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Making Garland safer to ride in (Read 5591 times)
goatstick




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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #15 - Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 20th, 2009, 7:43pm:
Europe uses a lot of traffic circles to slow traffic.

...

A 40 mph speed limit is too much for me. If you want to ride your bicycle 40 mph, get on the high speed roads. Designated bike routes should have a slower speed limit.

...

And the only two things keeping 30 mph electric commute vehicles from becoming popular is their high price, and the fact that people can't use them in high speed traffic..

Traffic calming goes way beyond circles and speed bumps, and neither of them work all that well imo anyway.
 
I don't ride at 40mph. I have ridden almost daily in 45-55mph traffic for years. 45mph traffic requires that you learn a few things but isn't all that bad. *All* we have around here are high-speed roads. There is nothing else to ride on if you use a bike for transportation here. Sometimes there are usable shoulders and sometimes there are not. You will almost certainly have to train the drivers on those roads to regard and expect you though. At first it can be a little scarey but stick with it, fellow cyclists that follow you may someday come to understand how you helped them. Yes, I prefer roads with wide shoulders but that's not the reality of things.
 
And why should there be designed bike routes? All public roads that aren't limited access roads are already bike routes!  'Bike routes' *never* go where I need to go. I've ridden them in Europe. 12mph max and they only go where the locals go - at less than 12mph. No thanks. Oh! and I love the designated bike routes here in S.A. 2 ft wide with water diversion bumps and drainage grates regularly spaced so you have to dodge out into traffic. But they are trying to help by putting a sign by the bike killers letting you know that you have to dodge out into traffic so you get run over.
 
As to ebikes in high speed traffic... I *design* custom ebikes... I *prefer* riding a decent ebike in high-speed traffic over no power-assist, especially in hilly terrain. A decent ebike can average a lot faster than my meat-powered bike can on flat ground and doesn't slow nearly as much on the hills. Remember that my daughter, as a novice cyclist, rode her ebike from Helotes to Florida and back ~3200 miles last year averaging almost 100 miles per day, much of that trip on high-speed roads. Big stretches of narrow two-lane 70mph highways with no shoulders and a lot of traffic. Try Hwy 190 either side of Baton Rouge for more than a hundred miles each way. Average speed about 17-18mph. And no we didn't cause a great ordeal for the motor vehicles on those roads. Only very occasionally was there any kind of issue. Best drivers? Transport truckers. They watched for us and often waved. Worst drivers? Construction vehicle drivers and people in white luxury vehicles.
 
Now. The interesting thing might be that back in about 1997-1998 I think we worked very hard to pass fed legislation that required states that accepted federal funding to implement and maintain shoulders acceptable for cycling for highways. Texas responded by refusing fed funding. Until this year... They accepted fed stimulus funding. Might be worth asking why they aren't adding/maintaining shoulders to highways with that funding...
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« Last Edit: Oct 20th, 2009, 11:04pm by goatstick »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #16 - Oct 21st, 2009, 12:10am
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:48am:
Making some inquiries...

Answer:
 
-  It is general practice to include bike/ped plans in required comprehensive plans these days.   If a city desires to use state/federal dollars on a bike project, there are state and federal "suggestions (guidelines)" to do so.  
 
- Consultants usually include them and they tend to become general practice.
 
Result is that a lot of plans are cut & paste projects, however, some cities recruit interested citizens and bike activisists to create their plan usually in response to citizen pressure.  Austin used this process not so much because of citizen pressure, but because their last city manager thought that the presence of Lance Armstrong would generate enough private dollars that could be leveraged with local dollars into a project that then could attract political interest at higher than just a local level.  She was right. With the funding crisis in transportation these days, state and federal agencies that select projects to be funded are favoring plans that leverage dollars from various sources and benefit a large portion of the population or targeted populations.
 
Larger cities have enough transportation dollars thay they can afford to support bike/ped public participation in plan development. Smaller ones can't afford to support that kind of effort. In Central Texas, most of the cities are in this situation so the local MPO petitioned TxDOT to fund the creation of a regional bike/ped plan (7 counties).  They agreed so they had it written and provided to each of the cities so that they can include their portion into their city plans. Lots of elected officials will say that COGs are just an unneeded additional level of government.  However, it cost taxpayers a whole lot less to put a regional plan together than if the cities all did it separately.  Plus a regional plan has connectivity that city plans can't have.
 
Get younger citizens to front the cause.  Elected officials respond to younger generation involvement because they believe it translates into votes.  They are looking for ways to make themselves attractive to the younger/greener generation (especially the ones with money).
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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #17 - Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
Traffic calming goes way beyond circles and speed bumps, and neither of them work all that well imo anyway.

 
Then, in my opinion, you're exactly wrong. I ride on roads with speed bumps every day and see that they work well. I guess we'll agree to disagree on that.
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
*All* we have around here are high-speed roads. There is nothing else to ride on if you use a bike for transportation here. Sometimes there are usable shoulders and sometimes there are not.

 
Rural areas are a whole different problem. Opus asked about Garland, an urban maze of streets much like a lot of the DFW metroplex.
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
You will almost certainly have to train the drivers on those roads to regard and expect you though. At first it can be a little scarey but stick with it, fellow cyclists that follow you may someday come to understand how you helped them.

 
If you think you can singlehandedly train all the auto drivers, then go for it. Personally, I don't think you're going to get it done.
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
And why should there be designed bike routes? All public roads that aren't limited access roads are already bike routes!  'Bike routes' *never* go where I need to go. I've ridden them in Europe. 12mph max and they only go where the locals go - at less than 12mph. No thanks.

 
If you insist on taking the shortest route, no matter how bike unfriendly it is, more power to you. But most cyclists, like me, would gladly ride a longer route if it was safer. I ride 12.5 miles to work when the shortest route is just over 11 miles. 12 mph? I did suggest 30 mph, didn't I?
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
Oh! and I love the designated bike routes here in S.A. 2 ft wide with water diversion bumps and drainage grates regularly spaced so you have to dodge out into traffic. But they are trying to help by putting a sign by the bike killers letting you know that you have to dodge out into traffic so you get run over.

 
I wrote bike routes, not bike lanes, didn't I?
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
As to ebikes in high speed traffic... I *design* custom ebikes...

 
I wasn't talking about ebikes. I was talking about ECV's, neighborhood cars, or whatever you want to call them, those tiny three or four wheel plug in to recharge vehicles that should be a large part of our urban traffic, but aren't, because there aren't safe commute streets for them.
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 6:58am by Bud_Bent »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #18 - Oct 21st, 2009, 10:10am
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:

Then, in my opinion, you're exactly wrong. I ride on roads with speed bumps every day and see that they work well. I guess we'll agree to disagree on that.

Then I expect you'll really like the real traffic calming concepts. They work much better and don't beat your bike up.
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:
     
Rural areas are a whole different problem. Opus asked about Garland, an urban maze of streets much like a lot of the DFW metroplex.

I'm not talking rural. Think terrain. NW San Antonio. The routes that can go anywhere need bridges or cuts if you don't want to climb 10%-20% grades on a daily basis and/or have 45+mph roads occupying the available routes.  
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:

If you think you can singlehandedly train all the auto drivers, then go for it. Personally, I don't think you're going to get it done.

Have you tried it? I have for years. It is far more effective than I would have ever dreamed. You show up there pretty much every day and they get used to you. Stick a camera on your bike pointing back at them and they get used to you *really* quickly. Especially when frames from your daily commute movie indicting specific vehicles get published... And on long stretches of that commute I only saw other cyclists 2 times in 5 years. So yes. It most certainly works.
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:

If you insist on taking the shortest route, no matter how bike unfriendly it is, more power to you. But most cyclists, like me, would gladly ride a longer route if it was safer. I ride 12.5 miles to work when the shortest route is just over 11 miles. 12 mph? I did suggest 30 mph, didn't I?

Only one mile? I would love that. On my old 32 mile daily commute through NW S.A. there were only two detours that could take me through about 1/2 mile of what you describe but they would respectively add about 3 and 5 miles to my route and were far more dangerous than travelling the 45-70 mph roads I was on - especially crossing all of the connector roads between neighborhoods (that I was travelling on).
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:

Quote from goatstick on Oct 20th, 2009, 10:41pm:
Oh! and I love the designated bike routes here in S.A. 2 ft wide with water diversion bumps and drainage grates regularly spaced so you have to dodge out into traffic. But they are trying to help by putting a sign by the bike killers letting you know that you have to dodge out into traffic so you get run over.

I wrote bike routes, not bike lanes, didn't I?

They are designated bike routes. On 45 mph roads. It is far safer to just ignore the bike lane when riding them.
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:52am:

I wasn't talking about ebikes. I was talking about ECV's, neighborhood cars, or whatever you want to call them, those tiny three or four wheel plug in to recharge vehicles that should be a large part of our urban traffic, but aren't, because there aren't safe commute streets for them.

Ah. Safety isn't the reason for the restriction with NEVs. Check the history of the fed laws involving how/why the class was created. It was specifically to allow people who didn't have a driver license to travel using them, as with a farm vehicle, thus limited, local mobility. The original fed law only allowed insurance and license plates to be required. Tx and other states ignored the fed law and require a DL, voiding the entire legal purpose behind their existence. Get Tx to obey fed law and you'd see them used much more. Like the tiny electric scooters that S.A. banned a few years ago. They were fabulous, created far less inconvenience than a bicycle and were selling like mad. Of course the crooked auto dealer/developer 'owned' city council just had to ban them as a result.
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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #19 - Oct 21st, 2009, 10:11am
 
My hometown, which was so unfriendly to most everybody back when I was growing up, has made a pretty neat turnaround.  They have a yellowbike program with bikes parked at random places all over downtown that you can ride for a very low fee for the year, and they also have a city ordinance that states that any new roads or improvements must include bike lanes.  It's been an amazing change when I visit.
 
Not that there aren't much better solutions, I think, but just having a visual recognition for cyclists is a place to start.  Ideally there should be plenty of room for all.  This is the US, not Japan.  We have room.  It chaps my hide that we don't plan "neighborhoods" when we build, so you're forced to get in the car for simple stuff like groceries.  
 
Opus, here's an idea:  Get a group of 50 kids together and go in front of the city council.  Have them cry a lot and go to them and ask the councilmen why they don't want the kids to be safe when they ride their bikes?  Get a bunch of media coverage and there you have it. Funds galore! Smiley
 
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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #20 - Oct 21st, 2009, 10:59am
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 21st, 2009, 10:10am:

Have you tried it? I have for years. It is far more effective than I would have ever dreamed. You show up there pretty much every day and they get used to you. Stick a camera on your bike pointing back at them and they get used to you *really* quickly. Especially when frames from your daily commute movie indicting specific vehicles get published... And on long stretches of that commute I only saw other cyclists 2 times in 5 years. So yes. It most certainly works.

 
Yes, I've tried it for years, and no, it hasn't worked at all. Another area where I guess we'll agree to disagree.
 
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 21st, 2009, 10:10am:
Ah. Safety isn't the reason for the restriction with NEVs. Check the history of the fed laws involving how/why the class was created. It was specifically to allow people who didn't have a driver license to travel using them, as with a farm vehicle, thus limited, local mobility. The original fed law only allowed insurance and license plates to be required. Tx and other states ignored the fed law and require a DL, voiding the entire legal purpose behind their existence. Get Tx to obey fed law and you'd see them used much more.

 
And once again, I'll completely disagree. Low speed commute vehicles aren't popular because there aren't routes for them. Licensing issues would work out easily enough if there were practical routes for these kind of vehicles.
 
Are you beginning to see why cities don't ask for a consensus from cyclists, Opus? They know they won't get one. Here, you have Kent, a fast vehicular cyclist, and me, a medium speed vehicular cyclist, and we disagree on pretty much everything. Wait until you add the slow riders and those who think bicycles should only be on bike paths to the mix, and the arguments really start.
 
It's a shame that so many cyclists think their ideas are the only way, and will rant at the city if they do anything even slightly different. It makes it too easy for city planners to just ignore cyclists, and spend their time trying to please non-cyclist drivers, who are in a large majority, anyway.
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 11:39am by Bud_Bent »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #21 - Oct 21st, 2009, 11:41am
 
I think it's really more a difference in expectations. For years I've worked for the rights of cyclists. Almost no cyclists are willing to do that. I've seen the bloody internals of Tx politics while doing it and have very low expectations that decent, usable 'cycling facilities' will happen beyond wide shoulders (which usually work quite well and almost always better than anything else). As long as the auto industry and developers hold the keys to the city, it almost certainly won't happen, and as long as people value their convenience as paramount to all, noone is really safe in anything. Read the responses here:
http://www.austin360.com/blogs/content/shared-gen/blogs/austin/fitcity/entries/2 009/10/20/council_votes_thursday_on_safe.html
World Peace? We go ballistic with people who are almost identical to us.
 
I just ride where I need to go and enjoy it while I can. If more of us did that (like you commuting), it would be safer for us. There truly is more safety in numbers, and it starts by each of us being a '1' and not waiting to be '100' with full cycling facilities in group rides.
 
Just do it. And yes, sometimes you won't want to ride, so don't. Sometimes the risk really is too great, so work to figure something else out. But don't let risk aversion control you.
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 11:50am by goatstick »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #22 - Oct 21st, 2009, 12:20pm
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 21st, 2009, 11:41am:
I just ride where I need to go and enjoy it while I can. If more of us did that (like you commuting), it would be safer for us.

 
Yes, I do agree with that. Our biggest problem with riding the roads here in Texas is the fact that so few people do it. If we had 1000 times as many riders, autos would be much better at sharing the road with us, although any place where so many drivers come so close to living in their vehicles, the drivers are going to have far too great a sense of entitlement, with respect to bicycles or anything else on the road.
 
Have you followed any of the cycling advocacy organizations? There is nowhere else where the differences in how to better accommodate cyclists is so stark. Every time an organization takes a stance on an issue, one third of the membership quits in protest. So we truly have no really large advocacy groups with lots of clout.  
 
I'm still with Nelson; nothing short of too expensive gasoline will make major changes.
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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #23 - Oct 21st, 2009, 2:11pm
 
Quote from evblazer on Oct 21st, 2009, 12:23pm:
Is that a poke at me since I'm a low speed commuter  Tongue

 
LOL... somehow I don't think you ride a lot slower than the 12.9 mph average I maintained yesterday on my commute. But even creeping along on the loaded down SXP, I still pass more bikes than pass me, so I'll call myself a medium speed rider.
 
Quote from evblazer on Oct 21st, 2009, 12:23pm:
Decent and Continuous sidewalks are horrible for cycling. I feel they increase the danger to the cyclist by making every driveway a 4 way intersection especially when there are fences/walls at the intersections causing you to have to nearly stop and look around at every cross. If a cyclist wants to really be unseen by cars just get on the sidewalk and see how many more close encouters you have with people hooking you. Sidewalks also collect alot of debris that doesn't get blown off by cars or cleaned off and the sidewalks tend to fall apart or get huge elevation differences at all the expansion gaps. Plus if you are somewhere that people walk their dogs or kids now you have pedestrians hating you and making your rider slower and more dangerous.

 
Agreed. And that's why riding on the sidewalk is illegal in many cities. Every driveway is an intersection, and most bike/auto accidents happen at intersections. Sidewalks are the most dangerous place of all, for bicycles. Every safety study that's ever been done has confirmed that.
 
Quote from evblazer on Oct 21st, 2009, 12:23pm:
I prefer to ride on multilane high speed roads to 2 lanes myself, unless they are neighborhood ultralow traffic 2 lane roads.

 
This is one area where I notice a great deal of disagreement among cyclists. DJ says that the shoulder of FM1187 is his favorite place to ride in our area; I avoid it like the plague. Whatever the situation, I like the chances of a vehicle that's overtaking me doing 35 mph making the right evasive move, rather than a vehicle doing 80 mph. And I've spent so many hours riding the shoulder of SH360, watching traffic zoom by, that I see how every third car veers off onto the shoulder at every curve, or every time they hit the 'Z' key while texting on the phone. I prefer mixing with slower traffic.
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 2:20pm by Bud_Bent »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #24 - Oct 21st, 2009, 3:27pm
 
Does anybody believe anything like this would work here:
 
http://blog.pps.org/shared-space/
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ThaQjDLLJWA&NR=1
 
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RLfasxqhBNU
 
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0912/p07s03-woeu.html
 
http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0127/p01s03-woeu.html
 
By the number of people who park in the fire lane, and the number of people who seem all to willing to kill anybody in their way, I must say I have doubts.  But it would be an interesting experiment.  
 
Take Care,
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 3:53pm by Kwijybow »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #25 - Oct 21st, 2009, 3:44pm
 
Quote from Kwijybow on Oct 21st, 2009, 3:27pm:
Does anybody believe anything like this would work here:

http://blog.pps.org/shared-space/

http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0912/p07s03-woeu.html

http://www.csmonitor.com/2005/0127/p01s03-woeu.html

By the number of people who park in the fire lane, and the number of people who seem all to willing to kill anybody in their way, I must say I have doubts.  But it would be an interesting experiment.  I've seen a video somewhere but couldn't find it today.

Take Care,
Nelson.

 
Interesting stuff, but I'm not sure how it would play here. It would be interesting to try in congested, slow speed areas. But residential streets, with kids playing everywhere, don't seem to be enough to slow anyone here down, even the soccer moms with kids in their own vehicle, who should know better, hence the advent of speed bumps in so many neighborhoods, or neighborhood streets that don't go anywhere, to try and keep traffic away.
 
Narrow roads seem to be the only thing that slows down people here. When Johnson County roads get more narrow than my driveway, I notice that most vehicles seem to drive pretty slow on them. Make the road two feet wider, and paint a broken line down the middle, and you can post any speed limit you want, people will still drive 70 mph.
 
Speed differential is the biggest villain, when it comes to mixing vehicles with pedestrians and bikes and such. One mistaken sideways move by the slow mover, and he's a stain on a bumper. It's the slow mover's fault when that happens, but without such a great speed differential, the results aren't as bad. And that's what seems to be the hardest thing to do here, is slow anyone down. Every irate driver I've ever tangled with was mad at me because he thought he should have the right to drive fast everywhere, and nothing should ever slow him down.
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 3:50pm by Bud_Bent »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #26 - Oct 21st, 2009, 5:01pm
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 12:20pm:

Have you followed any of the cycling advocacy organizations? There is nowhere else where the differences in how to better accommodate cyclists is so stark. Every time an organization takes a stance on an issue, one third of the membership quits in protest. So we truly have no really large advocacy groups with lots of clout.

Yes, I've been doing it for over 20 years, on and off directly with cycling groups but found I could be more effective working with other groups - for cyclists. For about 6 years I spent about 4 hours per day doing it - usually in the middle of the night. There are many reasons why they break apart. What I've seen most often: 1) a developer 'ringer' poses as a cycling advocate. Often they actually cycle for at least long enough to get in a position of authority and control. Then they direct the organization's efforts towards construction projects that benefit their benefactor. This has been the biggest cause of cycling advocacy group breakup that I have seen. This typically results in a lot of money spent but things like the 2' bike lanes with roads hazards built into them. Since it is actually a job for them, they have far more time to spend on it than anyone else and a whole lot more money. 2) Most cyclists are recreational cyclists who drive their bike in a car someplace to ride. If the roads one place get trashed, they go elsewhere and don't want to get involved. When things get to the point where they actually need to make a commitment to do something, they just quit, regardless of what the issue was. 3) Burnout. This happens with pretty much every advocacy group, especially when it's just a few people doing all the work. That's what happened to me. I got tired of being pretty much the only one.
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 12:20pm:

I'm still with Nelson; nothing short of too expensive gasoline will make major changes.

Talk to bike shop owners who have been there a long time. When gas prices raise, people tend to drop everything else to be able to spend money on gas. Last summer has been the first time that has somewhat changed in the general population and it was primarily spent on used bikes and parts. Driving is the most heavily subsidized activity most of us will ever engage in. Just in terms of gas costs, drop all the primary and secondary subsidies (funded through tax dollars - tell the complaining drivers that one) and gas would be up close to $10 a gallon. And we'd probably have a civil war over it.
 
Please pick up a copy of "Asphalt Nation" and read it. Great book. "How the Automobile took over America and how we can take it back". It's more than just cyclists who are horribly adversely affected by all of this. Maybe work to hook up with other groups than just cyclists and gain even more clout. That's what we did.
 
Quote from Bud_Bent on Oct 21st, 2009, 2:11pm:
... I see how every third car veers off onto the shoulder at every curve...

This might be interesting... A few years back, one stretch of 2-lane with a shoulder I commute on I noticed as you did the high number of cars that veered past the lane markers. So I ran a survey of just the cars in front of me for a week, counting up to 100 cars each trip as I rode home. I didn't keep the results but over 80% of the cars travelling in my direction veered past the lane markers *after* they were about a hundred yards past me. I didn't count them until they had a chance to get a ways past me... About 30% of them travelling towards me did it. I thought that a bit strange so I sat near a curve that had the highest incidence of cars veering and counted 100 cars. Dropped to under 10% each way. Maybe file this in there somewhere with 'traffic calming'. :^)
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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #27 - Oct 21st, 2009, 6:07pm
 
Quote:
Please pick up a copy of "Asphalt Nation" and read it. Great book. "How the Automobile took over America and how we can take it back". It's more than just cyclists who are horribly adversely affected by all of this.

 
Yes a good book, read it about 10 years ago when I was going "Car Light"  I still do use a car occasionally, but not much.  In those 10 years I still hate cars, and the fact that most of our architecture and economy have been built around enshrining them and consumption as the purpose of human lives, But at the same time I don't think cycling is anywhere as dangerous as it is perceived to be either.  The whole business of fear mongering to help keep the status quo overlooks the fact that you are 3-5 times more likely to die in a car than on a bike for the same given period of time spent there.  Also if you aren't a child, or have been riding your bike more than the last couple of weeks your odds are even better. Something like 45,000 people die in automobiles in this country every year, and many more are injured.  I mean if an airliner a day crashed do you think anybody would fly?  Yet people think I'm crazy after they inform me how dangerous my ride home from work is, and I tell them they are at much greater risk than myself.
 
I personally think if you could slow all the cars down by an average of 25-30 mph everywhere you'd have something, but oh the howling that would entail.  I personally say f--- em.  I don't care anymore, I've been yelled at too many times and seen too much stupid and aggressive behaviour to care.
 
However I think the days are coming, not soon enough mind you, when car driving will be a much less common activity.  We'll move to electric, and natural gas powered vehicles in an effort to keep the Merry-Go-Round spinning, but eventually energy spent towards food will take precedence and the whole stupid game will wind down.
 
 
Take Care,
Nelson.
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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #28 - Oct 21st, 2009, 6:12pm
 
Quote from goatstick on Oct 21st, 2009, 5:01pm:
This might be interesting... A few years back, one stretch of 2-lane with a shoulder I commute on I noticed as you did the high number of cars that veered past the lane markers. So I ran a survey of just the cars in front of me for a week, counting up to 100 cars each trip as I rode home. I didn't keep the results but over 80% of the cars travelling in my direction veered past the lane markers *after* they were about a hundred yards past me. I didn't count them until they had a chance to get a ways past me... About 30% of them travelling towards me did it. I thought that a bit strange so I sat near a curve that had the highest incidence of cars veering and counted 100 cars. Dropped to under 10% each way. Maybe file this in there somewhere with 'traffic calming'. :^)

 
Your experiences are somewhat different than mine. While doing most of my weekday rides down a stretch of shoulder on SH360 for the last few years, I noticed that it was every curve that sent people over the line, whether the curve was in front of me or behind me. For that reason, I got to where I watched especially closely whenever I had just passed a curve, lest a car just behind me would join me on the shoulder, a habit I still have today.
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« Last Edit: Oct 21st, 2009, 6:15pm by Bud_Bent »  

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Re: Making Garland safer to ride in
Reply #29 - Oct 21st, 2009, 7:57pm
 
Quote from Kwijybow on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:07pm:
... But at the same time I don't think cycling is anywhere as dangerous as it is perceived to be either...  I mean if an airliner a day crashed do you think anybody would fly?

The science of risk analysis was pushed into adulthood after TMI with the desire to try to understand the public reaction so I needed to obtain a working knowledge of it. People are absolutely horrible at it. We judge risk mostly on the basis of familiarity and then convenience. The more foreign or difficult something can be seen, the riskier it seems to us and vice versa. Airline travel would be seen as risky if it was simply presented as foreign and difficult in the news. It wouldn't take any more airline crashes to do it. People can be manipulated this way so easily it's scarey. Want to make cycling appear safer? Make it look familiar and comfortable. As bent-riders we at least have the second part down. :^)
 
Quote from Kwijybow on Oct 21st, 2009, 6:07pm:
I personally think if you could slow all the cars down by an average of 25-30 mph everywhere you'd have something
 
Want to slow traffic in a particular area? Ask all of your car-driving friends to travel 10mph slower. The hard part is getting people to actually do that, but it's amazing to see how many cars around them will slow when they do, even in very light traffic. Most people don't pay that close attention to driving. They mainly just flow with the traffic. Problem is getting your friends to slow down. People talk a lot about doing things to help but few are actually willing to do anything *themselves*. They mainly want someone else to do it.
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