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Another motorist spotted with 'cyclist tally' decal; Traffic cops schooling ignorant road users...Highway Code edition; Cav: Biggest joy from 2021 was people saying 'thank you'; Guess Alex Dowsett's "irrational" cycling dislike? + more on the live blog

It's Thursday and Dan Alexander is your chief live blogger while Ryan takes a well-deserved break...

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27 January 2022, 17:27
"On a BMW? Who'd have guessed!": All the reaction to today's 'cyclist tally' reappearance

Over on our Facebook there's a lively discussion about the 'cyclist tally' sticker spotted in north London on...you guessed it...a BMW. It was that or an Audi, wasn't it? 

Jake Underhill's wondering "Do they do a 'BMW wing mirror' version of this sticker? Asking for a friend."

Aaron Bennett wondered if it's encouraged to add to the tally with your keys?

Ian Weatherill reckons the bigger issue is why a child has clearly been mistakenly given a driving licence...very good.

Not everyone agreed though, Rollo Gillespie said: "You know what I doubt there is true malice behind it, live and let live. I would have laughed and gave them the thumbs up to be honest." Each to their own.

Here on the blog Captain Badger reckons a spray can of Hammerite could solve this issue pretty quick...the rest of you were too busy debating the pros and cons of carrot cake...which, for what is worth, is an elite cake in my book...

27 January 2022, 08:51
Another motorist spotted with 'cyclist tally' decal

Remember back in December when Capita apologised for an "offensive and inappropriate" decal snapped by a road.cc reader on the side of one of its highway maintenance vans?

Capita van

Well, there's another one...this time noticed by a road.cc reader on a passing BMW in north London. The picture at the top of this live blog isn't entirely clear, but Paul tells us "you can just make out the bottom right bumper, its a tally sheet for cyclists, pedestrians, disabled persons and horse riders hit, killed or injured.

Cyclist tally (image supplied)

"I wouldn't want to encourage anything untoward but can you publish attached photo taken in green lanes north London? You never know they might see it and the error of their ways and remove it. Not sure I can describe the emotions I felt but it took great self control not to follow and remonstrate."

Last month, Capita confirmed a disciplinary process had been opened and the offending sticker, similar to the markings denoting enemy planes shot down that pilots would display on the side of their aircraft during World War Two, removed from their van.

27 January 2022, 16:40
Online harassment, misogyny and why none of us can ignore it

Cycling Weekly's tech editor Michelle Arthurs-Brennan has penned a blog post detailing the grim reality of her experiences as a woman in the world of cycling journalism. It is a pretty shocking read and well worth five minutes of your time...

In April 2020, YouTube shockjock Hambini posted a video attempting to discredit her, in which he called her a "feminist attention seeker", "girl" and included a sexually suggestive caption.

At the time Arthurs-Brennan tweeted this...and said the Hambini video ‘asks 44k people to comment on my vagina’.

The blog post is well worth a read, follow the link here.

27 January 2022, 15:25
Suffolk WW2 veteran celebrates 100th birthday — still cycling 100 miles per week

War veteran and centenarian Norman Gregory marked his 100th birthday by doing what he does every day...riding 10 miles near Bury St Edmunds in Suffolk. He was greeted by cheering crowds of friends, and described his age as "just a number".

The 100-year-old has already racked up 350 miles in 2022 and last year covered 5,350 miles, the equivalent distance from his home village of Cockfield to San Francisco.

"By the time I was 16, I joined the West Suffolk Wheelers and quite frequently I was cycling 100 miles at the weekend with the cycling club," he told ITV.

Norman was met by a camera crew from the broadcaster who recorded a news story as he was presented a birthday cake and his card from the Queen.

27 January 2022, 14:27
Tom Pidcock ready for opportunity of a generation at CX world champs
Tom Pidcock GP Sven Nys (CorVos:SWpix)

Tom Pidcock was 14 the last time the UCI Cyclo-cross World Championship was won by someone other than Wout van Aert or Mathieu van der Poel. Come Sunday a new name will pull on the rainbow bands, as both miss out through prioritising the road season and injury respectively.

Pidcock told the media in Fayeteville how not having his two great 'cross rivals on the startline is both a blessing and a curse.

"They are the two best CX riders in the world," he said. "So, I certainly think there's more opportunity this year. Of course, it's an opportunity to take. But then again, you know, there's always going to be that cloud if you like that they aren't there.

"But I think, if I can win this year, then I'm world champion and then I can focus on beating them in another year. So, it is kind of the blessing and sort of – it's not good at the same time."

Pidcock also caused headlines when his interview with BBC Sport went live. The 22-year-old said he thinks it's now too dangerous for pro riders to train on time trial bikes because of the riding position. The comments come days after teammate Egan Bernal underwent multiple surgeries following a TT bike crash into a parked bus while training in Colombia. Pidcock too crashed last year while training on his Pinarello TT bike.

27 January 2022, 13:35
😬

Hmmmm we'll have more on this shortly but not a great look. If only he had a colleague with an expertise in active travel and road safety. I don't know, a now-interim commissioner of Active Travel England perhaps...

27 January 2022, 12:37
Before vs after
27 January 2022, 11:46
Glasgow World Championships expected to bring in £67 million
UCI World Championships 2023 Glasgow logo

Next year Glasgow will host the first ever UCI Cycling World Championships where all 13 disciplines are decided at the same event. The event is expected to boost the Scottish economy by £67 million and attract one million spectators to the city.

GlasgowLive reports the city's council is now ready to approve a £15 million contribution to the event, which will welcome 2,600 elite cyclists from 120 countries, competing in road, track, mountain biking and BMX.

A Gran Fondo will also allow 8,000 amateur riders to take part in the celebration of cycling.

27 January 2022, 11:29
Insult a MAMIL, deal with herd

Apparently one of these guys loves cycling, so we're happy to have a laugh at our own expense...

Although to be honest, I'm more concerned about the wear on those cleats tap dancing about like that. 

27 January 2022, 11:11
Traffic cops schooling ignorant road users...Highway Code edition

Go on, have some Surrey traffic cops entertainment to brighten up your Thursday...

With the Highway Code changes getting a spotlight in the media this week (sometimes incorrectly), there has been plenty of social media discussion, debate, diatribe about what it all means...

As per, it means there have been more than enough falsehoods, complaints and attacks for the Surrey Roads Policing Unit to get its teeth into...including some old favourites...

That sound was the mic hitting the floor. Anyway, they still had time for the day job...

27 January 2022, 10:39
Three-hour rides: Alex Dowsett's "intense and irrational" cycling dislike...

Don't all shoot Alex down at once...

The case for the defence?

That was going great until the unnecessary carrot cake slander...

Personally, a three-hour ride sounds lovely. In winter it seems like a proper day out, and in summer you can push the pace with your new-found fitness and even squeeze one in on a weekday evening. Also, unsurprisingly, nobody at road.cc can comment on Dowsett's Porsche Panamera claim...journalism money, and all that...

Gravel bikes, though, that's more up our street. Valued member of your bicycle family or a little bit pointless? I'm sure off-road.cc will have something to say...this could get tasty...

27 January 2022, 09:46
"The biggest joy from 2021 was people saying 'thank you'. Before I would get 'well done' or 'congratulations'. It's touching": Cav reflects on 2021
Mark Cavendish wins Tour de France 2021 Stage 10 in Valence - Copyright A.S.O., Charly Lopez

Ahead of the start of the 2022 season, Mark Cavendish sat down with BBC Sport reporter Matt Warwick from Quick-Step Alpha Vinyl's training camp in Calpe to reflect on the year that was...

We all know the story now: Cav won (a lot) and was back on top of the sport as the Manx Missile we all knew before. But more than wins, the green jersey and the congratulations, it was the gratitude of his fans that connected with the 36-year-old the most.

"It was the first time that… as a sportsperson you're disassociated from a human point a lot of the time. It was the most connected I felt in my whole career, to the fans," Cavendish said.

"They're not watching you do something - they're living it with you. All I can say is the biggest joy I got from 2021 was people saying 'thank you'. I haven't really heard that before - I would get 'well done' or 'congratulations'. But I got 'thank you for the joy and hope you give us'. It's touching, you know.

"I've had some hard years, but a lot of people have had worse years. I hope I can give hope that… if you push hard enough anyone can come back and stand on the top step or whatever you want to."

Speaking to team boss Patrick Lefevere, Warwick was told: "When he won [his] first stage, I think that was one of the biggest emotions I ever saw in 20 years of my team, with everybody. And then the miracle happened; one stage became four and then the green jersey."

Dan is the road.cc news editor and has spent the past four years writing stories and features, as well as (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. Having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for the Non-League Paper, Dan joined road.cc in 2020. Come the weekend you'll find him labouring up a hill, probably with a mouth full of jelly babies, or making a bonk-induced trip to a south of England petrol station... in search of more jelly babies.

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127 comments

Avatar
TriTaxMan replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
8 likes
brooksby wrote:

Well, Carolinee Willmot seems like a lovely person, doesn't she...? 

Apparently it looks like she doesn't need to worry about being late for work any more.......

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janusz0 | 2 years ago
0 likes

Oi!  Re: decals.

This is the UK, we have transfers and stickers. I very much doubt that that egregious sign is a transfer (decalcomania for left pondians).

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to janusz0 | 2 years ago
11 likes
janusz0 wrote:

Oi!  Re: decals.

This is the UK, we have transfers and stickers. I very much doubt that that egregious sign is a transfer (decalcomania for left pondians).

Forty-odd years ago when I was making model aeroplane kits the various RAF roundels, flight numbers etc were always described as "decals" and if it's good enough for 1970s Airfix it's good enough for me! It's certainly not just an Americanism - the etymology is French I think.

As far as I've always thought of it a sticker is a one-piece design where one just removes the backing and slaps it on, a decal is usually a collection of elements, e.g. vinyl-cut letters, held together on a top sheet, so one removes the backing, smoothes it onto the surface and then peels off the top sheet. That's just an assumption though...

Avatar
GMBasix replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
7 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:
janusz0 wrote:

Oi!  Re: decals.

This is the UK, we have transfers and stickers. I very much doubt that that egregious sign is a transfer (decalcomania for left pondians).

Forty-odd years ago when I was making model aeroplane kits the various RAF roundels, flight numbers etc were always described as "decals" and if it's good enough for 1970s Airfix it's good enough for me! It's certainly not just an Americanism - the etymology is French I think.

I was also transported instantly back in time to the 70s to cementing (it was cement, iirc) my fingers to the dining room table.

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Rendel Harris replied to GMBasix | 2 years ago
5 likes

That's right, always cement, never "glue".

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brooksby replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
4 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:

As far as I've always thought of it a sticker is a one-piece design where one just removes the backing and slaps it on, a decal is usually a collection of elements, e.g. vinyl-cut letters, held together on a top sheet, so one removes the backing, smoothes it onto the surface and then peels off the top sheet. That's just an assumption though...

Do you remember the old Letraset graphics and lettering?  (for the young people here, this was what we did if we wanted to do posh graphics and lettering, in the days before word processing and CAD).

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
4 likes

Yeah! The plastic sheets where you rubbed on the letters with a pencil - never could get them in a straight line, try as I might...

Avatar
mdavidford replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like
brooksby wrote:
Rendel Harris wrote:

As far as I've always thought of it a sticker is a one-piece design where one just removes the backing and slaps it on, a decal is usually a collection of elements, e.g. vinyl-cut letters, held together on a top sheet, so one removes the backing, smoothes it onto the surface and then peels off the top sheet. That's just an assumption though...

Do you remember the old Letraset graphics and lettering?  (for the young people here, this was what we did if we wanted to do posh graphics and lettering, in the days before word processing and CAD).

Or for the less fancy, one of these:

https://www.amazon.co.uk/Printer-Lettering-Machine-Embossing-Typewriter/...

Avatar
Awavey replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
6 likes

Surely you mean one these?

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mdavidford replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
2 likes

Ah - thank you - that's more like it. My quick scout around failed to turn up anything sufficiently classic.

Avatar
Gus T replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
1 like
brooksby wrote:
Rendel Harris wrote:

As far as I've always thought of it a sticker is a one-piece design where one just removes the backing and slaps it on, a decal is usually a collection of elements, e.g. vinyl-cut letters, held together on a top sheet, so one removes the backing, smoothes it onto the surface and then peels off the top sheet. That's just an assumption though...

Do you remember the old Letraset graphics and lettering?  (for the young people here, this was what we did if we wanted to do posh graphics and lettering, in the days before word processing and CAD).

Ahhh! Letraset, never enough vowels so it was a self generating chain of demand  1

Avatar
captain_slog | 2 years ago
5 likes

I have to come to the defence of carrot cake. I would totally eat a carrot cake energy gel. 

Avatar
Steve K replied to captain_slog | 2 years ago
3 likes
captain_slog wrote:

I have to come to the defence of carrot cake. I would totally eat a carrot cake energy gel. 

Carrot cake is just wrong, imo.  If you're going to have cake, have cake.  Don't pretend its healthy by putting carrot in it, when all that does is ruin it.

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Daveyraveygravey replied to Steve K | 2 years ago
2 likes
Steve K wrote:
captain_slog wrote:

I have to come to the defence of carrot cake. I would totally eat a carrot cake energy gel. 

Carrot cake is just wrong, imo.  If you're going to have cake, have cake.  Don't pretend its healthy by putting carrot in it, when all that does is ruin it.

 

YES!

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Captain Badger replied to Daveyraveygravey | 2 years ago
0 likes
Daveyraveygravey wrote:
Steve K wrote:
captain_slog wrote:

I have to come to the defence of carrot cake. I would totally eat a carrot cake energy gel. 

Carrot cake is just wrong, imo.  If you're going to have cake, have cake.  Don't pretend its healthy by putting carrot in it, when all that does is ruin it.

 

YES!

NO!

Avatar
Jetmans Dad replied to Steve K | 2 years ago
7 likes
Steve K wrote:

Carrot cake is just wrong, imo.  If you're going to have cake, have cake.  Don't pretend its healthy by putting carrot in it, when all that does is ruin it.

That is so not why carrot cake has carrot in it. 

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CyclingInGawler replied to Jetmans Dad | 2 years ago
0 likes

Just to expand on that, adding carrot to cake was a way of replacing the sugar in the recipe that was not abundantly available during wartime (just can't remember whether that was originally WW1 or WW2 though).

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Ride On replied to CyclingInGawler | 2 years ago
1 like

Which I totally get, but why then whack a load of thick sugary icing on top it.

I quite like carrot cake, or basically anything with cake in its name, the icing sugar rush is just too much.

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CyclingInGawler replied to Ride On | 2 years ago
1 like

I'll happily give you that one; love the body of the cake, but quite happy to forego the icing!

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rct replied to CyclingInGawler | 2 years ago
0 likes

When my other half used to sort the catering at our club RR's, her non-iced carrot cake was always the first to sell out.

 

* for gender balance, I used to bake and ice the coffee walnut cake which also sold out later.

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mdavidford replied to Ride On | 2 years ago
1 like

Sickly icing is absolutely not a fundamental feature of carrot cake. Just as it's not a fundamental feature of lemon drizzle. Or (American) muffins, for that matter. This is just a modern abomination that has infected our cakes.

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Captain Badger replied to Ride On | 2 years ago
0 likes
Ride On wrote:

Which I totally get, but why then whack a load of thick sugary icing on top it. ....

Because we can. 

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Captain Badger replied to CyclingInGawler | 2 years ago
3 likes
CyclingInGawler wrote:

Just to expand on that, adding carrot to cake was a way of replacing the sugar in the recipe that was not abundantly available during wartime (just can't remember whether that was originally WW1 or WW2 though).

memory starting to fade?

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wycombewheeler replied to Jetmans Dad | 2 years ago
0 likes
Jetmans Dad wrote:
Steve K wrote:

Carrot cake is just wrong, imo.  If you're going to have cake, have cake.  Don't pretend its healthy by putting carrot in it, when all that does is ruin it.

That is so not why carrot cake has carrot in it. 

well it can't be for the flavour, as just about every other type of cake is tastier. I mean carrot cake may come in ahead of sludge cake, but not by a great margin, and only one of those is intended for eating.

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racyrich replied to Steve K | 2 years ago
2 likes

What's your position on date and walnut cake?

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brooksby replied to racyrich | 2 years ago
4 likes
racyrich wrote:

What's your position on date and walnut cake?

TBH I could literally eat that until I was sick...

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Steve K replied to racyrich | 2 years ago
0 likes
racyrich wrote:

What's your position on date and walnut cake?

I don't like walnuts (unlike carrots, which I do like, just not in cake) but dates in cakes/puddings are fine. I do love a sticky toffee pudding, for example.

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jacknorell replied to Steve K | 2 years ago
0 likes

You're going to be so upset when you find out about banana bread...

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Steve K replied to jacknorell | 2 years ago
0 likes
jacknorell wrote:

You're going to be so upset when you find out about banana bread...

Fruit in cake is great - banana bread; lemon cake; (my personal favourite) Dorset apple cake etc...  It's vegetables in cake that are wrong.

Avatar
mdavidford replied to Steve K | 2 years ago
0 likes
Steve K wrote:
jacknorell wrote:

You're going to be so upset when you find out about banana bread...

Fruit in cake is great - banana bread; lemon cake; (my personal favourite) Dorset apple cake etc...  It's vegetables in cake that are wrong.

Where do you stand on courgettes, pumpkins (and other squash), or tomatoes? Technically they're fruit...

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