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Accident cancels Bristol's Biggest Bike Ride - but there's lots more for city's cyclists to do

Safety first as organisers take decision to pull plug on event, but it will be back next year

Organisers of Bristol’s Biggest Bike Ride, cancelled on Sunday due to a combination of a road traffic accident and poor weather that made conditions dangerous for entrants, have said it is impossible to reschedule the event for later this year, but promise it will be back in 2012.

The four rides that make up the mass-participation event open to all ages and abilities had each been due to travel on a route including the Portway, closed to motor traffic each year to allow Bristol’s Biggest Bike Ride to take place.

However, an accident involving a van there on Sunday morning before the road was closed resulted in diesel and glass being spread across the surface, while there were also fears that a lamp post over the road might collapse.

With safety considerations uppermost, organisers cancelled the ride for the first time in the 18 years it has been held, and as it turned out it was four hours before the road could be cleared and reopened.

Councillor Jon Rogers, Bristol City Council's Executive Member for Cycling, commented: "Everyone was really disappointed. Over 5,500 people had registered to take part, and more were registering on the morning of the event. 100's of people had already turned up ready to ride, even in the rain, when the decision came through that the event was cancelled.

"Today, we considered the the possibility of rescheduling the event for later in the year. Bristol's Biggest Bike Ride is a major event that involves a huge amount of work and resources to ensure that it is safely and properly run for thousands of people to enjoy.

“It was concluded that logistically it is not possible to reschedule for this year. However, we'll concentrate efforts on making next year's event even better. In the meantime, I would encourage everyone to enjoy the many other cycling events being held in and around Bristol this summer."

In the meantime, there are a number of other cycling-realted events coming up in Bristol in the months ahead, starting with the World Naked Bike Ride on Sunday.

The same day sees Dinotour, a family cycling treasure hunt for dinosaur clues that follows 13 miles of the Bristol-Bath Railway Path between Whitehall and Bath.

On Thursday 23 June, there’s the Bristol Bike and Walk Picnic on College Green, and on Saturday 25th June, cyclists get half-price entry at Bristol Zoo Gardens.

Finally, 17 July sees the 56-mile Great Weston Ride, which starts in Bristol before heading over the Mendips and the Somerset Levels to Weston-Super-Mare.

Full details of all those events and others can be found on the Better By Bike website.

 

 

 

Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.

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4 comments

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OldRidgeback | 12 years ago
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Aha, I worked as a lab technician at a grain merchant one summer on account of that chemistry o grade. If you think napthalene is bad try picking up a test tube with concentrated suplhuric acid on the inside as well as spilled on the outside. I picked it up, wondered what the sticky stuff was on the outside (concentrated H2 SO4 is quite viscous, put the test tube down and then marvelled as my finger tips turned first red then black. only when they were properly black did the pain hit. I didn't have any fingerprints for a month or so. They do grow back.

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OldRidgeback | 12 years ago
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Diesel on the road is remarkably easy to clean up, once you know it's there.
Step 1: get a bucket
Step 2: fill it with hot water and mix in household washing up liquid
Step 3: pour mixture over affected area of road and sweep vigorously with stiff bristle brush.

The detergent breaks up the oily diesel particles very effectively and allows the roadway to be cleaned effectively and quickly. Anyone with O grade chemistry should know this. Animal testing isn't particularly nice but it means household detergents used for washing up are known to be safe.

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Simon_MacMichael replied to OldRidgeback | 12 years ago
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OldRidgeback wrote:

Anyone with O grade chemistry should know this.

That excludes me, then. Gave it up after *that* incident with the molten naphthalene and stuck to subjects that were less likely to result in me losing fingers, eyes and suchlike...
 9

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Jon Burrage | 12 years ago
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drove past on the way to the burnham tri at about 7:45. There was a van that had crashed into the barriers but it was a good 5m off the carriageway beyond a footpath. There was no debris on the carriageway and unless the van had hit a lighting pole and then moved it seems odd that there was a risk from one as there didnt appear to be anything affected.

A bit of an over reaction but given the weather on sunday it was probably quite nice for the council to have this as an excuse.

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