It’s safe to say that, in the past few years anyway, farmers have been unfairly maligned by the professional cycling world – Contador and tainted beefgate immediately springs to mind, as does Toon Aerts’ recent attempt to take on the entire Normandy dairy farming industry…
> Wake up to (anything but) milk: Pro cyclists warned not to eat or drink dairy products at cyclocross race after positive doping tests
But sometimes, farmers – irritated by the sullying of their reputations by desperate, excuse-scavenging pro cyclists – get their own back by taking aim at us normal folk just riding our bikes on the roads.
Last May, for instance, a particularly foul-mouthed tirade went viral on the Farmers Against Misinformation Facebook page, which lambasted cyclists – colourfully described as people who enjoy “slipping into a Lycra suit and impaling yourself on a cock-shaped bike seat” – for not stopping to allow oncoming tractor drivers to pass.
“Do not just continue at full speed and then piss and moan as you go past because if it goes wrong you’ll end up being pressure washed off a tractor wheel,” the post said. “Cars, horse riders, and runners are capable of it, I seem to be missing something with cyclists, I presume either you don’t want to get your special bike dirty, you’re trying to beat your PB, or more than likely you’re just a complete cock in general.”
Charming.
> Foul-mouthed anti-cyclist rant from farmers' Facebook group goes viral
And, speaking of farmers and anti-cycling tirades, Farmers Weekly – the longstanding British farming magazine – has now decided to follow in the angry online tracks of illustrious predecessors like the Spectator, the Mail, and GB News by devoting one of its columns to a cliché-packed, almost certainly manufactured (or at least exaggerated) rant about Lycra-clad, middle-aged cyclists.
The column, penned by Welsh beef cattle farmer and opinion writer Will Evans and titled ‘The one where the cyclist meets the hedgecutter’ (coming soon to a Channel 5 Christmas movie marathon near you), inevitably begins:
Out of my peripheral vision I saw the fluorescent Lycra-clad man come hurtling round the bend. My instincts told me there’d be trouble.
Will, did your instincts also advise that you had a column deadline in a few hours, and precisely no ideas for what to include in it?
Anyway, Will continues: “Powered by pedals and righteous indignation, he flew down the road towards me, slowed, crossed over, and stopped just a few metres in front of the tractor bonnet with a face like thunder, a bulldog chewing a wasp and a smacked arse combined.”
Following that paragraph of mixed metaphor purgatory, Will goes on to detail how much he hates cutting the hedges along this particular narrow, twisting stretch of road, due to the vast number of “speeding cars, dog walkers, and pedestrians around”.
One of those things is not like the others, but go on…
Back to the Mexican standoff I unexpectedly had on my hands.
It crossed my mind as I waited to see what he’d do next that it was a good job it wasn’t my old man on the tractor, as the bike – and possibly its rider too – would be flat by now.
The thought of this, and the absurd situation I now found myself in, made me begin to giggle.
This only seemed to anger him further, and he began furiously flinging his arms around, gesturing at the hedge, then pointing angrily at me and the road while unleashing a profanity-laced tirade.
I apologise to any cyclists who happen to be reading this (and I’ve been known to occasionally don the gear and head out for a few miles myself, by the way).
But how on earth is anyone supposed to keep a straight face when confronted with a profusely red-faced, slightly rotund middle-aged man, dressed from head to toe in figure-hugging fluorescent Lycra and a bike helmet, windmilling his arms and frothing at the mouth with rage while trying desperately not to topple over on a bike?
(Thank God that he didn’t, or I genuinely might have died laughing.)
Ah, it seems that Will is learning fast from his heroes over at the Spectator, being careful to mention that he rides a bike too, you know, while also making light of running a cyclist over with a tractor. Classic.
> Spectator accused of “deliberately confusing drivers to encourage hate towards cyclists” with yet another bizarre ‘I’m a cyclist, but…’ Highway Code column
Evans eventually concludes by claiming that his response to the cyclist’s rant – for which no reason was given in the column – involved a Travolta-esque dance routine, designed purely to wind the rider up even further.
“Perhaps he was just having a bad day,” Will concludes, with that oh-so necessary hat tip towards balance. “As my daughters seem to have an uncanny aptitude for finding multiple thorns with their bike tyres, I had some sympathy for the man.
“But those roads and pavements would be even more unsafe if the hedges weren’t cut. Who’d be a farmer, eh?”
And who’d be a cyclist? I know who could sort all this out… Who has Bernard Hinault’s number?
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57 comments
Full house for me, knew the ballpark on the test costs from when my son applied a few years ago, had to think on the stopping distance one, remembered the 70mph in feet and mentally convert to metres
Well done.
I got the stopping distance correct too although aren't those distances hopelessly out of date now what with ABS etc?
Almost certainly, reaction times won't have changed of course, but they were probably based on a Ford Anglia or similar with drum brakes & cross-ply tyres. That said, something like that weighed 750kg not 1500kg, that will make the difference smaller though.
Disc brakes are no better than drum brakes, you just lock the wheels up, with more power. And they look rubbish, and they might slice someone up in a crash.
Be quite, you're showing yourself up being that stupid!!!
I believe the word you meant to use was quiet.
The overtaking question is daft anyway, it says which of these things is not on the list of things you must do before an overtake (make sure the road is clear ahead, make sure there is sufficient space to go back in, make sure nobody is overtaking you and indicate your intentions), but actually they all are, the first three things are, admittedly, in a single group in the Code and then the last is included later, but they are still all on the list of things you should do before pulling out.
Also, it's a long, long time since I took my motorcycle theory test but does it really now include questions about how much the theory and practical test cost? Absurd if so, how does that come under the heading of information you need to know to drive safely on the road?
Not AFAIK, this is just a quiz devised by the Grauniad. An example of the real thing is here:
https://www.gov.uk/take-practice-theory-test
I got those wrong
As did I. Presumably if I'd actually been sitting the test I would have known how much it had cost me to do so.
(I was one of the first to sit the theory test, in exam conditions in a test centre. Just before it started, we were asked if we had any questions. Someone put up his hand and asked 'what do we do if we can't read?')
Exactly my thoughts, too.
I only got 8/14, all the ones I guessed, including costs of tests. That's not something than anybody needs to know unless they're about to pay for one, so rather irrelevant, I thought.
I got ten and am not in the UK.
Some of those questions are really bad examples. I don't care whether or not another driver knows how much a test costs, what year rear seat belts became mandatory, or whether the rules were updated one year ago or two.
I do care whether they know what road signs and striping mean.
As mark1A notes below, this seems to be a lazy effort by the Graun who've just made up questions rather than bother researching what the theory test actually contains. None of those examples you mention would appear in the actual test - as you say they would have no relevance to good driving.
Today is the day, fellow live blog commenters, where we finally don't waste time and energy failing to change each other's minds about politics on a cycling website!
Typical Tory/leftist deflection. I trust you're being paid well for this.
Why bring politics to a cycling website. Says the person with the explicitly political username.
politics_is_for_losers
You sound like Mr Starmer telling me what I should think.....
(gets bike out of shed and rides off quickly.... )
Is that the Mr Starmer who's been advised by his publicity wonks to tell everyone how much he doesn't hate Thatcher?
Too late! Already bloody Tory farmers / socialist broadcasters / treehugging professional cyclists here (is this right)?
Thank god we have apolitical commentators like you here to bring balance..
I don't claim to be better, I am one of the worst for feeding the trolls. The above is for me as much as everyone else hahaha
Ah my apologies I thought you were one of the "all cycling media should be 100% sports and 0% politics" gang.
Typical brexiteer...
It's a cycling website?
You know, at times, you actually make me laugh.
Thanks.
Given the time it takes pages to load, I'm not sure which word you're emphasising for comic effect there.
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