Soldato
- Joined
- 18 Oct 2002
- Posts
- 4,457
- Location
- between Blandford Street and Mars
I didn't realise thats what you were getting at - fair point. But you can hardly say that drivers are always considerate. They cut into cycle lanes, stop in the areas at traffic lights that are meant for cyclists, they pass to close and too quickly. OK, thats a lot of examples that cause me a problem when I'm on my bike. So when I'm in my car, what about the person that sits a foot off my back bumper, pulls out in front of me etc. etc.
Lots of impolite and incosiderate things happen on our roads, and that isn't down to bikes, or cars, or buses. Have you ever considered that maybe you should show a bit of consideration for that cyclist who is a bit wobbly, or whatever. You don't own the road, regardless of whether you pay road tax or not, no matter how much you would like to think it.
However, I realise, especially in this forum, that this isn't an argument I'm going to win, so we should probably just both admit that cyclists and drivers both cause their fair share of problems on the roads![]()
I agree and wasn't saying that cyclists are the only item on our roads that is to blame. However, I do show the wobbly cyclists some consideration. I'm not a total git.
Anyway, I'm not talking about "urban" cyclists here, I don't drive in the cities enough to find any of their actions annoying, and I don't blame them anyway. I'd probably do the same if I lived in such an area. But I do have to put up with a considerable number of... shall we say "rural warrior" cyclists? The sort who, like I said earlier, decide suddenly that it's high time the whole family got healthy and that they should dig that old knackered racer out of the garage and go for a ride, and that, because they are being "green" and "healthy" they have priority over all other road users and can't do anything wrong and if they're holding the traffic up? So what, that's the car drivers problem.
The road using equivalent of those annoying breed of ramblers that traipse directly through a farmers crop simply because their map shows a foot path crosses the field. Yes, it may, but there's nothing wrong with walking around the edge of the field instead of trampling down the crop, now is there?
We seem to get quite a few of those type around these parts
