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Video: Cycling family in plea to top cop on danger on Cornwall's roads

Tom Jones highlights lack of police presence despite massive holiday traffic as he rode with his wife and children

A family whose cycling travels around them the UK have won them thousands of followers on social media and seen them featured on media outlets such as BBC News have appealed to Cornwall’s top police officer to tackle bad driving on the county’s roads following a series of encounters with poor drivers while out riding yesterday.

The Jones family from Wellingborough, Northamptonshire, hit the headlines in June when Rhoda, aged 4, was filmed on a tag-along giving a lorry driver in Jedburgh in the Scottish borders a thumbs-up as he overtook her with plenty of room to spare.

> Video of little girl giving safe overtake lorry driver thumbs-up goes viral

She was riding with parents Tom and Kate – who blog about the family’s adventures at Family ByCycle and brother and sister Thomas Ivor, nine and Ruth, five, and the video quickly went viral.

Yesterday, the family were riding in Cornwall and it proved to be a much less happy experience, summed up by the picture in this tweet.

A subsequent tweet revealed one particular nasty experience, which was flagged up to Devon & Cornwall Police on Twitter.

This morning, dad Tom posted a video addressed to the force’s Chief Constable, highlighting the lack of police presence on a road full of holiday traffic and urging Devon & Cornwall Police – which operates its roads policing unit jointly with Dorset Police – to take action.

He said: “We’re on the road this morning and we’ve got a quick message for the Chief Constable of Devon & Cornwall Police” [since 2013, Shaun Sawyer, with Stephen Otter having left the previous year – ed].

“We’ve looked back at the video we shot on the A39 and the A392 yesterday coming through your patch.

“We would love to know why on one of the busiest days of the summer coming in and out of Newquay we did not see a single Devon & Cornwall traffic car for the entire length of our journey.

“We’ve got a lovely collection of videos of drivers behaving appallingly towards us tomorrow.

“In particular, a red Ford – untaxed, we checked it – towing a caravan almost took out Katy and Ruth coming through Quintrell Downs.

“We’ve already asked on Twitter but we’ve not had a reply. Please would you get in touch with us.”

He continued: “We don’t want to share the video publicly because that will prejudice the opportunity for you to issue a NIP [Notice of Intended Prosecution] and to charge them and to take the matter to court.

“It’s not fair that a family like ours is being intimidated off Devon & Cornwall’s roads. Please will you do something to restore our confidence.

“We’re going to be riding through the county, or through your patch, for the rest of today.

“So if you’d like to come out and see us on the road, maybe come and have a look at the film with us, come and experience the conditions we’re putting up with.

“Bring an unmarked car and come and come and sit on the road with us for a little while, we’d love to see you because this is a really, really serious matter.”

He added: “Road harm is a significant cause of death and this is just not acceptable.

“Yesterday, a busy day, you’ve got grockles everywhere, poor standards of driving and not a single traffic cop to be seen and we don’t think that’s fair on families like ours.

“Please reach out and get in touch and we look forward to having a positive conversation with you soon. Thank you.”

The family’s experience has seen them receive a lot of messages of support on social media – as well as one on the roadside itself yesterday.

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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42 comments

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jazzdude | 5 years ago
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Britain is shit. The weather is shit, the roads are shit, the police are understaffed and underfunded and most motorists are racist, biggoted, daily mail reading, tory voting fascists who think that cyclists should be run off the road. And then there's Brexit. Move to Europe.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
0 likes

There were 76 cycling deaths in Spain from 1810 fatalities in 2016 (a 10& increase on 2015)

  KevJJ, close passing laws were before 2015 in Spain, France and Germany

http://www.dgt.es/Galerias/seguridad-vial/estadisticas-e-indicadores/pub... they have a similar rule to what is a road death as in up to 30 days after the incident it is counted as a road death. The last figures I can find state that per million inhabitant UK cycles twice as far than Spain (this was 2010), there will obviously be some variances from this but it won't be much either way.

This is clear evidence that per cycling miles spain is more deadly for cyclists, the equivalent would be nearer the 150 mark per billion miles travelled.

 

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joeegg | 5 years ago
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   After riding in Spain,year in year out for the past 18 years,i feel far safer than riding in the UK. British friends who ride out there as well would be in total agreement. How on earth can you work out the total number of miles covered by cyclists in a country,especially a large one like Spain. No one has ever asked me how much distance i've covered in a year.

 I have to agree about the mention of Italy. Actually felt worse than the UK to me.

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BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
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The Irish government looked at all previous distance passing laws or countries that were going to undertake such this year.

Minnesota which implemented the 3Fl passing law years ago has on average cited THREE motorists per year, Florida is somwhat better at 300, oh hang on that's 300 since 2006!! (so actually not that much better), policing in the 20 US states that has a passing law is pretty much zero as mentioned in the Irish study.

The study found that between 1990 and 2014 there was no positive impact on cycling safety due to mandatory passing laws. The authors go on to state that at best a minimum passing law MIGHT save 1 cyclist death per 20.4 months, at worst this could actually have a negative effect of 2.67 more deaths over the same timescale.

NSW has seen no improvement in injuries and millions of dollars of fines for no helmets, minimum passing infractions, less than half a dozen over the same period.

Have a look at the cycling injury rate rises in Spanish cities in the last few years, the info is there if you look.

Here's the irish study http://www.rsa.ie/Documents/Consultations/Cycling%20MPD/Examining%20the%...

 

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don simon fbpe replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
0 likes
BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

The Irish government looked at all previous distance passing laws or countries that were going to undertake such this year.

Minnesota which implemented the 3Fl passing law years ago has on average cited THREE motorists per year, Florida is somwhat better at 300, oh hang on that's 300 since 2006!! (so actually not that much better), policing in the 20 US states that has a passing law is pretty much zero as mentioned in the Irish study.

The study found that between 1990 and 2014 there was no positive impact on cycling safety due to mandatory passing laws. The authors go on to state that at best a minimum passing law MIGHT save 1 cyclist death per 20.4 months, at worst this could actually have a negative effect of 2.67 more deaths over the same timescale.

NSW has seen no improvement in injuries and millions of dollars of fines for no helmets, minimum passing infractions, less than half a dozen over the same period.

Have a look at the cycling injury rate rises in Spanish cities in the last few years, the info is there if you look.

Here's the irish study http://www.rsa.ie/Documents/Consultations/Cycling%20MPD/Examining%20the%...

 

No it's not.

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to don simon fbpe | 5 years ago
0 likes
don simon wrote:
BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

The Irish government looked at all previous distance passing laws or countries that were going to undertake such this year.

Minnesota which implemented the 3Fl passing law years ago has on average cited THREE motorists per year, Florida is somwhat better at 300, oh hang on that's 300 since 2006!! (so actually not that much better), policing in the 20 US states that has a passing law is pretty much zero as mentioned in the Irish study.

The study found that between 1990 and 2014 there was no positive impact on cycling safety due to mandatory passing laws. The authors go on to state that at best a minimum passing law MIGHT save 1 cyclist death per 20.4 months, at worst this could actually have a negative effect of 2.67 more deaths over the same timescale.

NSW has seen no improvement in injuries and millions of dollars of fines for no helmets, minimum passing infractions, less than half a dozen over the same period.

Have a look at the cycling injury rate rises in Spanish cities in the last few years, the info is there if you look.

Here's the irish study http://www.rsa.ie/Documents/Consultations/Cycling%20MPD/Examining%20the%...

 

No it's not.

Hahahaha, ok, let's see you worm your way around these stats then. No, didn't think so. Since the 1.5m passing laws and increases in helmet wearing cycling injuries have gone UP.

Let's see you counter that then ya mug!

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don simon fbpe replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
1 like
BehindTheBikesheds wrote:
don simon wrote:
BehindTheBikesheds wrote:

The Irish government looked at all previous distance passing laws or countries that were going to undertake such this year.

Minnesota which implemented the 3Fl passing law years ago has on average cited THREE motorists per year, Florida is somwhat better at 300, oh hang on that's 300 since 2006!! (so actually not that much better), policing in the 20 US states that has a passing law is pretty much zero as mentioned in the Irish study.

The study found that between 1990 and 2014 there was no positive impact on cycling safety due to mandatory passing laws. The authors go on to state that at best a minimum passing law MIGHT save 1 cyclist death per 20.4 months, at worst this could actually have a negative effect of 2.67 more deaths over the same timescale.

NSW has seen no improvement in injuries and millions of dollars of fines for no helmets, minimum passing infractions, less than half a dozen over the same period.

Have a look at the cycling injury rate rises in Spanish cities in the last few years, the info is there if you look.

Here's the irish study http://www.rsa.ie/Documents/Consultations/Cycling%20MPD/Examining%20the%...

 

No it's not.

Hahahaha, ok, let's see you worm your way around these stats then. No, didn't think so. Since the 1.5m passing laws and increases in helmet wearing cycling injuries have gone UP.

Let's see you counter that then ya mug!

1. Source.

2. That isn't in the article you linked to in your previous post (so no worming needed).

3. I've already stated that there has been a huge increase in cycling in Madrid and probably throughout Spain, so no real surprise there that there is an increase in accidents. When I was riding Madrid, I'd maybe see two other cyclists in the city on a good day.

4 What it doesn't show is that it's more dangerous than the UK, as is your rather ridiculous claim.

5. It doesn't state anything about the type of accident, so no relationship between MPD and those numbers.

6. It says nothing about Spanish cyclists being harrassed in cities, as you clearly believe is true. Experience says the opposite is true. I'm sure mis-reading trumps experience.

7. When will you thick cunts learn to stop putting little insults at the end of an otherwise sensible post (apart from the bollocksy bits listed above)? It'll just end in tears. Leave it out, OK?

8. Want more?

Provide the full document and source or stop making yourself look silly.

 

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Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
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BTBS has a point. You can wax on about aggro brit drivers all you want but loads of European roads are statistically worse for fatalities.

I remember driving in Italy and it was horrendous. Nobody had the slightest bit of patience at all, even the women seemed aggressive beyond belief just to get onto a roundabout or try and force you onto one, blasting on the horn in crappy Fiats. Can't imagine them suddenly calmy down because 2 wheels were blocking the path.

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wycombewheeler replied to Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
0 likes
Yorkshire wallet wrote:

BTBS has a point. You can wax on about aggro brit drivers all you want but loads of European roads are statistically worse for fatalities.

I remember driving in Italy and it was horrendous. Nobody had the slightest bit of patience at all, even the women seemed aggressive beyond belief just to get onto a roundabout or try and force you onto one, blasting on the horn in crappy Fiats. Can't imagine them suddenly calmy down because 2 wheels were blocking the path.

And into this mayhem go grannies doing their shopping by bike. I can't 8magine how they do it.

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slappop | 5 years ago
1 like

Britain needs a strict liability law (motorist is automatically presumed to be at fault in accident with a cyclist) as used in the Netherlands, Denmark and Switzerland (where I live). Good luck getting the Daily Mail to approve that, though...

https://www.cycling-embassy.org.uk/wiki/dutch-cycle-because-strict-liabi...

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hawkinspeter replied to slappop | 5 years ago
4 likes
slappop wrote:

Britain needs a strict liability law (motorist is automatically presumed to be at fault in accident with a cyclist) as used in the Netherlands, Denmark and Switzerland (where I live). Good luck getting the Daily Mail to approve that, though...

https://www.cycling-embassy.org.uk/wiki/dutch-cycle-because-strict-liabi...

Absolutely.

Also, it'd make a lot of sense if we looked at the European cities that have low rates of traffic incidents/KSIs and copy what they do.

It's really simple, but instead our so-called government pisses around with consultations on things that affect the smallest demographics and ignores the larger issues. If only there was some way we could vote them out and not get someone else equally useless.

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burtthebike | 5 years ago
1 like

What we need is to change the balance of harm between cyclists and drivers, as self preservation is easily the most controlling factor in our lives, so we have to make the drivers worried about their lives. 

Currently a driver can inflict injury and death on a cyclist with absolutely no danger to themselves, so they are callously indifferent to their safety.  Cyclists should be allowed, no, made, to carry guns, and to use them in cases of dangerous driving, so that the risks are balanced; you hurt me and I'll hurt you.

This might sound absurd, and maybe it is, but I remember about thirty years ago in the USA, when there was a spate of road rage shootings, and suddenly all the drivers became very, very polite.

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Jimmy Ray Will | 5 years ago
0 likes

The problem in cornwall is that the road infrastruture is fairly limited (hence why you find cyclists on A roads) and traffic levels vary greatly depending on the season. also, holiday makers when on holiday tend to behave appallingly when behind the wheel. 

Possibly frustration, possibly just down to being on holiday... like they are also on holiday from respecting laws. 

On a wider level, I've said this several times before, increased crime levels will not stimulate additional investment in police resources. The only thing that will cause a change is an increase in vigiliante activity. The more members of the public take it upon themselves to exact personal justice, the greater the need for a more effective police force. 

So basically I am saying for all our safety, it is up to us to take control and force the hand of those holding the purse strings. 

To stress how bad it is out there... a little while ago, someone from within the forces, once admitted to me that on one Friday night, there was a single, solitary mobile police unit patrolling the highways of Devon. Devon the largest county, with one of the most comprehensive road networks. One unit. And people wonder why folk do not respect the law. 

 

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atgni replied to Jimmy Ray Will | 5 years ago
1 like
Jimmy Ray Will wrote:

The problem in cornwall is that the road infrastruture is fairly limited (hence why you find cyclists on A roads) and traffic levels vary greatly depending on the season.

 

Limited infrastructure and traffic levels aren't the problem. Lack of consideration for others is the problem.

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Gavin2020 | 5 years ago
0 likes

D&C police took the publicity of taikng up operation safe pass from W Midlands police, one half day unpublicised "event" is the sum of their effort in 2 years I believe.

I've asked for feedback a few times, given up after no response.

You're on your own in D&C area.

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thehairs1970 | 5 years ago
1 like

In defence of our police - Devon has more road miles than most counties in England. Couple this with chronic underfunding by the government and you will not see traffic cops out on the roads. No, I am not a policeman.

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Awavey replied to thehairs1970 | 5 years ago
1 like
thehairs1970 wrote:

In defence of our police - Devon has more road miles than most counties in England. Couple this with chronic underfunding by the government and you will not see traffic cops out on the roads. No, I am not a policeman.

The lack of traffic cops is because it was decided to police the roads using number plate recognition cameras and yellow boxes on poles instead of having actual police on the roads, it's not a funding issue that they aren't there anymore,it's one of deciding those force numbers are better used elsewhere. That Devon & Cornwall are a combined force to begin with, is an issue that's been rumbling on for 50years,and their focus has always been on the A30 to the virtual exclusion of any other road.

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joeegg | 5 years ago
5 likes

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

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iandusud replied to joeegg | 5 years ago
6 likes
joeegg wrote:

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

 

I lived in France for over 20 years and you are right, it is a cultural thing and in the UK there is culture of the car owning the road. The recent initiative by the governement only highlights arnd encourages it! 

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Shades replied to iandusud | 5 years ago
3 likes
iandusud wrote:
joeegg wrote:

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

 

I lived in France for over 20 years and you are right, it is a cultural thing and in the UK there is culture of the car owning the road. The recent initiative by the governement only highlights arnd encourages it! 

I was riding in the Pyranees recently and was on a main road that, in the UK, would have felt pretty dangerous.  I didn't feel vulnerable at all; the French just seem more relaxed with cyclists.

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Eton Rifle replied to iandusud | 5 years ago
1 like
iandusud wrote:
joeegg wrote:

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

 

I lived in France for over 20 years and you are right, it is a cultural thing and in the UK there is culture of the car owning the road. The recent initiative by the governement only highlights arnd encourages it! 

The reason I don't tour in this country is because of all the shit drivers.  I won't even ride to and from the ferry port because I don't  want the first and last things I remember about the holiday to be stress and anger from crap driving.

I intend to retire for France for various reasons but a significant one is the infinitely better cycling experience over there.    

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alanbboyd replied to joeegg | 5 years ago
2 likes
joeegg wrote:

In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

Similar experience cycling in France, just far more respect for other humans and a relaxed live-and-let-live approach to getting around. Far better dedicated infrastructure and the more visible presence of - and enforcement by - the gendarmerie probably helps.

Yorkshire wallet wrote:

I ended up swerving around the front of his car and shouting "you fat fC@£%ng c£nt" at his bald head.

Which is why I could never, ever use a GoPro while cycling...

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to joeegg | 5 years ago
0 likes
joeegg wrote:

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

And yet the Spanish cycling deaths per billion miles is worse than the UK, the 1.5m passing rule has not changed a thing in terms of cycling injuries and people are still harassed in Spanish cities where cycling injuries have been on the rise for some time. Helmets and hi-vis compulsary on roads outside cities even during the day.

Anecdote does not equal data, sorry but the facts speak for themselves, you should check them out, France is also equally not as great as some people think, Germany same.

Yes there are in many instancs more respect but the overall picture is no better than the UK for cycling deaths.

Avatar
kevvjj replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
1 like
BehindTheBikesheds wrote:
joeegg wrote:

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

And yet the Spanish cycling deaths per billion miles is worse than the UK, the 1.5m passing rule has not changed a thing in terms of cycling injuries and people are still harassed in Spanish cities where cycling injuries have been on the rise for some time. Helmets and hi-vis compulsary on roads outside cities even during the day.

Anecdote does not equal data, sorry but the facts speak for themselves, you should check them out, France is also equally not as great as some people think, Germany same.

Yes there are in many instancs more respect but the overall picture is no better than the UK for cycling deaths.

As far as I can see the stats you quote only go up to 2015 and close passing laws are more recent than that (Spain 2016?). I think we need a few years of data to see if there has been any real effect. Unless you have more recent data...

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don simon fbpe replied to BehindTheBikesheds | 5 years ago
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BehindTheBikesheds wrote:
joeegg wrote:

   I ride in Spain for nearly 6 months every year.The routes around my house become busy with cyclists every weekend and i never hear of confrontations between cyclists and motorists. The local council has put up signs along these routes advising motorists of the safe passing distance of 1.5 metres. This is overwhelmingly respected.In fact,the cyclists ride in groups virtually blocking the road and the only people i hear complaining about that are British drivers. Is this cultural as the Spanish just seem calm and relaxed in their vehicles compared to the " angry " brigade we have here.

And yet the Spanish cycling deaths per billion miles is worse than the UK, the 1.5m passing rule has not changed a thing in terms of cycling injuries and people are still harassed in Spanish cities where cycling injuries have been on the rise for some time. Helmets and hi-vis compulsary on roads outside cities even during the day.

Anecdote does not equal data, sorry but the facts speak for themselves, you should check them out, France is also equally not as great as some people think, Germany same.

Yes there are in many instancs more respect but the overall picture is no better than the UK for cycling deaths.

A link to the facts would be useful.

While wearing a helmet might be compulsory, I only had the Guardia Civil once tell me to put my helmet on, they didn't hang around long enough to see whether I did or not.

 I'd love to know where this harrassment in cities comes from too (this has to be 100% anecdotal). The only road I wouldn't ride on was Paseo de la Castellana in Madrid, Cibeles was an absolute hoot though and generally people were accommodating of cyclists. The Spanish style of driving, I think, is best summed up in the fact that everyone drives quickly but no one is in a rush. Do you think the rise of accidents in Spanish cities runs in line with the increase in popularity? I'll admit that there were very, very, very, very few riders in Madrid when I was riding there some 10 years ago, I'll admit that my Facebook has a significant number of rants about poor driving in Spain/Madrid now than I ever experienced

Just watch out for the coked up kids on a Sunday morning.

 

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Yorkshire wallet | 5 years ago
2 likes

Hard to avoid the rage sometimes.

I had one of those try to turn right across you types at the junction the other day. I could see him mouthing off as I went straight across the junction and he tried to force me to give way to him.

I ended up swerving around the front of his car and shouting "you fat fC@£%ng c£nt" at his bald head. Half expected to hear the roar of an engine turning around afterwards.

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KINGHORN | 5 years ago
3 likes

Personally, I would rather see "reduce your speed when approaching and overtaking cyclists" highlighted to re-educate drivers, mainly because, this also in the HC.

This is more practical on narrow roads and can be used alongside giving space. I always appreciate it when drivers slow down, those who do, I wave them through if the road is wide enough with oncoming traffic. They nearly always give me a wave of thanks after!

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vonhelmet | 5 years ago
7 likes

I worry that one day someone will do something stupid and I’ll end up dragging them out of their car and beating them half to death. The closest I’ve come is screaming my head off at some middle aged lady who drove into my back wheel while I was waiting at a roundabout and I screamed blue murder at her. Pedestrians were staring. Fun times.

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kil0ran replied to vonhelmet | 5 years ago
8 likes
vonhelmet wrote:

I worry that one day someone will do something stupid and I’ll end up dragging them out of their car and beating them half to death. The closest I’ve come is screaming my head off at some middle aged lady who drove into my back wheel while I was waiting at a roundabout and I screamed blue murder at her. Pedestrians were staring. Fun times.

My logical brain tells me to let it go, the trouble is that adrenaline floods my reptile brain and I start yelling. It's not a sensible or logical course of action, I almost got a kicking off three lads in a BMW a few years back, really lucky to avoid them trying to grab my rucksack and haul me off the bike. Strava PB on that segment still stands  1

 

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BehindTheBikesheds replied to vonhelmet | 5 years ago
4 likes
vonhelmet wrote:

I worry that one day someone will do something stupid and I’ll end up dragging them out of their car and beating them half to death. The closest I’ve come is screaming my head off at some middle aged lady who drove into my back wheel while I was waiting at a roundabout and I screamed blue murder at her. Pedestrians were staring. Fun times.

There was that guy last year who launched his bike into the windscreen of a car whose driver was very likely driving like a prick, it might have seemed like OTT reaction but it's down to the continual driving like a prick and being on the end of it for the 100th time that week, 1000th time that year and he's cracked and lost it.

That's what is being allowed to happen by police, by government, by CPS and by judges. They are all complicit in these assaults, a close pass that makes you feel fear of harm/alarm is exactly that.

But then it'd be you getting the charge. I was threatened with breach of the peace (I told plod exactly what happened) for punching the side (thoughened glass) window of a bus after knobjockey almost wiped me out as he was doing 50mph. He denied even seeing me when I caught him up at the queue. Police did fuck-all despite his threats to put me (back) in hospital, despite video, oh wait, police said that the bus company told them there was no video and they beleived them ffs!

I felt like lamping the fucker, I was so angry.

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