Friday 27 March 2015

A guide to using the road part 2...



If you are a cyclist, do you remember the first time you told someone – whether a mate, work or family member  - about cycling to work?

I bet you at least one response was: “I had this cyclist…” as if you were responsible for the actions of every other cyclist on the road. It was very weird the first time that happened to me. What has it got to do with me? I first started off getting defensive but nowadays I start replying: “Oh you’re a driver. I once had a driver hit my elbow…I once had a driver…” you get the idea.

So, in that spirit, I present a not-so-serious guide to the driving species.

The school mum
The school mum is tired, stressed out and thinking about everything except what is in front of her. She doesn’t mean to pull out and force you to slam the brakes on or swerve around her – she simply has her mind on other things. Little Ciabatta, who cannot walk or cycle to school cos it’s dangerous and it might be cold/wet/snow/too bright/too hot, will be safe in the spankingly new 4x4. Quite often there is a crossover with the ‘don’t-know-own-car’ driver below.

The 20-something female driver.
She’s a go-ahead girl. Literally. That’s all she’s focused on. Straight ahead at a steady as she goes 40mph no matter what. If you are lucky, you may stray into her peripheral vision but the only way to get on her register is to take up a strong primary so she may, and note I say may, notice you.

The 20-something male driver
Don’t worry about making life-saver looks for him. You will hear him from about a mile away through the revving in a wrong-gear. This over-revving will continue as he follows you through a town. It doesn’t matter that it’s a 20mph-zone, he and his Vauxhall or Citroen will rev up in impatience. He will overtake you at the nearest hint of a gap and if you are lucky, he may even have a friend to lean out of the window to shout or throw something at you.

The White Van Man (WVM)
These are the KING OF THE BEASTS, HEAR ME ROAR. These tuck in behind you, revving engines, hooting horns, flashing lights, shouting abuse at you.

Then, just as you are getting to a pinch-point (any point in the road where the road narrows for example a traffic island or parked cars), it is the signal for the KING OF THE BEASTS to overtake you, leaving you no choice but to take evasive action. Now the usual advice is to take a strong primary but, and I have seen this, the KING OF THE BEASTS will actually go to the other side of the road in the desperation to get ahead of you.

The BMW/Audi man
Now there used to be a simple, undisputed rule – stay out of the way of the BMW man. These drivers thought themselves as the Kings of the road. No rules applied to them, they had the divine right to the road. Shove you into the pavement, No problem. Red lights? Not necessary. Speed limits? Due care and attention? Road sharing? Space? Not their problem. In their important roles as middle-management, their company car was the be-all-and-end-all. Make way for the King of the road. The King was happy to cut into your path when overtaking and will always overtake in an unnecessary and dangerous manner just…
to…
join…
a…
queue…
at…
the...
lights…
ahead.

But recently, there seems to be coup de rue going on as Audi drivers for some reason have taken on the mantle of King of the road. Now, BMW-man still exists but has been joined by his Swedish upstart.

Hybrid/Prius man
Now, there is another type of King of the road – the one with the smug, green credentials. Like the above, rules of the road are apparently voluntary to these hybrid drivers – after all they are saving the planet! It doesn’t matter all those air miles, those strip mining technics and poisonous metals used to build the car. It doesn’t matter that the energy used still has to be generated somehow…they are saving the planet.
So not only do they drive with the scantest of consideration for other road users, they get to be smug about it and be silent when deadly.

Don’t know their own car
These can actually be the most frustrating of all. There you are making good time and distance, then, bang. You have to stop. Why? There is a car siting at a gap that is too afraid to more. That driver is singularly unaware of the width of their car and will not move until there is a gap the size of the Titanic to go through.
It may seem odd to criticise but there is such a thing as being too cautious and inconveniencing other road users. These drivers will also stick behind milk floats and slow bicycle riders blithely unaware of the queues growing behind them.


And to think I haven't even got onto couriers and the like...
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