British Cycling has now removed a section of its guidance for the period of National Mourning that “strongly recommended” all cyclists around the UK avoid riding during the Queen’s funeral and procession. Meanwhile, the Metropolitan Police has also advised cyclists to avoid closed road areas in London.
In British Cycling’s original article on guidance for the Period of National Mourning, it stated: "As a mark of respect to Her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, British Cycling’s guidance is that no formal domestic activities should take place on the day of the State Funeral, Monday 19 September. This includes cycle sport events, club rides, coaching sessions and community programmes (such as Breeze rides).
"British Cycling strongly recommends that anybody out riding their bike on the day of the State Funeral does so outside of the timings of the funeral service and associated processions, which will be confirmed later this week. Once published, we will share the details of those timings on this page.
"As the day of the State Funeral has been designated as a national bank holiday, in line with many other employers British Cycling will close for the day."
...however, the whole section titled 'Events and activities on the day of the State Funeral' has now been amended, with the new paragraph stating: "The date and time of the State Funeral will be confirmed in due course. British Cycling will provide further information on the implications for events and activities due to take place on this day once those details have been published."
The exact reasoning for British Cycling's original advice for its members not to ride during the funeral service and processions nationwide is unclear, with some even speculating on social media that cyclists could be faced with hostility from other members of the public. road.cc has asked British Cycling for comment.
Arrangements in London: what does it mean for cyclists?
Parts of London are completely closed to motor vehicles as well as bicycles as Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin is taken from to Buckingham Palace and then to Westminster Hall where she will lie in state for four days.
People from all over the UK and beyond have been flocking to London to join the huge queue to see the late Queen Elizabeth II’s coffin, where she will lie in Westminster Hall.
This has meant that various roads around Westminster and Buckingham Palace will be/are closed to cars with a huge police presence throughout the capital as forces have been asked to send officers from all over the country.
Transport for London (TfL) advises people to follow the Metropolitan Police Event Twitter feed (@MetPoliceEvents) but specifically stated about cyclists saying:
“Avoid the roads that are closed to motor traffic and use alternatives if possible. Central London will be very busy. It may be too crowded to cycle in some areas.
“Follow the instructions of stewards and police - you may need to dismount and walk at times.
“Cycleway 3 is suspended between Duke of Wellington Place and Northumberland Avenue. Follow the signed diversion.
“Some Santander Cycle Hire docking stations around Green Park, St James's Park, Whitehall and Westminster will be closed. Check before you travel using the live Santander Cycle docking station map. Download the Santander Cycles app from the App Store or Google Play.”
The Met Police Events Twitter feed is sharing what roads and areas are closed to vehicles every day, with a map showing what areas are closed highlighted in purple.
Today’s closures (Tuesday September 13) are shown below.
You may walk your bike through if you absolutely need to go through these closed areas, but queues are expected to be multiple miles long with people having joined the queue as early as yesterday. Crowds will be large and it's expected that it will take a long time to walk through.
The late Queen will be lying in state in Westminster Hall for four days before being taken to Westminster Abbey for the state funeral that will take place on Monday September 19.
We will update further on this article and on our live blog as more information comes in, and we've asked British Cycling for further comment on its advice.
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109 comments
Definitely looking forward to a ride out on Monday
The twitter responses to this are great.
https://twitter.com/BritishCycling/status/1569673211188584449
Personally I am planning a road ride on the Monday morning. Should be lovely and quiet. I wouldn't watch the funeral even if I stayed in.
Well the one about cyclists always wear black so can cycle where they like was amusing in the context at least
I am hoping the weather is suitable for my most vibrant, fluorescent full on MAMIL gear.
That tweet has since disappeared.
But British Cycling can go f**k themselves with that attitude. It's a piss-poor organisation that exists almost exclusively for elite cyclists. They take a chunk of every event entry fee while providing truly pathetic support (if you can call it that) for grassroots sport at club / regional level.
Cycling UK is miles ahead as a campaigning body and always has been. If you want to buy membership one of the other then I'd choose CUK every time (I'm currently a member of both).
I have not been mourning and will not be mourning.
Jack Thurston tweeted this from the official "National Mourning Guidance"
It makes sense (IMO) not to ride a bike around the closed roads in central London during that event, but I'm not sure about "strongly recommends that anybody out riding their bike on the day of the State Funeral does so outside of the timings of the funeral service and associated processions, which will be confirmed later this week." Will we get stoned by furious Royalists or something?
My non-safe-for-work response if they're really saying don't ride your bike anywhere during Brenda's funeral:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xK_a11bkPyk
I'm confused. Is British Cycling only refering to London, or are they suggesting that all UK cyclists shouldn't go out during the funeral?
Personally I'd have thought a wide-reaching, national event that keeps half the population indoors, glued to their TV screens would create the safest conditions for cycling on UK roads in living memory. I was planning on going for a ride exactly during the timings of the funeral and associated processions.
As the Queen was patron of Cycling UK I think that a long ride on quiet roads would be a good way of commemorating her service to our sport.
"sport"?
I know, the moment I posted I didn't like it, but I didn't want to overthink it.
Not my sport.
Here's the exact wording on the BC website.
"Events and activities on the day of the State Funeral
"As a mark of respect to Her late Majesty Queen Elizabeth II, British Cycling’s guidance is that no formal domestic activities should take place on the day of the State Funeral, Monday 19 September. This includes cycle sport events, club rides, coaching sessions and community programmes (such as Breeze rides).
"British Cycling strongly recommends that anybody out riding their bike on the day of the State Funeral does so outside of the timings of the funeral service and associated processions, which will be confirmed later this week. Once published, we will share the details of those timings on this page."
What a load of cock.
Bollocks to that, I'll be taking advantage of the quiet roads. All this has already messed up my Tour of Britain weekend. Having had relatives die and not be able to attend their funerals due to COVID lockdowns I'm not about to waste two hours of my life watching hers.
I going out for a ride no matter what although I am going to stay away from any group of "sheep" who want to mark this £6 Billion event.
Just think how many operations that would pay for!
No, that's not what they're saying but it's certainly how the headline makes it sound.
They're recommending people refrain from cycling in the affected areas of London.
Thanks, I re-read it and noted the "and" so edited my post.
Still going out for a ride no matter what.
Also the CS3 diversion around Green Park etc isnt that great apparently.
https://twitter.com/jimfrayling/status/1569587618219790342?s=12&t=iZyc8V...
Also a mate of mine did another alternative route avoiding Constituion Hill today and summed it up on Strava as "Many Cars on it"
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