Motorists

And yet, it was a flawless ride

By
40
September 17, 2010
BMUFLsignferncreek

Some interesting things happened on my way downtown yesterday. I was headed to the Health & Fitness Fair at First Presbyterian Church on Jackson St to promote Bike/Walk Central Florida and CyclingSavvy. My printer crapped out, so I needed to stop and get some fliers printed at Staples. And I was running out of time. As...
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NYC Releases “unprecedented” Report

By
1
August 18, 2010
NYC Releases “unprecedented” Report

Over 7,000 pedestrian crash reports studied. NY Times has an article which highlights unexpected results. Taxis, it turns out, are not a careering menace: cabs, along with buses and trucks, accounted for far fewer pedestrian accidents in Manhattan than did private automobiles. Jaywalkers were involved in fewer collisions than their law-abiding counterparts...
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It’s a RAID!

By
2
August 17, 2010
It’s a RAID!

In hot pursuit! About two weeks after Retired Admiral Collins was hit while cycling in a crosswalk before dawn, the Tampa police stage a raid on downtown Tampa. The motorist, a 2nd year OB/GYN resident on her way to work at a hospital wasn’t cited. No details yet as to whether Collins had lights. Ironically, a...
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Trust and the “Substandard” Lane

By
4
July 22, 2010
Trust and the “Substandard” Lane

I want to trust people. I really do. It would make everything so much easier. The road in the photo above is Woodcock. I use it and Lawton all the time. The lanes are 13ft (measured from the center of the double-yellow line to the gutter seam). That makes them “substandard” for the purpose of...
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Passing into Oncoming Traffic

By
21
July 7, 2010
Passing into Oncoming Traffic

Bob Sutterfield has written an excellent letter to his local paper about the problem of motorists passing into oncoming traffic. This is the only regular problem I have with car drivers. I rarely experience close passing. Harassment comes from significantly less than 1% of drivers I encounter. I almost never have conflicts or scary...
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Use the Right Tool for the Right Job

By
1
July 5, 2010

As a tradesman, I was taught two very important things. One was “Attention to Detail!” and the other was “Use the Right Tool for the Right Job!” “Attention to Detail” means to single-mindedly finish one thing before moving on to another (so much for multi-tasking) and “Use the Right Tool for the Right Job” means...
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It’s not about cyclists vs motorists, scofflaws simply use the tool at hand.

By
13
June 16, 2010
It’s not about cyclists vs motorists, scofflaws simply use the tool at hand.

(Helmet tip to Danc for posting the video on Yaybikes.) Recent articles about the MBL law and the Jacksonville stabbing have brought out the anti-cyclist comment trolls. I typically avoid the comments, but even that isn’t working anymore. Now some of these people feel so emboldened by their righteousness, they’ve even taken to joining cyclist...
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Lemonade

By
15
June 5, 2010

Fishing for ideas. We can cast blame where ever we like . . . But now it is time to make lemonade from lemons. I was thinking about this and something else that has been weighing heavily on my mind and wonder if they can’t be combined . . . What’s been bothering me lately is...
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Another old “Safety Device” Going Bye-Bye

By
5
June 3, 2010
Another old “Safety Device” Going Bye-Bye

Since the 1930′s, London and other cities in the UK used pedestrian guardrails. If you haven’t been there and seen them, here is a pretty good picture from the Daily Mail. Click this to make it bigger As you can see, in some places, they are on the sidewalk and line entire streets. In other places,...
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Contempt for Stop Signs

By
28
May 26, 2010
stopsigns

Tom Vanderbilt’s article on Stop Signs in Slate yesterday, Stop! Is it possible to design a better stop sign?, raises some good points about our traffic culture. In 1998… there were more than 700,000 crashes at intersections marked—or “controlled,” as engineers say—by stop signs. More than 3,000 of these were fatal. Having nearly...
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When I see an adult on a bicycle, I do not despair for the future of the human race.
~H.G. Wells