glenn forger
Guest
No idea, wasn't there, don't trust the account of someone who mentions irrelevances to have a dig at people on bikes.
Hmmm. Case closed, I think.I was here (pretty much where the Google car was) about to take the next exit:
https://www.google.co.uk/maps/@51.4...Z-MVfarhehyodK8IepsA!2e0!7i13312!8i6656?hl=en
Cyclists came from the exit road on the left, in a large bunch. Nowhere for me to go but stop, and quickly.
My main complaint is that if you do this when you are on your own, then fine, you might squeeze through ok, but you take the risk. But please don't do it if you are leading a group as you are going to get them killed.
I mainly posted here in the hope that maybe one of the riders might read this.
Trouble is, a rider in the middle of a peleton can't just put the brakes on at 25mph without the whole bunch crashing down. That's why the leader needs to consider the group as a unit.As this is a cycling forum I guess it is to be expected that there is a certain element of pro-cycling/anti-car driving sentiment. As such I take some of the posts with a pinch of salt
However, in this case, having seen where this happened, there is very little to excuse what is just rank poor and dangerous cycling. The cars on the roundabout have priority so you stop and give way, regardless of whether other riders in your group have kept going
Did the ride leader pile on and drag everyone else on?
All this "it's my right to ride 3 abreast, if I want to" is a crock. As a cyclist, using a public highway, you have a responsibility to ride in a manner that doesn't inconvenience other road users, whenever possible. It's even in the guide, that is the Highway Code.
Each cyclist has a duty of care for themselves, and nobody else. Just because the ride leader has a clear, right of way, does not mean everybody following does.
Well you could argue that it was the leader of the group that was at fault. Or it was those that followed him. The one person not at fault was the car driver already on the roundabout
Apart from the pollution spewed out by his penguin-killing death machine.
I don't like cars either, but not killing penguins doesn't make the cyclists' actions in this instance sensible.Apart from the pollution spewed out by his penguin-killing death machine.
Trouble is, a rider in the middle of a peleton can't just put the brakes on at 25mph without the whole bunch crashing down. That's why the leader needs to consider the group as a unit.
Indeed. I wonder if some of the riders were even aware of the cars on the roundabout. When you're in a bunch you're concentration is on the rider immediately ahead, and those either side. There's an amount of trust involved....and slow the group when approaching potentially hazardous junctions such as a roundabout.