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Nigel Farage complains about "insane" cycle lanes...but is all as it seems?; Cyclist praised for helping pensioner; Danny MacA-skills; No Brits for Ineos at Giro; Plastic bike lane; Bike theft plea; Simon Yates eyes Giro redemption + more on the live blog

The live blog is back after the bank holiday with Dan Alexander providing you with updates throughout the day

SUMMARY

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04 May 2021, 16:56
You've heard of cars in cycle lanes. Now get ready for... Jeeps in docking stations

Siri, show me entitlement. 

04 May 2021, 16:58
Ineos announces Tao-free (and Brit-free) Giro line-up, as Bernal makes debut
ineos giro pic

None of Ineos' British riders have been selected for the Giro, including the 2020 champion Tao Geoghegan Hart. Egan Bernal makes his Giro debut, and will be the team's joint leader with Pavel Sivakov. Ineos also says the two individual time-trials will create an opportunity for current world time-trial champion Filippo Ganna "to shine in those rainbow colours." Here's the eight-man team: 

Egan Bernal 
Pavel Sivakov 
Filippo Ganna 
Jonathan Castroviejo 
Jhonatan Narváez 
Salvatore Puccio 
Gianni Moscon 
Daniel Martínez  

04 May 2021, 15:18
Nigel Farage blames cycle lanes...but is all as it seems?

Nigel Farage looked at the gridlocked cars in the video above and decided it was right to blame the congestion on cycle lanes. However, as some in the replies and a few comments under this live blog pointed out, it is not clear if the space has been closed off for roadworks.

 Global Nomad commented: "Looks like the Euston Road with University College London on the left - Euston station over behind on the right....The Euston Road has a temporary segregated cycle lane which for much of the way takes up the previous bus lane - there is still a bus lane now and the two other lanes have become a single lane in some stretches. In the video clip you can still see the bus lane that the ambulance is trying to get into but the cars have not moved forward enough to allow it..."

Anyone else got any local knowledge or pictures?

Also worth noting that as recently as last week a cyclist was taken to hospital with injuries after a collision with a van driver on the Euston Road. Camden New Journal reported at the time that the cyclist was seen sat on the floor being treated for a head injury before being taken to hospital by paramedics.

04 May 2021, 13:54
Cyclist praised for helping elderly man who fell out of mobility scooter

This cyclist stopped to help an elderly man who had fallen out of his mobility scooter. The video was originally shared by LADbible and attracted plenty of attention on Twitter where the cyclist has been praised...

Well done to him. Less well done to the commenters who suggested the video was clearly a set up as there was someone filming...thankfully a few people have got in early to explain the concept of cameras mounted to handlebars. 

The video also raised the interesting question of why was the cyclist the only person to stop? We have seen some people saying cyclists are generally more in tune with their surroundings? Thoughts? 

04 May 2021, 13:33
Just kids enjoying riding bikes
04 May 2021, 15:17
Dangerous driver ignores zebra crossing

Here is a quick one for all the Nigel Farage comments accusing cyclists of breaking the rules of the roads.  

04 May 2021, 15:16
Simon Yates eyes Giro d'Italia redemption ahead of Grande Partenza in Turin this Saturday

Simon Yates has unfinished business with the Giro d'Italia. In 2018, he cracked on stage 19 having led the race for 13 days, winning three stages. Last year he tested positive for Covid and was forced to withdraw before the end of the first week. Now, the 28-year-old is back with a full BikeExchange team willing to support his bid for the maglia rosa. 

"I hope this year I can have clear run and a good go at fighting for the win and we have a very strong team to try to do that," Yates said. "I like so many things about the Giro; the parcours, the food, the fans. I really enjoy racing in Italy, it is a great place to be a bike racer. This year the route looks very hard, of course there are some differences to the previous years that I have raced at the Giro d’Italia. It is bookended with two time trials and time trials are not my speciality, so we will try to limit the losses there."

The race begins on Saturday with an 8km flat individual time trial in Turin and what looks likely to be a relatively easy sprint stage on Sunday.

04 May 2021, 15:14
Three of the main West Midlands mayoral candidates back active travel pledges
West Midlands Metro Mayor pledges (credit: Fusion Media)

Coventry's Bicycle Mayor, Adam Tranter, put five key pledges to the West Midlands mayoral candidates to gauge their commitment to supporting active travel policies. Andy Street (Conservative), Liam Byrne MP (Labour) and Jenny Wilkinson (Liberal Democrats) backed all of the pledges.  

The five key asks they agreed to were: 

1. Pledge to meet the government’s targets to double levels of cycling by 2025 and for 50% of all journeys in West Midlands towns and cities to be walked or cycled by 2030.

2. Only commit funding to projects that provide high-quality active travel provision in line with LTN1/20 guidance. This provision should be assessed by an independent peer review board.

3. Sign up to the Vision Zero ambition to eliminate all deaths and serious injuries from the streets of the West Midlands.

4. Support the local implementation of active neighbourhoods, enabling safe and more active communities. Launch a publicly-stated target and plan to reduce car dependency in the West Midlands.

5. Appoint an Active Travel Commissioner to lead the West Midlands cycling and walking revolution; providing them with the political support and funding to achieve real change.

Green Party candidate Steve Caudwell said he "supported these aims" and already featured many of the pledges in his manifesto but did not want to formally sign up because of his concern "of the growth of pledge politics". Reform UK candidate Pete Durnell said his party supports active travel but he did not want to sign up to pledges as a matter of policy.

Adam Tranter explained the need for active travel being treated as a priority by whoever is elected. "Enabling a shift to walking and cycling for short journeys is no longer a ‘nice to have’," he explained.

"It’s essential to clean up the region’s toxic air, tackle climate change and to build a more equitable and healthy transport system. We need to reduce our car dependency and the time for change is now; the next elected Mayor of the West Midlands needs to not only have a bold vision but a desire to act immediately to realise the region’s active travel potential."

04 May 2021, 15:13
London mayoral candidates' plans for cycling
London cyclists (via Dermot Hanney/Twitter)

Regular road.cc contributor Laura Laker has penned this useful guide if you need the low-down on what the London mayoral candidates have said about cycling ahead of this week's election. Although, if your name is Shaun Bailey, it might not make comfortable reading...

04 May 2021, 14:22
Mexico City bike path made from plastic waste may offer a solution to the city's flooding problem

Dutch infrastructure company PlasticRoad has created a climate-adaptive bike path made from one tonne of plastic waste. The path in Mexico City is the group's first pilot project for its road system that allows storage of rain and runoff water to help alleviate the risk of flooding. WorldHighways reports the design means the cycle path offers temporary water storage and drainage which is monitored by sensors and gradually releases rainwater back to the ground.

"Our third pilot in Mexico is an opportunity to test our product under a different set of climate conditions, which will provide us with significant data in order to explore international markets outside our country of origin—the Netherlands—in the future," said  Eric Kievit, managing director at PlasticRoad.

04 May 2021, 14:12
East Renfrewshire Police urge cyclists to secure against bike thefts as demand raises value of second-hand bikes
bike theft.JPG

East Renfrewshire Police urged cyclists to make sure their bikes are properly protected from bike thieves. The call comes after two bikes worth thousands of pounds were stolen from a property in Clarkston, with police warning the pandemic bike shortage has pushed up the value of second-hand bikes, making them more attractive for thieves. 

The Merida road bike and Giant hybrid had a combined value of around £3,000 and were taken from the property in Stamperland Drive. Barrhead News reports police in the area are now urging cyclists to take extra care. "Since the start of the pandemic, the retail supply of bicycles has been limited and this has driven up the price of second-hand bicycles," Sergeant Michael Morgenthaler of East Renfrewshire's community policing team told the news website.

"This has made them a lucrative commodity for thieves who can sell them. We would urge owners to review their security measures to safeguard their property. Bike marking is a useful deterrent and can help to recover stolen property and detect those involved in these types of crimes."

04 May 2021, 14:09
Danny MacAskill takes bunny hopping to another level

It is always a good day when Danny MacAskill drops a clip showing off his skills. Best leave this one to the professional, unless you want a face full of dirt. On the plus side, you might get £250 from You've Been Framed...

At the end of January, the Scot released his latest nerve-shredding film, as he took on the Dubh Slabs – a 500m drop down an exposed slab rock face usually only fit for mountaineers and climbers. MacAskill said it was his "wildest" adventure yet, so you know it is going to be epic.

04 May 2021, 07:44
Nigel Farage complains about "insane" cycle lanes blocking emergency services

"This is totally insane. These cycle lanes are a joke," Nigel Farage wrote, posting this video on Twitter to his 1.6 million followers. Here we have the latest instalment in the former politician's new career as an anti-cycling bingo caller (when he is not selling birthday messages for £75 a pop on Cameo).

The comments to the tweet are, as you might expect, mixed. While there are many replies, often from people with English and British flags in their name, giving it the usual 'road tax', cyclists cannot afford cars etc...There are also plenty of sensible ones...

Of the less sensible comments, most were along the same lines as Farage's November Daily Mail article titled "Cyclists need to stop being so pious, pay road tax - and obey the rules like us motorists".

Take this one for example...

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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59 comments

Avatar
Awavey | 2 years ago
6 likes

In what way is bike marking a 'useful deterrent' ? A bike thief if they spot it and consider it a problem selling a bike on anyway,will just break the bike down into components, which due to the shortage of bike bits now are arguably more valuable, IMO treating bike theft as something more than mere paperwork would be a more useful deterrent.

Avatar
Sriracha | 2 years ago
1 like

A few comments in the twitter thread saying the space has been barriered off for roadworks, not for a cycle lane (which is the least part of the width restriction). Does anyone have local knowledge?

Avatar
Awavey replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
0 likes

The one.network site should have any roadworks details online about it,if we could identify the road

Avatar
Global Nomad replied to Sriracha | 2 years ago
1 like

Looks like the Euston Road with University College London on the left - Euston station over behind on the right....The Euston Road has a temporary segregated cycle lane which for much of the way takes up the previous bus lane - there is still a bus lane now and the two other lanes have become a single lane in some stretches. In the video clip you can still see the bus lane that the Ambulance is trying to get into but the cars have not moved forward enough to allow it...For a long time cars have been more worried about getting a fine if they make an infraction to allow an emergency vehicle through i.e going into bus lanes or edging forward at red lights...these days they wait until the lights turn green to move out of the way....

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism replied to Global Nomad | 2 years ago
1 like

Yep, Euston Road. You can use the time bits from Apr 2019 and nov 2020 to see the differences. Traffic levels still stupidly high but bus lane would have been free either time, just people deciding to block the lanes for the Ambulance which probably would have happened either time. 

Avatar
IanMK | 2 years ago
2 likes

Love some of those comments:

"Khan needs to be held to account" What like holding a Mayoral election for example?

"Cyclists's are sad people who cant afford cars" which is strange because I thought I read that "anti car" policies like congestion charges, increased fuel duty, LTNs were supposed to hit the poorest the hardest?

 

Avatar
Tired of the tr... | 2 years ago
5 likes

How about an article about this video of a cyclist helping a man whose mobility scooter had toppled in a pothole, which is a nice positive story for a change?

https://twitter.com/ladbible/status/1388931294696988672

Some interesting comments in the thread: "the drivers didn't see him", "cars had no place to stop" - well, that's the point, isn't it, that cyclists are better for social safety because we see things and we can stop...

And "Who was filming it. They could have helped" (reply: "do let us know when you've figured it out"...).

Perhaps some are looking a little bit too much at their English flag in the profile.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Tired of the trolls here and gone cycling instead | 2 years ago
3 likes

Slightly OT, but is that because cyclists (or pedestrians) are more 'engaged' with what's going on around them?  Motorists are just seeing it all passing by somewhere beyond their glass box...

Avatar
Tired of the tr... replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
4 likes

Yes, that's also my experience that cyclists and pedestrians are more "engaged" with the surroundings. From my experience when I cycle and drive, I guess there are probably several factors.

Firstly, as cyclist I'm generally slower so I simply have more time to spot things.

Secondly, it's hard to look out of a car because of all the metal; especially in this situation where the footpath is below the level of the road and to the side, so it's probably in the blind spot; as cyclist you are higher up with free sight.

Also, as driver one tends to look mostly at the road in front (and the mirrors, which not every driver seems to do...), but as cyclist I constantly look around in all directions, partly because there can always be trouble from any directions for a cyclist.

Perhaps the cyclist also heard the man cry for help (the video doesn't say, but it might be a possibility), inside a car you simply wouldn't hear that. Even if the man just made any kind of sound the cyclist is more likely to hear it.

Avatar
Tired of the tr... replied to Tired of the trolls here and gone cycling instead | 2 years ago
3 likes

I think this is all relevant in the context of low traffic neighbourhoods etc. where some opponents say that people will be less safe if there are no passing cars that can stop and help.

It's not so much about arguing how these specific drivers in this video behaved, but the general observation that car drivers are simply much less likely to notice any problem than cyclists or pedestrians.

Avatar
mdavidford replied to Tired of the trolls here and gone cycling instead | 2 years ago
0 likes

Stephan Matthiesen wrote:

Firstly, as cyclist I'm generally slower so I simply have more time to spot things.

I think this is probably the key factor. Particularly with the view from the approach partially obscured by trees, at the speed a car would be going there wouldn't be much time to spot that there was something out of the ordinary there, still less take in exactly what it was.

Unless you're a police officer under the thumb of an OGC, of course.

Avatar
Eton Rifle replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
0 likes
mdavidford wrote:

Stephan Matthiesen wrote:

Firstly, as cyclist I'm generally slower so I simply have more time to spot things.

I think this is probably the key factor. Particularly with the view from the approach partially obscured by trees, at the speed a car would be going there wouldn't be much time to spot that there was something out of the ordinary there, still less take in exactly what it was.

Unless you're a police officer under the thumb of an OGC, of course.

Mother of God! It's OCG, fella...

Avatar
Hirsute replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
0 likes

I missed there were trees in the middle of the carriageway.

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Hirsute replied to Tired of the trolls here and gone cycling instead | 2 years ago
3 likes

That road was really wide. No excuse for a driver not to stop.

Cyclist has been sent a NIP for riding on the pavement !

Avatar
Tired of the tr... replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

hirsute wrote:

That road was really wide. No excuse for a driver not to stop.

True, but remember that drivers are also conditioned not to stop suddenly as long as the road is clear to keep the traffic flowing; seeing something off the road just doesn't necessarily register as a valid reason to stop.

Avatar
brooksby replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

hirsute wrote:

That road was really wide. No excuse for a driver not to stop.

Cyclist has been sent a NIP for riding on the pavement !

I hope that's a joke???

Avatar
Hirsute replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
2 likes

Yes and No !

Ever since that cyclist got sent a NIP in London after submitting a close pass, I can't rule it out. As it was, the london cyclist was using a shared pathway that led to a Satander central cycle point !

Ever since, then, I make sure if I am on the pavement, I point out in my submission it is shared and where any signage is.

Avatar
Shake replied to Tired of the trolls here and gone cycling instead | 2 years ago
1 like

He did so well until he cycled off on the pavement. Joke

Avatar
alexls | 2 years ago
13 likes

Please stop sharing Farage's rants.  It sucks me in every time and I have work to do!

Avatar
PRSboy | 2 years ago
11 likes

I'm starting a gofundme to charter a SpaceX to send Nigel Farage to Mars.

Who's in?

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to PRSboy | 2 years ago
7 likes

PRSboy wrote:

I'm starting a gofundme to charter a SpaceX to send Nigel Farage to Mars.

Who's in?

What's Mars done to deserve that? 

Avatar
mdavidford replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
10 likes

Captain Badger wrote:

PRSboy wrote:

I'm starting a gofundme to charter a SpaceX to send Nigel Farage to Mars.

Who's in?

What's Mars done to deserve that? 

Avatar
Captain Badger replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
0 likes

mdavidford wrote:

....

I think I'd react like that in their shoes - or whatever Martians wear on their feet/claws/apendages

Avatar
brooksby replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
1 like

Captain Badger wrote:

PRSboy wrote:

I'm starting a gofundme to charter a SpaceX to send Nigel Farage to Mars.

Who's in?

What's Mars done to deserve that? 

"Ack-ack...  Ack-ack-ack-ack!"

Avatar
Mungecrundle replied to PRSboy | 2 years ago
6 likes

Not saying you don't have a decent chance of raising enough money to be rid of the duck faced pillock, but wouldn't a decent shovel be all that is really needed?

Avatar
Philh68 | 2 years ago
10 likes

So what was there before the cycle lanes besides parked cars?

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HoarseMann | 2 years ago
19 likes

We don't need cycle lanes. What we need is a network of segregated 'emergency vehicle' lanes, with priority over other traffic at junctions, that cyclists are permitted to use.

Avatar
Rendel Harris replied to HoarseMann | 2 years ago
8 likes

HoarseMann wrote:

We don't need cycle lanes. What we need is a network of segregated 'emergency vehicle' lanes, with priority over other traffic at junctions, that cyclists are permitted to use.

That is a great idea, like to see the gammons coming out in favour of denying access for emergency vehicles!

Avatar
AlsoSomniloquism replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
3 likes

The fully fixed cycle lanes in London allow emegency vehicles to use them as shown by one cyclists video of a fire engine using it. Doesn't stop the gams arguing against those as well. 

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