but you know, when traffic is stop and go, you are doing about the same speed they are. Now suburbia is a different thing. All the housewives with their huge SUV's (that they can't see around) and aggressive angry men... UGH, there are some towns i do not like to ride in.
    Finally out in the country, it's nicer than suburbia at least.. The areas of countryside where I ride are scenic areas so again they are accustomed to seeing cyclists and I feel pretty comfortable there too.
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