goatstick
Team SCDRR
Posts: 349
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Widening the roadway is an issue, but as I mentioned, it benefits pretty much everyone. As to 'get in the bike lane', here's what my daughter learned on the trip: ---------------- Leaving the gas station, we had to negotiate traffic, which in this area at this time of day was over 70% SUVs, trucks, vans or minivans (Suburbia, go figure). Almost our entire route along the north side of Gainesville had marked, labeled bike lanes. Of course, this proved to be more dangerous and labor-intensive than riding a regular shoulder would have been. Drivers shut off part of their brain around bike lanes for some reason. It’s as if they imagine a wall between their lane and the bike lane – as long as they don’t cross the line, they can get as close to that wall (and your bike) as they like, going as fast as they want. In their mind, they set you in the bike lane and never expect that you would have to leave that lane for any reason. It’s the “Bike Lane”; why would your bike need to be anywhere else? They don’t consider that you might need to cross their lane to make a left turn, or move into their lane to avoid the all-to-common debris that accumulates in bike lanes or even to dodge potholes or manhole covers. When a vehicle encounters a big tree branch or a giant pothole in their lane, it’s common to change lanes to avoid the obstruction, but drivers find it unacceptable that bikes might need to do something similar. ----------------- What was the difference between Gainsville's bike lanes and a wide shoulder? Signs and markings stating it was a bike lane. Oh, and debris. Where there were no bike lane markings, the shoulder was free of debris and obstructions.
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