• Nfamwap@lemmy.world
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    14 天前

    I cycle. I can’t fathom the risk some cyclists will take. Cycling on a dual carriageway? Absolutely no chance. Cycling on a busy A-road? No way.

    Having the right to be there doesn’t mean it’s any less risky when you have great big lorries hurtling by at > 50mph.

    Graveyards are full of people who had the right of way.

    • Andrew@piefed.social
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      14 天前

      I’m not some arrogant cyclist, insisting on my right to be somewhere - I use what is often the only road that takes me where I want to go. Personally, I find windy b-roads a bit scary too, and there’s a downhill I have to take that’s got a ‘cycle lane’ painted on, with cars parked on the left of me (so if anyone opens their door, I’m dead), cars in a narrower-than-usual lane to the right of me, and a diversion onto the pavement at the bottom, with a bus stop for the unwary to crash into. So basically every segment of a cycle journey is terrifying one way or another, and I just have to not think about it too much or I’d never go anywhere.

    • fpslem@lemmy.world
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      14 天前

      North America is full of those dual carriage motorways, with no alternate roads in many areas. No one enjoys riding on them, they just don’t have another choice.

      It’s also a North American past-time to blame the guy trying to get to work or school when some inattentive driver mows him down.