To get the context clear to you, Ladd Circle is a fairly big roundabout with a park in the middle in Portland, Oregon in the USA. And since 2016, local cycling campaign group Bike Portland has been organising an event called the Ladds 500. Participants have been coming in the hundreds on all sorts of rides, including penny farthings, to camp in the park and have a day of fun.
The aim is to complete 500 laps around the park, switching hands with your teammates after every few laps — it’s not a race, it’s a relay. In the words of the organisers, “prizes are awarded not to the fastest finishers, but to “whoever looks like they’re having the most fun.”
Now that out of the way, two cyclists, who were taking part in the event held during the weekend, they decided to make things just a little bit harder for themselves. How? Spend the entire 24 hours before the relay cycling around the roundabout. Or, at least try to…
Posting under the username bicyclecrumbs, the cyclist shared a video documenting their day on Instagram. “Sometimes you set out to do something hard. Sometimes you set out to do something dumb. Sometimes it’s both, you end up on lap 1066 of round-a-bout questioning your choices and ultimately failing,” they wrote.
“Yesterday we set off to do 24 hours of Ladds, a round-a-bout here in #Portland that is about .15 miles. With the goal to lead into the 500. With the first 100 miles crushed out in 5:51 I fell apart at 9:00 pm (ok I’ll admit it my year of no zone 2 might not be sustainable)and couldn’t crawl my way out of it. Failing happens, it happens to the best of them. You have to learn to accept it and keep rolling.”
“The story isn’t just that. It’s the community that came out and did laps, dropped off Taco Bell or cookies or bagels. Talked to us, took photos or videos. Simply recognized we wanted to try something strange and without question supported it. It turned into something so much more fun and better than expected. If I could do this everyday and replicate this energy everyday I would. I thought I just wanted to smash out laps, the opposite was so much fun. This support is 100% what made the entire day. Support your friends so hard always!
“Ladds was a terrible day on the bike for me, I’ve never cracked worse. It’s mind numbingly hard to remember to eat or drink. You can sit at 17mph the entire time and it doesn’t feel like much work, but it will get you. Brent crushed out 200miles no issues at all.
“I get asked a lot what’s with the bike challenges or made up events? Why not just race that’s already a “game”? Well for me speed isn’t the goal. I honestly don’t even love going over 30mph. There’s this sweet at about 17 mph where it just feels like you are at the perfect speed to take in the world. I’m just trying to find ways to do that all day.”
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On the subject of jumping red lights.
Why am I allowed to decide for myself whether it's safe enough to cycle on a country lane with blind corners, a single or dual carriageway with speeds up to 70mph, or indeed navigate a cross road junction in the middle of the countryside, yet suddenly in a city or town I'm deemed incapable of stopping, looking around, and making a judgement for myself?
In Paris many junctions have a sign point out that cyclists are able to decide for themselves whether it's safe to proceed to the right or straight on, regardless of what colour the traffic light is displaying.
Taking it literally - perhaps because on a country lane you should be cycling in the same direction as other traffic. (Albeit they might be hooning it round the bend behind you at a speed where they're unable to stop safely when they do...) And in general while you've a much greater chance of death (and probably more serious injury) if you are in a collision there* the density of people / frequency of interaction is normally much lower.
Of course what this should point at is some specific enhanced safety requirements in the countryside - but more generally an acknowledgement that cyclists are humans also. So fixing junctions so a) they don't have to wait so long they get impatient - when actually they could often bypass them completely and b) designing juctions which don't require signs but are still safe - indeed return to cyclists the responsibility for their own safety.
* EDIT And of course due to higher driving speeds! Likely due in part to extra time needed to get to you and get you to high-level medical care. Or even for someone else to notice the collision happened. (Not saying "...after the driver has left the scene" - but there are a lot of deer and sacks of potatoes falling out of the sky in the countryside, I read...)
For me it's just the fact that some of the junctions with traffic lights in London specifically appear to me pointless. Take this one in Blackfriars on Victoria Embankment.
https://maps.app.goo.gl/DaLcKqQSWBrpbVEv7
If you're turning left, as a cyclist, all you have to do is look to your right, check there aren't any cyclists coming from the right. That's it. I don't understand why the person that designed this cycle infrastructure thought that cyclists couldn't look for themselves.
Ah yes - something like that has been added in Edinburgh at Haymarket on the CCWEL (but for going straight - not even with a left turn) - and is threatening to make a red-light-jumper out of me.
Of course, that's for 2 good reasons:
#1 a cycle is a vehicle, therefore (to a traffic engineer) it's ... a car (but with its own dinky set of lights, isn't than nice) and ...
#2 Terrorradfahrer! People want to be protected from those menaces!
More reasonably, it's a pedestrian crossing. Our convention is that everyone has to stop before pedestrians cross. (We can't have nice things because people being hit - almost entirely by motor vehicles - after being lured off their "safe" footway). Plus it's a 2-way cycle path which will still be seen as a serious hazard no doubt.
Alas, I think #2 probably is a reasonable consideration for now in the UK. Because that still isn't quite a "separate cycle path" - though good enough for the cyclists (and I see they've extended the dropped kerb a bit). It could do with a bit more separation from the motor vehicles. That would also give pedestrians a nice spot to wait before dealing with the heavy traffic. Plus these really need to be blindingly obvious and be understood by everyone - which means marked in a clear and standard way everywhere (see link at end).
More than that it'll probably take a generation or more for everyone - including some of the cyclists of today - to learn how to cope. After that we will hopefully realise that traffic lights are there because motor vehicles and aren't needed where there are just pedestrians and cyclists.
In that instance (I ride through there a lot) the traffic light is also a pedestrian crossing, heavily used in peak hours, so not sure allowing cyclists to ignore it would be desirable. Also, numerous times when coming over Blackfriars Bridge going north with a green light in my favour I've had to brake or swerve to avoid people (particularly tourists on hire bikes) blithely riding out of that junction on red to go left without checking at all, often looking at their phones for navigation or to film their selfie videos as they ride. The reason the person who designed the infrastructure thought that cyclists can't look for themselves is that unfortunately apparently many can't. What we have to remember is that junctions can't just be designed on the assumption that every cyclist is going to behave as carefully as you; unfortunately they have to be designed with the twats in mind too.
The statements are a meaningless word salad.
Mr Mark Harper soon to be.
Placed in the dustbin of historee.
Can this be the same lot as (mostly) agreed that putting some disincentives in the way of the children of the future getting started smoking cigarettes (so not even fully restricting nicotine I believe...) was a good idea? Yet ...
...just "asking motorist to slow down a bit"* is apparently a dangerous imposition on liberty and a crazy waste of cash?
* Most people acknowledge that 20mph is not going to mean 20 any time soon, just less than 30...
If only I could also celebrate that him being turfed out would usher in change in transport (to save everyone money and lives lost or damaged, never mind the planet...).
Or - to be positive - give us nicer cities and liveable places.
Unfortunately I'm not remotely confident that national policy will shift much next year. Even in Scotland - where we did at least manage to get a promise for a remotely sensible transport budget (delivery lagging behind...) - I wouldn't guarantee that things won't go backwards after the elections (2026 for us) - because "unpopular".
I agree, 20 only where appropriate. Like everywhere people live, where they work or where they would like to walk.
To paraphrase the Dalai Lama ("One should be kind whenever possible. And it is always possible"), there should only be 20mph limits in towns when there is a good reason. And there is always a good reason.
How about just putting the 20mph limits in wherever there's been a traffic collision? That could change the nature of motorways though.
Points to a solution:
Killed: Emergency chicane (concrete blocks) in place with traffic control (lights).
Seriously injured: Automatic 20mph zone with traffic control (lights)
Injured: Automatic 20mph zone.
All accompanied by signage/social media with brief details of "incident" possibly including motor vehicle registration plate details - and company name and number when company owned motor vehicle.
Removed only after "incident" has been investigated by highways agency, local authority, or whomsoever - with reports from Coroner's Court when death involved, from Traffic Commissioners when operators license involved, from HSE when company vehicle involved,
Obviously costs paid out by motor insurer. Subsequent motor insurance premium rises to those involved.
But not the M25...
That's slow enough already apparently
Does the M25 allow speeds greater than 20mph?
It's technically allowed but it's not known as "London's Orbital Car Park" for nothing.
20mph on all urban roads with no parking restrictions, as these are obviously residential and not intended as a through route. It's parked cars on bioth sides that restrict drivers views of pedestrians, and pedestrians views of cyclists. These lead to the requirement for lower speed limits.
Generally through routes will at least have yellow lines, or parking bays.
The thing is, motorists' killing grounds are not limited to schools, hospitals and nurseries and their environs.
Bike storage in Kingston
What an eyesore! Not in keeping! It's ableist / ageist / discriminating against the poorest as you could put down hardstanding and fit two cars there, easy...
Have you seen the news about the new EU rule requiring each new home to have storage for 2 bikes? Think GCN reported it yesterday.
Edit: link added below
https://ecf.com/news-and-events/news/default-two-bicycle-parking-spaces-...
Am I right in thinking that this has been the case in NL for over half a century (or 30 years nationally)? With a brief interruption from 2003 - 2012 because - what do you know - the "market" sometimes just wants to make stuff more cheaply?
https://bicycledutch.wordpress.com/2013/07/11/parking-your-bike-at-home/
%&#@ now there will never be a succesful vote to go back to the EU.
We can't afford to rejoin the EU, because of the cost (economic, political, emotional...) of rejoining the EU.
Not exactly the same but I see analogies with "we can't afford the cost of things for active travel, because we have to pay all the costs of climate change / providing for new ICE vehicles". Or "we can't afford the cost of improving public transport, because we have to keep building new roads / filling in potholes because everybody drives".
If you'd read it a bit more carefully you'll see that it also requires each new home to have at least three parking spaces. So it shouldn't be a problem after all.
I presume that garda will be sacked shortly for showing up all of their colleagues?
Dawn raid by GSOC on her home already being setup, no doubt.
They will be put on administrative leave for two years while the investigation into her conduct is completed, then re-instated but warned about future conduct.
"The majority of cyclists are safe and obey the Highway Code,"
I'm pretty sure that all the anti-cycling ranters post this all over social media today (most of them adding that this means, the real problem are red-light -jumpers in 1,5t -150000J-vehicles).
Stopping them advising / fining them absolutley the right thing to do. Danger to themselves and to pedestrians trying to cross safely.
Would love the same focus to be applied to people driving and jumping red lights.
It's endemic now. Watched a skip lorry jump two reds within 100m on my commute this morning. No intention of stopping.
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