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"As a cyclist..." anti-LTN talkRadio rant; Bus driver pulls in on Jeremy Vine...but apparently it's the cyclist's fault; Peloton van blocks bike lane; Dowsett's Hour Record disappointment; Bike hangars, Valverde's final season + more on the live blog

It's Thursday live blog time and Dan Alexander is here, ready to take you one step closer to the weekend...

SUMMARY

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04 November 2021, 16:34
"As a cyclist..." anti-LTN talkRadio rant

"As a cyclist..." is normally a red flag when the context is a talkRadio phone-in.

Of course we could all be jumping to conclusions, but this cyclist was particularly against low traffic neighbourhoods, so much so they felt the need to call into Ian Collins' early afternoon show, ready to unload...

Maybe we're reading too much into it, but "I… I’m personally a cyclist, er, I cycle most places, however… however…" sounds like an undercover cop trying to infiltrate an organised crime-loving peloton.

With that out the way, the caller named Ediz gets to the main reason for his call, "There is an agenda to push away congestion and pollution onto others for longer hours, freeing up these, sort of, gated communities to say 'look how wonderful, look what we've done, we've reduced congestion and pollution in here'."

Ediz didn't face much scrutiny from Collins who nodded his head throughout, jumping in with regular points of agreement. The caller then went on to say families living on the borders of LTNs are "suffering more pollution, more congestion for longer hours. How is that good for the climate?", before suggesting councils strategically collect traffic-counting data during school holidays for more favourable lower readings.

A government survey from last November found that 8 out of 10 people support measures to reduce motor traffic, while seperate research at the same time found majority support for the capital's LTNs. Weeks later, traffic counter readings in Hackney showed that the borough's LTNs had not caused a rise in traffic on nearby main roads. While, research from March showed that low traffic neighbourhoods in London are not mainly introduced in more affluent areas.

04 November 2021, 17:03
Sure he can win the Tour...but could he do it during a cold, wet, windy rush hour in Elston?

Tweet of the day right there...come on Pog, show us what you've got...

04 November 2021, 15:35
The road.cc forum thread with all the best/worst driving fails

Cheers to OnYerBike for pointing me in the direction of one of our forum threads, titled 'Car crashes into building - please post your local news stories'. It was inspired by the Audis in houses website (yes, I'll be procrastinating the next 15 minutes over there) and it has turned into a thread of shocking, frightening, hilarious and downright bizarre photos of drivers' crashed vehicles in strange places. 

It saves me chucking 'but cyclists...' posts on here every day. Maybe we can save that honour for the best ones...

04 November 2021, 14:59
We heard from the moaning masses...but what did you make of that Jeremy Vine video?

Reaction time...we heard from the people blaming Jeremy Vine for virtually anything and everything earlier, now it's time for your thoughts and comments. For some reason I reckon they might be quite different...

On Facebook, John Edmund Gangy said: "Bus [driver] clearly at fault here. Real easy to slow down a bit and let the cyclist through."

George Ong agreed: "I am in Vine's camp! How could this be right? It is about time motor vehicles drivers treat cyclists as equal road users."

Giles Green commented: "How on earth that could be considered as the cyclists fault is beyond me, who would even come up with that conclusion? Bad driving, bad anticipation by the bus driver."

Graham Black continued the trend: "Bus [driver] is definitely in the wrong here, this is no different to a vehicle overtaking a cyclist then immediately turning left. But I suppose many drivers think that's ok too."

In fact, almost all our readers agreed Jeremy Vine was absolutely not in the wrong, we did get one reply suggesting Vine had made the situation "far worse than it needed to be"...strap yourselves in, it's a long one...

"My no doubt unpopular take on the Vine video was he made his position far worse than it needed to be, by riding into that vanishing gap like he did. Basically if I'm riding that lane, and you can debate for sure whether the bus driver is being considerate of Vine for overtaking and stopping, but we dont know if the bus was already planning to stop or someone pressed the stop button part way through as they passed each other, the bus [driver] can't slam on the brakes. 

"All you can then do as a cyclist in that situation is deal with the hand you are being dealt, and as soon as that indicator is on, I know what the bus is going to do, cheers bus driver thanks a bundle, not going on my Christmas card list, but I don't carry on riding as if the bus is going to bail out of what its doing at the last second, I dont want to be trapped on the inside of a bus, I'm going to quick shoulder check behind the bus, maybe apply a bit of brake though I think just easing off pedalling would create enough speed difference to drop in behind the bus and shift around it's right hand side and it's all done in seconds with no aggro at all and we carry on our merry ways."

Anymore thoughts?

04 November 2021, 14:13
Parliament to debate tougher sentences for hit and run drivers who cause death
Houses of Parliament (CC licensed by Rajan Manickavasagam:Flickr)

MPs are to debate tougher sentences for hit and run drivers who cause death after a petition reached 104,324 signatures. The debate will be held on 15 November 2021 and will question if the maximum penalty for failure to stop after an incident should be increased. Currently the maximum penalty is points and a six-month custodial sentence. Causing death by careless/dangerous driving is between 5 -14 years.

The government's official response to the petition is: "It is wholly irresponsible for drivers to fail to stop and report an incident. However, the offence of failing to stop should not be used to punish an offender for a serious, but not proven, offence."

The debate will be available to watch online on the UK Parliament YouTube channel...

04 November 2021, 14:05
Oh the irony...Peloton-shaped bike lane blockage

04 November 2021, 12:27
Cardiff cyclists left waiting more than a year for bike hangars

Cyclists in Cardiff have been left waiting more than a year for a promised trial of bike hangars. Wales Online reports Cardiff Council announced the trial in October 2020, but more than a year later, no hangars have been installed. The trial was promised following a petition from Cardiff Cycle City, which gained more than 500 signatures. 

A spokesman for Cardiff Cycle City said: "It’s great the council are getting on with building new protected cycle tracks, but lack of infrastructure isn’t the only thing that prevents people from cycling.

"Many people live in terraced houses, flats, or houses of multiple occupation, that have no space for storing bikes, while the roadside space outside their house is filled with parked cars. We think it’s only fair to offer some of this space to people to store their bikes by installing cycle hangars, which make more efficient use of the kerbside as six bikes can be stored in the same space as half a car.

"If the council is serious about the climate emergency, and its ambition of getting people to switch from driving to cycling short journeys, then it is essential that cycle hangars are installed quickly and in large numbers."

Yesterday, Portsmouth City Council announced they had approved an extension to the city's bike hangar scheme.

04 November 2021, 11:39
There's life in the old dog yet...Alejandro Valverde confirms he'll continue racing in 2022 for 21st season as a pro

2022 will be Alejandro Valverde's last dance as a professional cyclist. After 21 years in the pro peloton, spanning back to the 2002 season, next year will be his final one. In that time he's won the World Championship road race, four Liège–Bastogne–Liège, five Flèche Wallonne, the Vuelta, 17 Grand Tour stages and just about every hilly race in between.

The 41-year-old announced the news via a video shared on his team's Twitter, backing up his previous quotes saying it's "with absolute certainty" 2022 will be his final year. The most recent campaign has been quiet by the Spaniard's exceptional standards, only winning three races. Valverde came close to winning a fifth stage of the Tour de France but was bested by Sepp Kuss on the stage finishing in Andorra.

04 November 2021, 11:33
Ominous...
Jeremy Vine trending

And it's got nothing to do with that bus video...

04 November 2021, 10:50
ProBikeKit launches Movember Cycling Club in fight for men's health — ride 150 miles this month for a chance to win £500 gift voucher

 

Movember Cycling Club

ProBikeKit and Movember have come together to unite the cycling industry this November, all in the name of raising funds and awareness for men's health. They've created the Movember Cycling Club (MCC) and will be hosting a number of activities and fundraising events throughout the month, including the 150 #MilesForMo Strava Cycling Challenge, an online silent auction and a limited edition merchandise collection including Little James Arnold prints.

More than 80,000 people have already joined the 150 #MilesForMo challenge, with ProBikeKit donating £1 to Movember for each participant who rides 150 miles this month. Completing the challenge will also earn you a ProBikeKit discount code and chance of winning a £500 gift voucher.

04 November 2021, 10:45
But cyclists...

Yesterday, I jokingly threatened to make this a regular feature. If pics like this keep rolling in, I'll have no choice.

First, we had the HGV being pulled out of Bristol harbour, then yesterday it was the BMW perched on a Tesco bollard...

Today, it's a Jaguar driver seeking a bit of extra elevation...if only that bollard was wearing hi-vis...

04 November 2021, 10:40
Yes, I am making sure my niece WILL be a cyclist...

Can I point you in the direction of one of our buyer's guides, Laura? 

04 November 2021, 10:08
Brooks adds a splash of colour to its Cambium saddle
2021 Open House Brooks Cambium

Ooo what’s that, some anodised blue on a Brooks saddle? The new limited edition 2021 Open House version of Brooks’ Cambium saddle features the bicycle saddle manufacturer’s rivets in anodised blue to match the components of Chris King’s seasonal range and this is contrasted against an anthracite-coloured, vulcanised-rubber saddle surface. It’s a bold look.

2021 Open House Brooks Cambium

Available in both the C17 Carved and the slimmer C15 Carved shapes, these Brooks saddles are designed to be the ideal adventure companion thanks to its all-weather performance. Reviewer John described the ‘hammock’ saddle design as “supremely comfortable” and now you can get this all-day comfort to paired up perfectly with Chris King components.

04 November 2021, 09:29
"The biggest failure would have been to have never tried": Alex Dowsett reacts to Hour Record attempt

Alex Dowsett ultimately came up short in his bid to reclaim the Hour Record, despite adding 1.618km to his previous best. The 33-year-old hit the 54.555km mark by the end of the hour and his JustGiving page, raising money for The Haemophilia Society, has raised more than £31,000 at the time of writing.

> Alex Dowsett reveals his hour record bike for tomorrow’s attempt

Despite not breaking Victor Campenaerts' record of 55.089km, Dowsett said the event had achieved its biggest goal – raising awareness of haemophilia.

"The biggest failure today would have been to have never tried and that’s the message I want to send out," the Brit said afterwards. "I spent my childhood being told what I couldn’t do. My mum, my dad, and I, we knew what we couldn’t do – football, rugby, boxing – so we set about finding what we could do. We turned a negative into an absolute positive and I’ve been able to carve a massive career out of adversity.

"That should be the message. Life can throw you a bad hand at times but it’s what you make of it. It’s how you deal with it. That’s as far as I can go and I’m proud of that and the distance that I managed to cover today but the most important point today was the awareness that we’ve brought to haemophilia."

04 November 2021, 08:36
Bus driver pulls in on Jeremy Vine...but apparently it's the cyclist's fault

We shared this video on yesterday's live blog, but since then the reaction has blown up...mainly with people feeling they've found fault with Jeremy Vine, and not the bus driver cutting him up...

So what happened? Vine was cycling in the cycle lane, the bus driver approached from behind...overtook the cyclist, started indicating and immediately pulled into the stop, forcing Vine to brake and go around. The alternative? The driver waited a few seconds, waited for Vine to pass the bus lane, checked nothing else was coming and then pulled into the bus stop a couple of seconds later than in the real scenario. Is it ridiculous to think that's fairly uncontroversial? Apparently so...

The broadcaster has been inundated with replies from people blaming him for the incident and defending the bus driver. Exhibit A:

And another...

And one more... 

Vine said he was particularly shocked by the driver's response to his use of the horn, explaining: "Not even a waved apology. I can forgive anything when there's an apology."

So in summary, in the replies, we had: cyclists shouldn't expect a non-stop commute, he indicated and you should have slowed down, why should the bus driver wait for a cyclist, both at fault, you should be aware of your surroundings, I would have slowed down quicker, the bus driver shouldn't hold up traffic to wait, cyclists should give way at the end of cycle lanes, you seem to be actively manufacturing these situations to make good videos. 

I'll let Graeme King have the final say: 

Thoughts?

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for The Non-League Paper. Dan has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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168 comments

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GMBasix replied to wycombewheeler | 3 years ago
6 likes

But it remains the moving traffic's gift to give, not the emerging vehicle's right to take.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to wycombewheeler | 3 years ago
3 likes

Other traffic permitting, I normally pull out to overtake buses at stops with plenty of space and time. However if they then indicate to pull out before I get there, I will actually slot back in behind them. I will provisio that I'm normally in "shared use" bus lanes at the time so the next bus stop I will more then likely complete the overtake but would prefer the bus to be in front then feet behind me usually. 

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lonpfrb replied to hawkinspeter | 3 years ago
1 like
hawkinspeter wrote:

Currently, road laws do not prioritise busses

Bus lanes prioritise busses when there is reason and space to do so.

Otherwise they have no special priority in general except considerate road users such as you..

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chrisonabike replied to lonpfrb | 3 years ago
1 like

lonpfrb wrote:
hawkinspeter wrote:

Currently, road laws do not prioritise busses

Bus lanes prioritise busses when there is reason and space to do so.

Otherwise they have no special priority in general except considerate road users such as you..

Another one of my annoyances with almost all "infrastructure" in the UK is that it specifically makes use of bus lanes (same tarmac, two modes!). Round Edinburgh at least there are almost no "permanent" e.g. 24 hour bus lanes. So hey presto - another cycling "facility" which doesn't just disappear in space (at junctions) but also winks out of existence outside of rush hour and at weekends!

Plus almost all allow parking in them outside of operation and indeed some have specifically marked parking places.

I know plenty here are happy with bus lanes as cycle lanes in general but do these "features" not make this look like another "extra lane for the same paint" exercise?

https://cyclingfallacies.com/en/31/bus-lanes-provide-good-conditions-for-cycling

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TheBillder replied to chrisonabike | 3 years ago
2 likes
chrisonatrike wrote:

Another one of my annoyances with almost all "infrastructure" in the UK is that it specifically makes use of bus lanes (same tarmac, two modes!). Round Edinburgh at least there are almost no "permanent" e.g. 24 hour bus lanes. So hey presto - another cycling "facility" which doesn't just disappear in space (at junctions) but also winks out of existence outside of rush hour and at weekends!

At rush hour we get to share a moonscape with buses but I'd rather have that than nothing - at least the lane is wide and whilst outside city centres, even at peak times they're not as busy as the gridlocked rest of the road, and your average LRT driver is better than the average phone operator at the wheel of each car.

Mind you. 6.27 pm is probably the most dangerous time to be on the road as all the arseholes who are unwilling to share public transport with their inferiors dive into the bus lane.

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ktache replied to TheBillder | 3 years ago
2 likes

In Reading taxis are allowed in bus lanes, definitely most of them.  The drivers of taxis are much more impatient than those of buses, some of whom, even though they seem to still drive like they are in their small family runabout not an 8 1/2 tonne behemoth, do occasionally realise that they are going to have to stop in a bit anyway.

Though of course as JV showed, and I have suffered a few of those myself, some just cannot stop it with the impatience or sense of entitlement.

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Awavey replied to ktache | 3 years ago
1 like

I believe its a hackney/black cab exemption thing again that allows them to use bus lanes in general, of course its down to enforcement to prevent minicabs doing the same thing.

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Wingguy replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
7 likes

nicmason wrote:

Jeremy Vine at fault. Bus goes past him then starts to indicate. He should have braked had a look and gone round. 

This is a blatant and deliberate lie. The bus was not past him when it started to indicate and pull in. The fact that you have to lie in order to claim the JV was at fault makes it obvious that you know he wasn't.

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nicmason replied to Wingguy | 3 years ago
2 likes

if I'm cycling and a bus appears beside me and starts indicating as it passes I have two choices.

Choice 1 get my copy of the highway code  out and double check I have right of way  and then carry on cycling into a closing gap and be suprised at the outcome.

Choice 2. Bit of brake check behind me move out go past the bus.

its called traffic. You should try it.

 

 

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GMBasix replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
6 likes

nicmason wrote:

if I'm cycling and a bus appears beside me and starts indicating as it passes I have two choices.

Choice 1 get my copy of the highway code  out and double check I have right of way  and then carry on cycling into a closing gap and be suprised at the outcome.

Choice 2. Bit of brake check behind me move out go past the bus.

its called traffic. You should try it.

Reductive sarcasm usually misses the nuance that precedes it.

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nicmason replied to GMBasix | 3 years ago
0 likes

if you where a stick of rock it would say pedant all the way through.

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GMBasix replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
5 likes

nicmason wrote:

if you where a stick of rock it would say pedant all the way through.

Feel better for getting that off your chest?

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nicmason replied to GMBasix | 3 years ago
0 likes

thesaurus out of reach behind the toilet ?

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hawkinspeter replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
14 likes

nicmason wrote:

if I'm cycling and a bus appears beside me and starts indicating as it passes I have two choices.

Choice 1 get my copy of the highway code  out and double check I have right of way  and then carry on cycling into a closing gap and be suprised at the outcome.

Choice 2. Bit of brake check behind me move out go past the bus.

its called traffic. You should try it.

If I'm driving a bus and I see a cyclist ahead as I'm approaching a bus stop, I have at least two choices:

  1. remember my driving training and slow down so that I can slip behind the cyclist to pull in at the bus stop
  2. get my copy of the Daily Fail, read about how LTNs are destroying lives and decide to punish the red light jumping cyclist by pulling alongside and trying to crush him against the kerb like the insect that he is

That's called a stupid argument - you should recognise it

 

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Wingguy replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
10 likes

nicmason wrote:

Choice 1 get my copy of the highway code  out and double check I have right of way  and then carry on cycling into a closing gap and be suprised at the outcome.

Surprised and angry are two different things. I don't think anyone here is surprised that the bus driver is arrogant and dangerous enough to simply bully the cyclist out of his way, but so what? He is still absolutely in the wrong and he absolutely should be castigated for it. 
It has also been spotted that you're moving the goal posts. You lied and said the bus was past him not just to defend the driver but to say JV was at fault. JV was not at fault for anything. He avoided the collision that the bus driver tried to have.

Quote:

its called traffic. You should try it.

"It's traffic" is not and cannot be an excuse for dangerous driving that puts vulnerable road users at risk. That's an insane point of view. If you were mugged at knife point then "It's called London, mate" would not be an acceptable defence of the muggers, would it?

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TheBillder replied to Wingguy | 3 years ago
2 likes
Wingguy wrote:

. If you were mugged at knife point then "It's called London, mate" would not be an acceptable defence of the muggers, would it?

For this pearl I'm prepared to overlook that you should obv be called Doorguy. Swlxder will be along in a minute.

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mdavidford replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
10 likes

nicmason wrote:

Jeremy Vine at fault. Bus goes past him then starts to indicate. He should have braked had a look and gone round. 

IMO a bus full of people has priority over individual travellers. it makes public transport work better

IMO a board full of commenters has priority over individual contrarians. You should have paused, re-read your comment, and not posted it. It makes the internet work better.

[I assume that's how this works...]

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Seventyone replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
0 likes

If there had been another cyclist behind JV, and he had braked, so that the second cyclist hit JV, who would have been at fault nicmason?

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nicmason replied to Seventyone | 3 years ago
0 likes

1.  he only needs to brake gently  

2 if you cycle or drive  into the back of someone its almost always going to be your fault. bikes are no different to cars . if you're too close to stop you're too close. 

I have been crashed into by someone who was much more concerned with their own journey than what was happening around them and they snapped off my derailleur. I was none to pleased. maybe I should have demanded their insurnace details.

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GMBasix replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
4 likes

nicmason wrote:

1.  he only needs to brake gently  

2 if you cycle or drive  into the back of someone its almost always going to be your fault. bikes are no different to cars . if you're too close to stop you're too close. 

I have been crashed into by someone who was much more concerned with their own journey than what was happening around them and they snapped off my derailleur. I was none to pleased. maybe I should have demanded their insurnace details.

1. or harder. or really hard. or maybe he did brake but so did the bus, so they stayed level.

2. ... as the bus pulls into the side of him and he brakes enough to miss it and keep behind.

You're saying all the things that JV could have done, and it turns out, did; while holding back on the fundamental criticism that the bus driver went to pass another vehicle, knowing (or liable to know) that he was closely approaching a bus stop.

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Bungle_52 replied to nicmason | 3 years ago
4 likes

I always try to show consideration to buses but I won't be bullied into doing so.

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brooksby | 3 years ago
10 likes

Bus at fault.  Could see JV ahead, all the driver had to do was ease off on the accelerator (not even apply the brake, probably) and let JV past then pull in.

I don't entirely understand the comments along the lines of "Maybe someone pressed the button too late so he just had to pull in immediately".  In that case, then - well - he couldn't because there was a bike in the way and even the bus timetable isn't a licence to squash people.

And I don't know if things are different in That There London, but if you press the button too late for a stop, here in Bristol, well then hard luck and most of the time you'll just be getting off at the next stop.

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Awavey | 3 years ago
4 likes

My no doubt unpopular take on the Vine video was he made his position far worse than it needed to be, by riding into that vanishing gap like he did. Which I've said before theres a part of me that thinks he does so deliberately to create this kind of content he can share on his social media channels and create more of a fuss about.

Basically if I'm riding that lane, and you can debate for sure whether the bus driver is being considerate of Vine for overtaking & stopping, but we dont know if the bus was already planning to stop or someone pressed the stop button part way through as they passed each other,the bus cant slam on the brakes.

All you can then do as a cyclist in that situation is deal with the hand you are being dealt, and as soon as that indicator is on, I know what the bus is going to do, cheers bus driver thanks a bundle not going on my Christmas card list, but I dont carry on riding as if the bus is going to bail out of what its doing at the last second, I dont want to be trapped on the inside of a bus, I'm going to quick shoulder check behind the bus, maybe apply a bit of brake though I think just easing off pedalling would create enough speed difference to drop in behind the bus and shift around it's right hand side and it's all done in seconds with no aggro at all and we carry on our merry ways.

The road directly ahead in any case has parked cars and the cycle lane shifts over in the road, so regardless of the bus in this case Vine should have been planning ahead to move over pretty much where the bus starts indicating anyway, which is again shoulder check oh theres something in the way I need to account for,ok they want to stop & I dont I'll just feed in behind them to make that move.

I'd certainly not be riding through the bus stop because the road surface is invariably uneven due to bus wear & tear and inevitably covered in diesel/oil deposits with lots of painted slippy lines to fall off on.

So it's a subtlety no doubt lost on the twitter mob, that the bus driver wasn't being that considerate, but that Vine then handled that situation in the wrong way. YMMV on to who you apportion the most blame too as a result.

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wycombewheeler replied to Awavey | 3 years ago
9 likes

Awavey wrote:

. but we dont know if the bus was already planning to stop or someone pressed the stop button part way through as they passed each other,

Indicator is on at 18s as the front door is just past Jeremy (check glow in bottom right corner of image). If the bus driver releases the loud pedal when he turns on the indicator, the bus slows and drops in behind Jeremy easily. Instead the bus driver keeps going at the same speed rushing to the bus stop and making a more severe stop, which also makes it look like Jeremy is not slowing, because both road users are on their brakes they stay side by side, while the bus is moving left.

Awavey wrote:

, I'm going to quick shoulder check behind the bus, maybe apply a bit of brake though I think just easing off pedalling would create enough speed difference to drop in behind the bus and shift around it's right hand side an.

This is clearly nonsense because Jeremy is using his brakes, but as the bus is now braking hard for the bus stop it's not possible to slide in behind by merely stopping pedaling. 

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Awavey replied to wycombewheeler | 3 years ago
0 likes

the bus driver could have chosen to do alot of things differently, but we are not in control of the bus or the driver, we as cyclists in this situation can only react to the circumstances we find ourselves in.And Im saying dont react by riding up the inside of that bus, because thats the wrong choice to make, even if it makes good angry cyclist video content for your social media channel.

the point about slotting in behind the bus, theres a decision point, quite early in that video, where the bus is going clearly more than a few mph faster than Vine is pedalling at and not braking, to be able to overtake like that, and if you as a rider accept at that point the bus is going to do its thing regardless of you and you release your loud pedal, you will drop enough speed and initially its not that much speed at all to just drop back far enough behind the bus and swing around it before anyone needs to be on the brakes to stop.

The longer you leave that decision point, and it might only be a matter of seconds, the more likely you need to use the brakes to do the same thing. But for an urban commuter, this stuff should be second nature. Drivers are always putting you in positions like this, in fact lots of Londons roads seem positively tailored to create these kinds of conflicts, where youll need to loop around something thats trying to occupy space in front of you and most London cyclists Ive witnessed become quite adept at handling it.

Vine had to use the brakes and stop, because at no point does it look like he is even considering he wants to move around the bus, he wants to carry on riding where he is, and let the bus sort itself out, even though as I say the road directly ahead of him doesnt lend itself to maintaining that positioning and he was going to have to move over right and account for vehicles coming up from behind him anyway to ensure he had the space, in which case why be making such a big deal about this.

and that comes back to this point that alot of his videos he shares and gets alot of social media impressions on, have this style where he rides into situations that he could easily have avoided, that I think most experienced cyclists would have avoided in the same circumstances, theres rarely one Ive seen where Ive thought nope didnt see that coming from a mile out.

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GMBasix replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
10 likes

Nigel Garage wrote:

"Assume that the person you are listening to might know something you don’t."

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Clem Fandango replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
10 likes

Nigel Garage wrote:

Fantastic post Awavey, I couldn't have put it better myself.

As the world-famous psychologist Jordan B Peterson writes in his book 12 Rules for life, "Set your house in perfect order before you criticize the world" and "Assume that the person you are listening to might know something you don’t."

I'd suggest many on this forum would benefit more than most on leafing through its contents, especially the chapters quoted above.

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ktache replied to Clem Fandango | 3 years ago
6 likes

As far as I can tell, MrForage, your 3 posts have all been excellent.

Please keep it up.

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Seventyone replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 3 years ago
3 likes

Why are all the people you quote "world Famous" or "top lawyers" Nigel Gar(r)age?  Is that you like to appeal to authority?

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Seventyone | 3 years ago
6 likes

TBH, he has point about assuming someone might have more knowledge. However we have had enough input from Boo in his many guises to now know we don't need to worry. 

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