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The Highway Code also says I should keep to he left unless overtaking or turning right. I'm happy to leave a cyclist as much road space as a car but if he doesn't have any lights how do I know the idiot is there ?
Then MPS should be aware. Have you contacted Harringay SNT about this? Only this morning a similarly intellectually-challenged racer hurtled past me as I had stopped to let a lady cross at the belisha beacon crossing on Liverpool Road, junction with Madras Place, uttering loudly as he went "oh for f--- sake".. Your example, like mine, entailed reckless cycling and public order offences all in one go. Certainly a matter for the boys in blue..
Whilst there they can probably also stop that last car that always squeezes through on red after the lights change.
There are lots of anecdotes on this thread but, unless Harringay is significantly different to the national average then cyclists aren't really the dangerous ones.
When you adjust for miles travelled, pedestrians are more than twice as likely to be killed by a car, eighteen times more likely to be killed by a bus or twelve times more likely to be killed by a HGV.
There are large gaps between perception and reality. For instance, for all that people view cycling as dangerous it's actually slightly safer than walking when you adjust the rates for distance travelled. That's why knee-jerk reactions after seeing someone jump the lights on Green Lanes isn't a sensible way to make policy.
There should be some sort of registration to allow cyclists to be recognised and held accountable for their actions. I believe that the majority of bad cyclists do their bad deeds precisely because they know that they are unlikely to be caught. They are deaf, dumb and blind to the needs of others that are out there using the same paths and roads that they do. They seem to think that they have a God given right to ride anywhere they want. My dog, for example, doesn't understand what that bell means when she's rambling along the Parkland Walk. Neither does a toddler yet the cyclists still barrel down there as if it's a cycle motorway and not a walk. (and yes, I do know that it's also marked as a cycle way)
Some of them though are a danger to themselves as well as to pedestrians and other road users. I happen to ride a small motorcycle and even with an engine I would not pull alongside a lorry or other large vehicle at lights. Those one or two extra seconds earned by being in that spot are just not worth it.
Then there's drink driving. As a motorcyclist, insured, MOT'd and taxed I can easily be identified and banned from driving if I were to be caught drinking and driving. Not so the cyclists. My local pub is one of the top ten most popular pubs in Nth London and this weather especially brings in the cyclists in their droves. Standing outside the other evening and I counted 32 bikes chained to the school railings and cycle bars. I have seen these riders leave the pub yet still try and ride their bike home whilst obviously the worst for where. When I challenged a couple who were riding on the pavement their explanation was that they knew they were drunk and therefore it was too dangerous for them to ride on the road, safer on the pavement. But safer for who? Two cyclists on the pavement, side by side, drunk versus a mother and child or an unsteady on their feet OAP?
PS. My motorbikes tax class is bicycle. Does that mean I can get away with with breaking the highway code rules too? I think not.
I am almost just as vulnerable as a cyclist. Mine is only a small M/B, 90cc, and also not big enough to argue with large metal boxes on four wheels. I too have to avoid the littered gutters pedestrians stepping out, cars cutting across the bus lane I'm travelling along, indeed most of the hazards that cyclists encounter. But I had to be taught to ride safely and take a test to prove it. (the CBT test all new motorcyclists have to take before being allowed on the road stands for Compulsory Bike Training and teaches road safety and etiquette) Being licensed I can be held accountable for my actions. And I expect other road users to use the roads in a safe and responsible manner. Yes, there are good and bad riders/drivers every where but at least with a M/B, car lorry etc you have some sort of redress is something goes wrong.
All said and done, it's the bad drivers or riders that stick in your memory. The good ones are the unsung heroes of our roads and are ignored.
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