Recently Sheryl and I have joined a company sponsered bicycle club. They are very nice people, but are a change from what we did as individuals. We are casual riders, we, so far, have taken pains to stay off city streets, opting instead to haul our bikes to designated bike trails.
Well, these folks are mostly of the skinny tired, high tech bike, spandex crowd, and are experienced in riding a combination of streets and off-street trails.
Here in Texas, bikes have just as much legal right to ride on the streets as someone driving a car. I always wondered (driving my car) why the heck that they would take up a whole traffic lane, instead of riding single file along the curb or on a sidewalk if there happened to be one.
Well I now know that they intentionally ride 2x2 in a traffic lane to force drivers to either pass them as a slow moving car, or take a left lane if one exists. It is a safety concern believe it or not. Their experience is that if they single file along a curb, that drivers often miss-judge how close they come in their passing, and often stuff like wide pickup mirrors hit bike riders. The bike rider of course looses that one. Yes, the pickup is the national car of Texas, and this fact is all too true.
Texas recently passed a law about how close a car can be to a bicycle when passing the bicycle, but it's still a judgment call by the driver of the car when it comes down to if the bicycle rider is actually hit.
I'm still having a hard time not hugging the curb when we have sections of city streets to navigate to get back on a bike lane.
In this club's defense, they have routes set up for their rides that minimize any city streets where possible, and the leader announces oncoming traffic, cars and bicycles, joggers, and walkers, and any other obstacles. They are very much more safety aware than I would have imagined.
Your experience?
.
Well, these folks are mostly of the skinny tired, high tech bike, spandex crowd, and are experienced in riding a combination of streets and off-street trails.
Here in Texas, bikes have just as much legal right to ride on the streets as someone driving a car. I always wondered (driving my car) why the heck that they would take up a whole traffic lane, instead of riding single file along the curb or on a sidewalk if there happened to be one.
Well I now know that they intentionally ride 2x2 in a traffic lane to force drivers to either pass them as a slow moving car, or take a left lane if one exists. It is a safety concern believe it or not. Their experience is that if they single file along a curb, that drivers often miss-judge how close they come in their passing, and often stuff like wide pickup mirrors hit bike riders. The bike rider of course looses that one. Yes, the pickup is the national car of Texas, and this fact is all too true.
Texas recently passed a law about how close a car can be to a bicycle when passing the bicycle, but it's still a judgment call by the driver of the car when it comes down to if the bicycle rider is actually hit.
I'm still having a hard time not hugging the curb when we have sections of city streets to navigate to get back on a bike lane.
In this club's defense, they have routes set up for their rides that minimize any city streets where possible, and the leader announces oncoming traffic, cars and bicycles, joggers, and walkers, and any other obstacles. They are very much more safety aware than I would have imagined.
Your experience?
.