I only saw you by luck.
Votes: 23 Results | Other Polls
I also find, as a rider, people who don't follow the road laws make it worse for people who do, because the drivers have no idea what to expect and often get pissed when you take your lane because, say, you need to turn left. --Has anybody seen my clue? I know I had it when I came in here.
He sails from world to world in a flying tomb, serving gods who eat hope.[ Parent ]
But it's worth it. Amortised damage-wise, they're doing me more harm than anyone nearby in a car.[ Parent ]
There have been plenty of times where I came to an intersection, hit the crosswalk (or stop line) when it was green, then had it turn yellow right as I enter (can't stop at that point as I'd end up stopped in the middle of the intersection). I'm sure quite a few drivers were willing to mentally castigate me for "running the light".
Hell, there are some intersections around here where if I am stopped at the light with my foot on the raised pedal, the light can turn green and I cannot clear the intersection before it turns red. And that's on a single-speed where I have to jam the pedal down hard to get moving and then generally stand and pedal at least for a while. I wonder how many drivers, coming to the intersection as I'm finally clearing, have angrily thought "dammit, another cyclist running red lights"?
Rachael"Like oceans of regret / All these questions rise / Will they drown with our mistakes / Or will they learn to fly?" -- Blackfire
from yellow on one to green on the other. What usually happens (over here, anyway) is that a given set of lights go yellow ("Stop if you can, I'm about to go red"), then they actually go red, then there's a pause, then the orthogonal set of lights go red+yellow, then green.
I imagine clover kicker's point was that, given the speed at which the cyclist was travelling, (s)he must have been cutting it very late on the lights indeed in order to still be on (entering?) the intersection when clover's lights went green.
It's an arsehole's move whoever does it.
So it was raining like crazy again here on my way home, and I saw about a dozen truly spectacular idiots in cars and SUVs putting people's lives in danger, including their own. How many cyclists did I see pulling stupid moves? Zero.
The only reason people point out bad cyclists is because it's relatively infrequent. i.e., noteworthy.[ Parent ]
But, that's the reason I want buttons to hand out to good cyclists with "witty" phrases like "I wait my turn" (for cyclists who actually yield until it's their turn at a stop sign) and "Sidewalks are for walking" and "The wrong way is the path of morons". Of course, I need opposite ones to hand to the idiots so they can bristle at me for daring to suggest they are idiots. More pleasant than yelling "idiot! why don't you stop?" and they get a button out of it even!
But, then again, there are plenty of stupid car drivers too. However, I don't really give a damn what the cars do because a motorist driving like an idiot doesn't reflect on me the way other cyclists being idiots does."Like oceans of regret / All these questions rise / Will they drown with our mistakes / Or will they learn to fly?" -- Blackfire[ Parent ]
Rachael"Like oceans of regret / All these questions rise / Will they drown with our mistakes / Or will they learn to fly?" -- Blackfire[ Parent ]
I hear cyclists complaining prolifically about the actions of drivers all the time. I hear drivers complaining prolifically about the actions of drivers all the time. I hear drivers complaining prolifically about the actions of cyclists all the time. I could probably find several posts of both forms here on husi if I tried hard enough. If there's a subset I tend not to hear from, it's cyclists castigating other cyclists.
And I don't think there are that many traffic whines here (I'm sure there are far more in daily conversation, though not generally in mine). Perhaps I just read past them because I just don't give a damn most of the time. And, so we are all clear, the traffic whines I make in reality these days (I don't consider them worth immortalization on the internet) are generally 90% about stupid cyclists. Because San Francisco is rife with them. When I was still in the suburbs, there were more cars (and they often didn't like me in "their" lane) so I think I may have posted a couple times on that. Perhaps I could enumerate the stupid shit cyclists do to make you happy? The problem I've been fighting locally is that in SF there is a great deal of car-bicycle polarization where a lot of motorists seem to think all cyclists are crazy and even when they do something legal and reasonable (but slightly out of line of what a car might have done) it's still "stupid" because they "shouldn't have been there".
The reality is that the reason we castigate one or another particular other vehicularist (note: I am including cyclists and motorists here!) is that we don't believe what they did is reasonable. All I was trying to point out is a case where this behavior could be reasonable. I probably wouldn't bother with a car-car whine because frankly I don't care what cars do most of the time."Like oceans of regret / All these questions rise / Will they drown with our mistakes / Or will they learn to fly?" -- Blackfire[ Parent ]
Also, if you're doing a left, you're probably halfway out, no? Not quite the same thing ..."Like oceans of regret / All these questions rise / Will they drown with our mistakes / Or will they learn to fly?" -- Blackfire[ Parent ]
Anyway, you have only countered my hypothesis with "he was going some large fraction of the speed limit", which isn't relevant: a cyclist is allowed to go as fast as the speed limit if it's reasonably safe (which I would say, for most roads where cyclists are going to be and most cyclist's ability and equipment, it's going to be damn hard for him to go "too fast").
I am well aware that there are many cyclists that bike very unsafely -- I see it every day. I do however bristle at the suggestion that any time a close call happens then the cyclist must have not been careful enough and that's how I read your original post: he was in the intersection when he shouldn't of (I almost hit him!) so therefore he must have been biking without reasonable care."Like oceans of regret / All these questions rise / Will they drown with our mistakes / Or will they learn to fly?" -- Blackfire[ Parent ]
I didn't see him until he was within spitting distance so I have no idea what he was planning or how he came into the intersection, but if I'd been just a little heavier on the gas it wouldn't have mattered what he was trying to do.[ Parent ]
It is of course lucky for the cyclist that you were a driver who looked, because most drivers do fall somewhat short of SOP in their normal driving behaviour.
But still, expecting to be congratulated for practising standard driving awareness is a bit much, isn't it? Or maybe keeping a good lookout's easier for me in the crowded, hilly 18th century city I just drove across than it is in the designed-for-the-motor-car one you're in.