Simon joined road.cc as news editor in 2009 and is now the site’s community editor, acting as a link between the team producing the content and our readers. A law and languages graduate, published translator and former retail analyst, he has reported on issues as diverse as cycling-related court cases, anti-doping investigations, the latest developments in the bike industry and the sport’s biggest races. Now back in London full-time after 15 years living in Oxford and Cambridge, he loves cycling along the Thames but misses having his former riding buddy, Elodie the miniature schnauzer, in the basket in front of him.
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Ok, so I brought the car to work and it took 1 hour 15 minutes, compared with 45 minutes if I travel by train and bicycle or by motorcycle. It was an intensely frustrating trip.
It's worth noting how many car drivers try and shove in ahead by being in the wrong lane and such as by being in a right hand turn only lane and then shoving over without indicating into traffic flow heading forwards for instance. It's no wonder so many cyclists (and pedestrians and motorcyclists) get knocked down when so many car drivers are clearly so aggressive and impatient. I expect a lot of crashes happen between cars, vans, buses and trucks because people are trying to shove in rather than driving with more consideration for others.
I don't drive very often at the rush hour because I find it a waste of time and really frustrating. And i've just reminded myself of that. I'll be using my normal tranport mode tomorrow.
In my my 15 years of cycling to work in London the only events that had a REAL effect on the amount of bicycles on the road are prolonged Tube Strike. Some of the worst maintained shed-dwellers appeared at traffic lights as the days went on.
Car Drivers are lost to us... tube travellers just need the right motivation....
If someone could come up with a campaign to get people of the tube {Real or spoof), the bicycle could be the alternative they choose.
Any idaes?
There's been a lot of very good cycle campaigns this year, but this isn't one of them.
It's a pub idea, one that sounds great after a couple of pints, but with a sober head should appear rather less so.
If it makes car drivers a little more considerate to cyclists (after all, he could be really blocking your way in his/her car), I'm all for it. Why is it a bad idea?
Cos they won't think like that.
They'll think "oh the traffic is heavier than normal today" and they might get a bit wound up and then the day after it'll be "alright" again (as alright as it gets sitting there in a car doing an average of 8mph to go 6 miles).
And they won't care or know, they certainly won't think about the logic behind it and if by some miracle they do think about cycling, I'm willing to bet that it'll be "all these other morons should get off the road and travel by tube/bike/bus then I can go much faster in my car"
It's a bad idea because it won't have any visible effect, so it's bad in the sense of being utterly ineffective.
If people don't notice anything different then they won't even begin to question why today is different than any other day.
I don't think it'll have any negative impact on cycling, because it'll be invisible to everyone except the participants.
pretty hilarious idea
I hope a few people do this. I would only take a small increase in traffic in central London to grind everything to total halt (rather than the very slow moving jam it normally it).
Evan some good publicity about the day would mean all traffic problems would be blamed on it, prehaps getting people to think about did they really need to make their journey by car.
I'm more than game as I've just spent £1,250 on a service, tax and MOT, but why am I going to do that 90 minute slog each way if you can't guarantee me some twunt isn't going to breakdown on Putney Bridge or the Wandsworth Gyratory, when burning a gallon of fuel every 10 miles I want it to really hurt.
what a stupid idea, all trundling along at 5mph.
I hope it's absolute mayhem.