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Cycle paths “teeming” with dozens of “brazen” rats, say locals; Cyclist “appalled” at Sainsbury’s driver parking on bike lane – right next to empty spots; Signposted bike path or river? UK’s most waterlogged cycle route contender + more on the live blog

It’s Tuesday and Ryan Mallon is back at the keyboard for more cycling-related shenanigans on the road.cc live blog
14 November 2023, 09:10
Rats spotted on Edinburgh cycle path (Ragged Trousered Philanderer, Twitter/X)
“I’m seeing dozens of them every day”: Edinburgh resident says the city’s most popular cycle paths are “teeming” with “brazen” rats

How about this for a delightful story to kick off a lovely Tuesday morning on the live blog?

While we normally focus our attentions on the poor design and maintenance of bike paths across the UK, and their plethora of terrible, crumbling surfaces, massive cracks, and accident-waiting-to-happen pinch points, another pleasant feature of Britain’s cycle paths is becoming increasingly common: rats.

The presence of our furry friends, scurrying across the edges of the country’s cycleways, appears to be particularly prevalent in Edinburgh, where one resident posted a video to X/Twitter yesterday of a whole gang of rats enjoying themselves on Chancelot Path, a popular cycle route in the north of the city:

Arrrrggggghhhhhhh…

“Could someone from Edinburgh City Council do something about the rat infestation on the cycle paths?” the social media user, known as the Ragged Trousered Philanderer, asked.

“Particularly the stretch of Chancelot Path from St Marks Park to Clark Road. The place is teeming with them. I’ve never seen so many rats in one place that were so brazen in daytime.”

Ah, those brazen rats, always taking up the cycleways…

The Edinburgh resident continued: “Five years ago I don’t recall ever seeing a rat in the wild. Two years ago during lockdown you started to see one or two every few months. Then earlier this year I was seeing them every week. Now I’m seeing dozens of them every day.

“It’s difficult to tell the scale from the video but the largest one in the image is six inches, nose to bum.” Oh, great.

Meanwhile, a Liverpool-based Twitter user helpfully added: “Unfortunately, it's not just an Edinburgh [thing]. The whole UK seems to be infested beyond control. I see them everywhere on a daily basis.”

But sure, as long as they’re making use of the cycle paths and participating in Rat-ive Travel it’s all good, isn’t it? I’ll get my coat…

14 November 2023, 11:01
Cyclist “appalled” at Sainsbury’s van driver parking on notorious Edinburgh bike lane – right next to empty spots

Another Edinburgh cycle path story? What is going on up there this week?

It’s only fitting, of course, that we complete our Auld Reekie hat-trick of cycling infrastructure tales by returning to the most notorious cycleway of them all: Leith Walk.

> Cycle lane notorious for parked cars "urgently" needs bollards, councillor warns "genuine concern" of fatality

Yep, the infamous zig-zag, narrow, impractical traffic light-featuring, parked van-laden, super light cycle rack-adorned bike lane is back in the spotlight, as Sainsbury’s joined Amazon in the list of companies whose drivers view the controversial infrastructure as just another curiously designed parking bay:

Yesterday afternoon, after spotting the bike lane blocking delivery driver – parked, ironically enough, right on top of a painted cycle symbol close to the Foot of the Walk – an Edinburgh cyclist took to Twitter to ask Sainsbury’s if such parking was “acceptable”, before providing evidence of “plenty of legal parking bays a short walk away”:

“I was appalled that a driver would think it’s okay to park like that when there was plenty of unoccupied parking bays nearby,” the cyclist told Edinburgh Live.

The supermarket’s social media team responded to the post by apologising for the driver’s parking and “any inconvenience” caused, and by assuring that the matter would be forwarded to the “relevant team for internal review”.

Ah, Leith Walk, the (terrible cycling) gift that keeps on giving…

14 November 2023, 10:07
Signposted bike path or river? Another contender for the UK’s most waterlogged cycle route

We’re sticking with Edinburgh for the time being, and moving to the south-west of the city, where – following Manchester’s canal/cycle lane from Friday’s live blog – one particular off-road bike path is making its own bid for the title of the UK’s most waterlogged cycle route:

That looks like a very relaxing commute, I have to say.

In fact, as cyclist Dave McCraw noted, the “officially signposted cycle route” (which is admittedly a low bar for some local authorities) on Donkey Lane in Currie, on the way to Heriot-Watt University, also serves as the riverbed of a spring – which explains why the path so closely resembles an actual river.

Or maybe it’s the council’s way of honing the next generation of cyclocross talent… Who knows?

Of course, it didn’t take long for someone to appear under Dave’s video to point out that Donkey Lane’s river masquerading as a cycle path is, in fact, a perfectly serviceable commuter route to the university for people on bikes – as long as they don’t mind getting completely caked in mud before class…

14 November 2023, 17:28
You’ve heard of kitten mittens… Now get ready for bike hats for cats

Jokes aside, after Travis and Sigrid’s collision with the errant moped rider, it’s only a matter of time before some attention-seeking MP stands up in the House of Commons and calls for feline cycle helmets to be made mandatory…

14 November 2023, 16:57
Wiggle Chain Reaction’s sister company Probikeshop enters administration

More news on the WiggleCRC front, as Probikeshop – the French online cycling retailer and sister company of the beleaguered British firm – has also entered administration.

Considered the leading cycling retailer in France, Probikeshop is also owned by Signa Sports United, which filed for insolvency last month and whose financial woes and lack of guaranteed funding plunged their companies into trouble over the past month.

> Wiggle Chain Reaction's sales process launched by administrators, with "considerable interest" shown by potential buyers

According to French news agency AFP, Probikeshop entered administration on 7 November, and buyers have been requested to submit offers by 1 December.

14 November 2023, 16:28
Looks like it’s that time of the year again…

Ugh, my birthday’s been and gone, which means only one thing – that dreaded season of gift giving (and more worryingly, receiving) is just around the corner.

But don’t worry, we’ve decided to give your long-suffering friends and family a hand by putting together our always useful 2023 Christmas gifts for cyclists buyer’s guide (no bike-shaped pizza cutters allowed)…

gifts for cyclists

> Gifts for cyclists under £50 2023 — the best affordable Christmas presents for the cyclist in your life

14 November 2023, 16:14
Oi, Wout, keep it steady at the front!

Imagine this lot – including Van Aert, Sergio Higuita, and Rigoberto Urán – flying past you while you’re trying to enjoy a nice, peaceful gran fondo ride…

14 November 2023, 13:55
Travis and Sigrid do the helmet debate: Moped rider knocks cyclist and pet cat off bike – and ‘police’ scold the cyclist for not wearing a helmet

I was going to write that this may be one of the more bizarre stories you’ll read today, but in reality it’s becoming a depressingly common one recently…

Footage of Travis Nelson and his famous feline passenger Sigrid – who have appeared on, among other things, the road.cc Podcast since rising to internet sensation levels during the Covid lockdowns – cycling in London has gone viral, after the video showed the moment the pair were knocked off their bike by a moped rider… only for what appears to be a police officer to pull up at the scene and scold the injured cyclist for not wearing a helmet. Classic.

'Police' scold cyclist riding with pet cat in basket for not wearing a helmet after moped rider knocks them off (@sigirides/Twitter)

Read more: > ‘Police’ scold cyclist riding with pet cat in basket for not wearing a helmet after moped rider knocks them off bike

14 November 2023, 13:27
Pog and Rog: Nightclub edition

Now I wouldn’t have expected Primož to be the one to pull off the classic duck face pose…

14 November 2023, 12:57
Stefan Kung crash at Europe ITT 2023 (Eurosport/GCN+)
“During a time trial I am basically blind”: Stefan Küng says he barely remembers horrendous time trial crash into barriers at European championships

Stefan Küng has spoken for the first time about his horrible crash during the final few kilometres of the European time trial championships in September, which saw the Swiss rider smash straight into the barriers, fracturing his cheekbone and hand and ending his season.

Küng also, notably, suffered concussion in the shocking spill but quickly remounted and continued on to the finish, where he placed 11th, despite being covered in blood and sporting a bashed-up helmet.

The decision by Swiss Cycling and the race organisers to allow the 29-year-old to finish the time trial while concussed and badly injured generated a huge amount of controversy in the days after the race, as fellow pros, pundits, and fans raised concerns about the welfare of riders involved in similar nasty collisions.

> "Should not have finished": Boss of Swiss cycling team admits they got Stefan Küng crash wrong

Küng’s national federation later apologised for the incident, with Swiss Cycling’s sports manager Patrick Muller conceding that the Groupama-FDJ rider “should not have finished this race”, but that – amidst the chaos of the time trial – it was “difficult to assess the seriousness of the injuries”.

Meanwhile, others argued that Küng should have been warned by his team about the rapidly approaching barriers, preventing the crash in the first place, while former UCI president Brian Cookson called for a crackdown on what he called the “crazy” trend of head-down time trialling adopted by the Swiss specialist and many of his colleagues in recent years.

Stefan Kung crash at 2023 European time trial championships (GCN)

However, in an interview with SRF, Küng argued that the high-speed nature of time trialling, and its accompanying aero position, can lead to mistakes.

“I think it was a guiding problem. During a time trial I am basically blind, I can only see a few metres ahead due to the position I have to hold and I have to trust the indications that come via radio from the team car,” Küng said.

“We've looked at it again, but it all happened very quickly. During a time trial I cover 50/60 metres of road in a few seconds, so if I make a mistake in an instant I’m on the ground without realising it.”

> Former UCI chief calls for crackdown on “crazy” head-down time trialling after Stefan Küng’s bizarre crash straight into barriers at European Championships

The 29-year-old also revealed that, in the chaos that followed the race, he lost his wedding ring and has still not been able to find it – and that the concussion has impacted his memory of the day.

“The wedding ring is gone. In the finish photos, I’m still wearing it on my finger. In St. Gallen, when the cast was removed, it was no longer there,” he said.

“I asked the various doctors who treated me, but to no avail. I certainly don’t remember if they cut it in the first few hours in the hospital, maybe because my fingers were swelling.

“I myself lack memory during this phase.”

14 November 2023, 12:39
Pedestrianisation considered to address safety concerns about “optical illusion” cycle lane that caused 59 injuries in a year

Ah, looks like Jacob Rees-Mogg’s favourite piece of cycling infrastructure is back in the news…

Keynsham cycle lane (Facebook)

> Pedestrianisation considered to address safety concerns about “optical illusion” cycle lane that caused 59 injuries in a year 

14 November 2023, 12:37
Tour de France 2022 stage 5 (A.S.O._Charly_Lopez)
2025 Tour de France set for Lille Grand Départ and possible early cobbles stage

While most of us are still struggling to get our heads around next year’s incredibly tough Tour de France route, race organisers ASO – thorough as ever – have already turned their attentions to 2025.

And following what will be, by then, three consecutive foreign Grand Départs on the bounce, the 2025 Tour will get underway on home soil for the first time since 2021, ASO confirmed this morning, with Lille and northern France set to host the start of the race.

The 2025 Grand Départ will mark the third time that Lille has hosted the start of the Tour, after 1960 and 1994 (the route of which also featured a brief detour to the UK), and the opening stages will take place in the Hauts-de-France region, the Nord Départment and the Lille European Metropolis.

While full details of the stages will be announced on 30 November, the very northern start to the Tour has already fuelled rumours of a possible early stage on the cobbles of the Hell of the North, with Roubaix and its famous velodrome located just up the road from Lille.

And what’s more – the last time Lille featured on the Tour route was in 2022, when it hosted the start of the bone-juddering day over the cobbles of Paris-Roubaix to Arenberg, a stage won by Simon Clarke and notable for Jonas Vingegaard and Jumbo-Visma’s infamous Keystone Cops bike swap moment.

Tour de France 2022 stage 5 (A.S.O._Charly_Lopez)

The last time the Tour set off from Lille, in 2022 (A.S.O./Charly Lopez)

More of the same in 2025, please.

14 November 2023, 10:53
Hit-and-run driver admits being high and drunk before leaving cyclist with severed foot in “unforgivable and incomprehensible” collision

A cyclist whose foot was severed by a hit-and-run driver – who had smoked cannabis and got drunk at a pub before getting behind the wheel of a car and causing the serious collision which left the victim bleeding out, temporarily blind, and with fractures to his spine, shoulder, and ribs – has described the motorist’s actions as “unforgivable and incomprehensible” as she pleaded guilty to numerous charges in court.

After hitting off-duty police officer Niall Flood, causing life-changing injuries, Niamh McDonnell – who drank five vodkas, five shots of whiskey, and a tequila after finishing work – did not assist the cyclist, and instead drove home with a flat tyre and shattered windscreen, when her partner found Mr Flood’s foot still wedged into the front of the vehicle and alerted the authorities.

R522 (Google Maps)

Read more: > Hit-and-run driver admits being high and drunk before leaving cyclist with severed foot in “unforgivable and incomprehensible” collision

After obtaining a PhD, lecturing, and hosting a history podcast at Queen’s University Belfast, Ryan joined road.cc in December 2021 and since then has kept the site’s readers and listeners informed and enthralled (well at least occasionally) on news, the live blog, and the road.cc Podcast. After boarding a wrong bus at the world championships and ruining a good pair of jeans at the cyclocross, he now serves as road.cc’s senior news writer. Before his foray into cycling journalism, he wallowed in the equally pitiless world of academia, where he wrote a book about Victorian politics and droned on about cycling and bikes to classes of bored students (while taking every chance he could get to talk about cycling in print or on the radio). He can be found riding his bike very slowly around the narrow, scenic country lanes of Co. Down.

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28 comments

Avatar
eburtthebike | 1 year ago
3 likes

“Unfortunately, it's not just an Edinburgh [thing]. The whole UK seems to be infested beyond control. I see them everywhere on a daily basis.”

Best if we kick them out at the next election.

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SaneRebel replied to eburtthebike | 1 year ago
0 likes

Do you mean rats or hit and run drivers - much the same thing?

- just seen your second line - yes goes for most MPs too.

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mattw | 1 year ago
5 likes

I'll take rats over ratrunners any day.

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GMBasix | 1 year ago
4 likes

Dave McCraw is inviting trouble, cycling without a cat.

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Safety | 1 year ago
4 likes

Re the water logged cycle way. It's an old rural right of way absorbed by 60s and 70s housing developments. It has always been prone to flooding as the map extract shows. So much so the local kids refer to it as "the muddys".
The real problem is that it was ever designated a cycle route.

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mikewood replied to Safety | 1 year ago
0 likes

The signs either end say it's basically a Bridleway or the Scottish equivalent now. They look like shared walker, cyclist, horse in a blue circle

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brooksby | 1 year ago
11 likes

I just want to share my very own Alliston Moment with the room.

Riding home last night, after dark.

Big front light on - one that's steady but does an intermittent BIG flash too.  Single lane road in Clifton, Bristol (so, urban area), cars parked both sides, one-way.

Ahead of me a woman walks out into the road, crossing from my right to my left, and she did not look at all before walking out, and was walking diagonally across the road with her back towards me.

She was far enough ahead that I didn't need to slow down or anything (it's not like I'm a Fast Rider anyway), so I just moved my line slightly to the right so I'd quite comfortably pass behind her.

Or I would have, had she not caught me in her peripheral vision as she was literally only maybe three feet ahead of me and to my left: she suddenly stopped, twisted round, panicked, and jumped backwards (that is: towards the oncoming moving object which was apparently so scary).

I slammed on my brakes, hard, and stopped.  She looked at me, said, "Sorry, so sorry" and looked like she was really scared.  I said sorry too, said I'd tried to go behind her without scaring her and had assumed she would never even have known I was there - I also pointed out that she hadn't looked before crossing.

At this point, I also noticed that she had earbuds in so was obviously also listening to music or something (which means my initial assumption that she had listened for oncoming traffic rather than looking must have also been wrong).

Takeaways:  (1) having two working brakes is really good (too soon?), and (2) if you're going to pass behind someone, aim for well in excess of their Jumping Distance.

Avatar
hawkinspeter replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
9 likes

brooksby wrote:

I just want to share my very own Alliston Moment with the room.

Riding home last night, after dark.

Big front light on - one that's steady but does an intermittent BIG flash too.  Single lane road in Clifton, Bristol (so, urban area), cars parked both sides, one-way.

Ahead of me a woman walks out into the road, crossing from my right to my left, and she did not look at all before walking out, and was walking diagonally across the road with her back towards me.

She was far enough ahead that I didn't need to slow down or anything (it's not like I'm a Fast Rider anyway), so I just moved my line slightly to the right so I'd quite comfortably pass behind her.

Or I would have, had she not caught me in her peripheral vision as she was literally only maybe three feet ahead of me and to my left: she suddenly stopped, twisted round, panicked, and jumped backwards (that is: towards the oncoming moving object which was apparently so scary).

I slammed on my brakes, hard, and stopped.  She looked at me, said, "Sorry, so sorry" and looked like she was really scared.  I said sorry too, said I'd tried to go behind her without scaring her and had assumed she would never even have known I was there - I also pointed out that she hadn't looked before crossing.

At this point, I also noticed that she had earbuds in so was obviously also listening to music or something (which means my initial assumption that she had listened for oncoming traffic rather than looking must have also been wrong).

Takeaways:  (1) having two working brakes is really good (too soon?), and (2) if you're going to pass behind someone, aim for well in excess of their Jumping Distance.

That kind of thing annoys me - there's plenty of room for a pedestrian to cross and a cyclist to use the road without any conflict. That's one of the reasons why we need more cyclists is to train pedestrians how to not react skittishly when confronted with one.

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wycombewheeler replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
4 likes

hawkinspeter wrote:

That's one of the reasons why we need more cyclists is to train pedestrians how to not react skittishly when confronted with one.

An interesting choice of words, maybe the conclusion that I should draw is that horses are not skittish around cyclists, it's their riders that make them that way. 

1) Horses with riders are often skittish around cyclists

2) horses with no riders (new forest / dartmoor) are not at all skittish around cyclists  (neither are goats at cheddar gorge)

3) pedestrians are often skittish around cyclists

common factor in skittishness? Doesn't appear to be horses after all.

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SaveTheWail replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
8 likes

Pedestrians are best treated as squirrels.  I was once cycling along a fairly wide country lane, approaching a small group of walkers with their backs to me.  No problem, as there was plenty of space to give them a wide berth.  I was about 2m or so clear of them widthways, but just as I was about to pass, one of them suddenly put out his arm and extended his walking stick out to the side to point something out to the others.  My 2m gap had gone, and it was sheer chance that he didn't knock me off my bike.

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mattw replied to SaveTheWail | 1 year ago
5 likes

Is that an argument for a default-ish cheery GOOD MORNING from 10-15 metres away?

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brooksby replied to mattw | 1 year ago
3 likes

mattw wrote:

Is that an argument for a default-ish cheery GOOD MORNING from 10-15 metres away?

Try it. I guarantee that at least one of them would be angered by this and do something as a retaliation.

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mattw | 1 year ago
1 like

I think that Road.cc needs to distunguish between big councillors and little councillors.

This lot seem to be Town Councillors (ie Parish Councillors if that) - that is Captain Mainwaring and Mrs Pike.

(Update: It seems they are actually District Councillors. Still refugees from the 1940s, though.)

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Hirsute | 1 year ago
13 likes

I can't resist putting this in.

//pbs.twimg.com/media/F-12PrXWAAAX95X?format=jpg&name=small)

 

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redimp | 1 year ago
0 likes

Rats is just another Tory thing. There is loads of litter about because there is less money to clean the streets. Unclean streets leads to more rats. It is not the rats' fault. treat the cause, not the symptom.

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mark1a replied to redimp | 1 year ago
4 likes

redimp wrote:

Rats is just another Tory thing. There is loads of litter about because there is less money to clean the streets. Unclean streets leads to more rats. It is not the rats' fault. treat the cause, not the symptom.

Last I heard, the conservatives were not running City of Edinburgh Council, or indeed Scotland.

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chrisonabike replied to mark1a | 1 year ago
0 likes

mark1a wrote:

redimp wrote:

Rats is just another Tory thing. There is loads of litter about because there is less money to clean the streets. Unclean streets leads to more rats. It is not the rats' fault. treat the cause, not the symptom.

Last I heard, the conservatives were not running City of Edinburgh Council, or indeed Scotland.

That's why they're appearing on the streets - it's those (tory) love-rats of yore no longer getting the love.

I hear if you vote for (insert party here) though that they'll send them all back where they came from (Norway?)

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brooksby | 1 year ago
1 like

Wasn't there a discussion on here the other day about deliveroo type app couriers subcontracting their accounts?

Children working as riders for food delivery apps - BBC investigation

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-67371473

 

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bigwheeler88 | 1 year ago
8 likes

I'll take brazen rats over murderous drivers any day. Easier to tuck my trousers into my socks than get people to stop using their phones while driving.

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chrisonabike replied to bigwheeler88 | 1 year ago
1 like

bigwheeler88 wrote:

I'll take brazen rats over murderous drivers any day. Easier to tuck my trousers into my socks than get people to stop using their phones while driving.

I do that already - simpler than cycle clips.  But isn't that for ferret defence?  (Probably better be safe though - I've seen the odd ferret out and about in Edinburgh also).

Can't believe any Edinburgh resident who says that they've not seen a rat.  Although they did add "in the wild" - mostly they're in houses in my experience...

Avatar
Flintshire Boy replied to bigwheeler88 | 1 year ago
2 likes

.

Hey, good lookin'.

.

Whaa cha got cookin'?

.

Hows about cooking somet'in' up with Rendy???

.

 

Avatar
hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
2 likes

Looks like there's an idea to pedestrianise Keynsham High Street to stop people from tripping over the optical illusion bike lane:

https://www.bristolpost.co.uk/news/bristol-news/optical-illusion-cycle-lane-street-8903888

However, it seems they want to ban cycle traffic through there too.

Avatar
chrisonabike replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
6 likes

Ban cycle traffic?  Well as today's post from Edinburgh shows cycling just encourages rat-running.

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hutchdaddy replied to chrisonabike | 1 year ago
7 likes

Boom Boom!

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brooksby replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
3 likes

Quote:

In a statement delivered to a council cabinet meeting on Thursday, November 9, Keynsham East Councillor Hal McFie said: “Keynsham ward councillors met with the leader and some cabinet members last week. It was agreed to apply more visual cues that would warn residents of an impending change in ground level.”

He added: “It was also agreed that the best way out of the current impasse was to pedestrianise the High Street, with the ward councillors pushing to make it a cycle-free area. This could only happen if there was a positive attitude by shopkeepers and residents so the first step was to draw up an outline plan and present it to the Keynsham population in the 2024-25 financial year.”

...

If the high street is pedestrianised, the councillors are hoping to see the traffic ban extend to bikes too, which they say could use Aston Way instead of the high street. Keynsham North councillor Alex Beaumont: “I’m all in favour of pedestrianising the high street.”

He said that he had been calling for it for years, but that they needed to look at how the move could accommodate disabled people who usually rely on vehicles to access shops on the street. He added that the street could reopen to traffic after 5pm.

So, these people hate cyclists so much that they would rather spend all that money on digging back up the cycle lane and then pedestrianising the High Street (but allowing disabled people to continue to drive along there).

Aston Way (Ashton Way?) appears to be the road along the back of the shops, so not much use if you are - you know - cycling to the shops...

 

Avatar
wycombewheeler replied to brooksby | 1 year ago
1 like

brooksby wrote:

 

Aston Way (Ashton Way?) appears to be the road along the back of the shops, so not much use if you are - you know - cycling to the shops...

Unless you want to use the back entrance to make discrete purchases. I don't know what sort of shops are in Keynsham, so this may be unlikely

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mikewood replied to hawkinspeter | 1 year ago
2 likes

Just make it level to the kerb but a different colour so it's obvious that's it's different and nothing to trip over. Simples!

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hawkinspeter replied to mikewood | 1 year ago
0 likes

mikewood wrote:

Just make it level to the kerb but a different colour so it's obvious that's it's different and nothing to trip over. Simples!

I think the lane was originally part of the road (haven't been to Keynsham in a while) so that would mean a lot more work in making it level with the pavement. Maybe a sloping kerb between the lane and the pavement might work better

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