Kicking the day off with some crazy images from Wokingham Borough Council’s head-scratching experiment of painting “leaf patterns” on the road to “encourage drivers to move slowly and make the area better for pedestrians” has got cyclists, motorists and pedestrians — well, pretty much everyone tied in knots.
First of all, cyclists raised concerns about the swathes of paint on the California Crossroads in Finchampstead, part of a series of improvements to the village centre being a big no-no for cycling safety in the rain. Dan Swain commented on Facebook: “Ooh lots of white paint in the road. Lethal for those on two wheels in the rain.”
According to the council, “the leaf pattern is part of the design to slow traffic and make it clear to drivers that they are approaching an area where they don’t have priority,”. And well, some motorists haven’t taken to this well…
One person wrote: “I’m a professional driver and I can’t believe this.. The most important thing on any road is clear instructions more so when children are in the vicinity.. Stop trying to reinvent the wheel and put safety first every time.”
But the loads of (more than 600, to be precise) comments on the council’s Facebook and Twitter posts makes us believe that the early arrival of autumn wasn’t taken to very well by a lot of people.
And there were some people who raised genuine concerns for pedestrians, especially children — with two schools in the neighbourhood near this quirky paintjob. Maybe it’s time for a comments roundup?
“Any reason why we’re part of an experiment, why not use a Zebra crossing, you know the one that’s in the Highway Code ? I looked up leaves but nothing in the Highway Code about leaves on the road!”
“Looks like a playground!! So deadly for children who are going to think they can play in the road.”
“Dangerous for those with visual impairment, and for children who might think this is a new playground game. Did you consult Guide Dogs for the Blind, for example, to see if they are training their guide dogs to navigate random pretty patterns and know this is where their partner crosses?”
“This is bizarre to say the least. Drivers should be focusing on the road and potential hazards not being confused and distracted by leaves painted onto the surface. It should be painted as a normal roundabout that people are familiar with and know how to deal with when approaching. This is plain daft and I can’t believe highways approved such a scheme.”
“Who the heck signed this off? This is an accident waiting to happen with pedestrians particularly children put in needless danger, looks like a children's playground not a busy [when there is traffic on it] set of main roads.
“It must be changed back to the markings as in the highway code and road traffic rules before anything horrible happens.
“Also this is close to two schools -- were they consulted Wokingham Borough Council over these changes, what do the schoolkids think and their parents/guardians and also the teachers of the schools as well, of the changes and the leaf designs and colourful dot to dots etc.
“Please let us not read of kids or adults with visual limitations or the elderly or anyone else being seriously injured or killed because of these fancy leaf and other designs that no one seems to understand.
“What will it take to get it changed to something sensible? How many people have to be injured or worse?”
Interesting.
Some, however, found reasoning in the council’s decision to paint the road with leaves. One person replied on Twitter, saying: “People here totally missing the point - it's not meant to look like a normal roundabout or road, it's meant to look like an area that's also used for other purposes, including pedestrians. It certainly makes you think carefully before driving into it.”
Another person noted that the road safety audit status is available on the council’s project page, and that it “looks fab”, before adding: “As with any new layout it will take a little time and extra care and attention until it becomes familiar.”
Which reminds me, if anyone else is wondering how the junction used to look before:
After all the attention (something something no press is negative press), Wokingham Borough Council said: “There is clearly a lot of interest in this new junction design. The scheme has gone through an independent road safety audit stage one and two, in line with the Department for Transport standards, prior to work commencing. There will be a further independent road safety audit (stage three) when the work is fully complete. This is standard practice for any new system delivered on the public.
“We would ask that all drivers, cyclist and pedestrians take extra care while everyone gets used to the new layout. The ‘hierarchy of road users’ places those road users most at risk at the top of the hierarchy.”
“On the junction, drivers should give way to pedestrians, as per the Highway Code, but we would also ask pedestrians to be sensible and wait for a break in traffic or for vehicles to stop before crossing.”
What do you all think about this? Will the painted leaves help improve road safety or is it going to distract or confuse drivers and add more risk for pedestrians and cyclists?
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Really sad postscript to the Tashkent story. The Uzbek federation took exception to Yanina Kuskova posting that Insta story and has refused to fly her bike and her wheels to the World Champs, also citing lack of results and a poor attitude. Absolutely speechless. She top 50'd in the TdF Avec Zwift pretty much solo, has decent results riding (if photos are anything to go by) various Frankenbikes and looks absolutely dedicated to the sport on a wage of 200-300 euros per month.
You get the same thing in every IT. Computer technicians will post pictures of a computer case full of dust, or sometimes a nest of some kind. In networking, whenever we replace cabling or equipment in a network cabinet we'll take before and after pictures and have a good laugh at how bad the before pictures were.
I am an LBS mechanic (and a total bike Loving gearslut) and in our shop we basically have two sorts of customers: those who come in with a perfectly working (and almost unused months and years after purchased)bike and complain about a barely noticable occasional noise as If it was the ultimate proof for everyone and everything in the world beeing truly evil and against them.
The other type are those who ride their bikes into the ground until they literaly break down. I 've had to replace disc brake calipers because people were "braking" with their pistons as the pads had not worn out but worn trough and away.
Combine this with the peoples tendency to buy cheap crappy bikes online and leave them outside all nights you are thrown into a lot of very messy and most importantly time consuming and thus uneconomic situations.
Also people keep making those car comparisons and usually can't hide their "disbelief" at how much it can cost to turn back 15.000 kilometers without service or shelter at night.
My point is this: as a LBS mechanic it is pretty easy to perceive most customers as less than smart and I often wonder why people spend 3500+ on bikes If they aparently hate them so much.
So If some of that frustration and disbelief is vented
with some humor and a picutre I can sooo understand that and as long as there is no personal mention of the customer or strong language involved I really don't see a problem. A lot of people really don't care about their bikes at all and should not be surprised if they are not getting any praise for this from the guy who is expected to turn maximum corrosion into shiny-silent-smoth by tomorrow and almost for free.
Maybe #yourbikehatesyou should be #yourbikedoesntcareaboutyoueither but If you knowingly make a mess you should be prepared for people being unhappy about it.
On the other side of the coin, if everybody looked after their bikes perfectly you would most likely be out of a job, wouldn't you?
I do understand where you're coming from and even as an amateur, yes, it is very frustrating when friends ask if you can resurrect a bike that's been out in the garden for five years untouched and then are astonished when you explain that the required parts will cost more than the bike is actually worth.
However I think the problem with mechanics posting material like that shown here is that it is indicative of a patronising attitude towards customers that is all too prevalent in bike shops, particularly towards female customers I'm sorry to say (I'm sure this doesn't apply to you). In too many shops the customer is treated like an idiot for not being as knowledgeable as the professional they are paying to fix their bike. A large part of the reason I am a fairly competent mechanic now is that many (many!) years ago when I was young I wanted to avoid having to take my bike to a mechanic because I knew there was a good chance of the encounter ending up with me feeling belittled and patronised.
It isn't just bike shops where that happens. In pretty much every field where people with technical knowledge or skills deal with the public you will find it. Some customer service training might be required.
Very true, though I find bike shops, record shops and guitar shops are frequently amongst the worst offenders, possibly because they are the shops where are you are most likely to find employees who are passionate about the products they sell which unfortunately can transmute into snobbery towards those not quite as knowledgeable/fanatical as themselves.
This from over 40 years ago, I'm sure we've all been here at some point:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DvswW6M7bMo
I guessed it would be that sketch before I even clicked on the link, brilliant! For a time it was permissible and understood to respond to the offer of additional extras in electronics shops with, "No thank you, I don't want salad cream or a bag on my head either."
If everyone knew how to perfectly maintain their bikes and were willing to spend the time and effort to do so, you'd be out of a job.
I fall between the two extremes that you mention. Last year I clocked 11500 km, this year will be about the same. I ride a 'gravel-ish' titanium framed bike that doubles as a commuter. For me it's a utilitarian means of transport and it simply needs to ride without drama and without complications, all components are optimized toward that. I maintain it (chain swaps, cleaning, disc brake change, tire change) and have it revised twice a year. It stays in my office or in the apartment but I do ride it every single day regardless of the weather. It's not spic & span.
Whenever I visit my brother and he sees the bike, he looks at me as if I'm a war criminal. He rides a Pinarello, during the weekend. When the sun shines. 60 km per tour. After each and every trip, he totally cleans, hand dries and takes apart his bike to inspect and lube everything. I'm sure his derailleur jockey wheels adore him. He also has it maintained twice a year. I'm sure his bike shop loves him.
Am I going to hell?
When did the Worlds get moved to November?
That's me out of pocket as I thought they were next week...
Singletrack had some of the Problem Solver's P nuts, to tighten tubeless valves and remove them trailside, in their FGF. So I had to have a look at what else they might have though of. Some may be interested in this
https://www.ison-distribution.com/english/product.php?part=PDWIDS
I'd fancy something more aggressive, if I rode SPDs, my Saint's are still incredibly scratchy.
You have to be a right sweaty betty to corrode an aluminium stem to that level. It doesn't appear to be cracked though, that's just the paint peeling off due to the corrosion
It looks dented to me, in the centre at the top, at the end of the long crack.
Shock, horror - a sympathetic article in the Mail about poor cycling infrastructure. https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-13868295/town-brthplace-bike-da...
But don't worry - the comments are as you'd expect.
That Tegan Phillips reminds me of Alice Roberts the archaeologist…
Struggling for news content? Only taken two weeks to report on these overgrown hedges, I hope shes still not stuck on the pavement waiting for them to pass.
https://www.eadt.co.uk/news/24596808.bucklesham-overgrown-paths-means-sc...
Come now, granted it's Friday afternoon but still, standards...
I feel for Yanina Kusova, a talented young rider who was very much carrying that team by herself. Hopefully a better funded Continental or development squad will sign her, to finish alone at the Tour and with a reasonable GC ranking is no mean feat. Shame on the Uzbek federation. I wouldn't blame her for withdrawing from the Worlds based on her treatment.
Wouldn't use that "cycle lane" anyway, so no loss.
I knew they were tall in that there Dutchland, but I didn't realise this was why.
Natural selection - there's pressure on pedestrians to have longer legs to cross the deadly cycle paths more quickly (or just be large enough to scare off cyclists)...
Given some of the shit bike mechanicery out there, it's a bit rich that they (deliberate sweeping generalisation) think they can criticise anyone.
Is there an equivalent "shit jobs by bike 'mechanics' " on soshul meeja?
You can find it by following #halfords
Quite, My last trip to the LBS my bike came back with bits missing and a nonsense of a re-cabling job, and they charged me double what they quoted up front for it.
I do my own bike repairs thesedays.
I once dropped off my 10 speed road bike for a service. When I picked it up, I discovered they'd fitted nine speed components!
On repair cafe jobs, I see instances of bikes left out in the rain or almost barn finds and bikes where some bodger has tried and failed at a repair : the gear cable hooked-up backwards, V-brakes with a return spring missing or an adjuster missing, the 8s gear selector that seemingly cannot ever have worked, the seized, gunged-up front derailleur, a chain so rusted and seized I had to cut it off in sections, the open-ended stays that dribbled out water when I up-end the bike. All that said, a lot of superficially sad components do come back to life with some GT-85 or oil on them. I'm close to figuring out how to centre V brakes.
You can pop the spring out and add tension with a little bit of bending.
Having just replaced the cantilevers on two bikes with mini-Vs I can tell you that is the simplest job on earth, all you have to do is set aside two or three hours for making every conceivable adjustment to the spring tension, cable tension, pad alignment and washer spacing, trying every possible combination of all those variables (don't forget to try all nine potential combinations of arm pin position as well), and then in frustration go back to the settings you had at the start and they will miraculously be working. If you're doing two bikes it shouldn't take you more than about a day and a half…
And don't forget the role of cycling component manufacturers. They make a lot of rubbish. Aluminium stems with short fatigue lives, rubbish bottom brackets, cheap bearings etc. Us consumers ultimately end up paying for someone to fix these problems.
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