A cyclist who died after coming off his bike on Buttertubs Pass may have been trying to avoid a sheep, an inquest has heard. Patrick McDonough was airlifted to James Cook hospital in Middlesbrough on October 4 after being found by a passing motorist, but died the following day.
Gazette Live reports that McDonough, 59, was found at around 11.40am by Martin McNaught from Leeds about 200m from the hill’s summit on the road between Hawes and Muker.
McNaught, who parked his van across the road to protect the cyclist, said: “He was conscious but not able to say anything. There was no reception on my mobile phone and I remember holding it in the air and moving it around. I was quite panicked at that point.”
Other vehicles stopped and nearby police officers were alerted. A doctor passing the scene also attempted to assist McDonough.
No other vehicles or cyclists were involved and the weather and road conditions were good. Traffic Constable Steve Kirkbright from North Yorkshire Police also said that the road had been resurfaced the previous year for the Tour de France.
McDonough had been descending at about 34mph and was wearing a helmet. A mark was found on the road from the cyclist’s shoe and it is thought he most likely put his foot down while attempting to stop.
The road is surrounded by grazing and it was suggested that a sheep may have started to cross in front of him.
Assistant coroner for North Yorkshire Jonathan Heath said it was a tragic accident.
“We might never know what it was that caused him to stop so quickly. It could have been a sheep, it could have been a hare. It could have been anything. We may never know the cause but my opinion is that it was an accident which resulted in the tragic loss of Patrick.”
I would add to that, look at the curve of the junction. Why do we build junctions in such a way that it facilitates drivers being able to take them...
No, those are fuelling plans.
I see a car go through a red light at almost every single cycle at every single junction. ...
Also don't forget - Sustrans are a charity *....
Yes ... but (just due to the large numbers of people affected) this likely would only proceed in the UK at a very ... cautious ... pace....
Arsehole in the van not with standing, how did they manage to get a risk assessment allowing a race (a group not a TT) group to be competing on ...
I think reviewer completely missed the point here trying to match bike's name with what it can do. Ribble is namin git's bike weirdly, the...
Bit of googling gone wrong in the article - the JAT is the Junction Assessment Tool, the Joint Approval Team appears to be a coutner terrorism...
Can't believe that child threw his bike on the floor at the end of that. Young people today have no respect... ;))