It must be nation bad driver day today.
Number 1 was the driver of a small white van. Having turned left I stayed in the middle of the lane to avoid potholes to my left and because I was turning right at the next junction just ahead. So I shoulder check, indicate, shoulder check and move to the right of the lane. Just as I'm about to turn the small white van is right next to me to my right. I must've shouted WTF louder than I thought because he turned right then stopped.
I cycled passed and he rolled down the window and shouted something I couldn't hear. I called back that his move was dangerous. He shouted that I was in the middle of the road. I pointed out that I was turning right and indicating that that was my intension. He's now moving preventing me getting back over to the left. As cars are starting to come from the other direction I slow down and tuck in behind the van. Once the cars have passed he stopped and got out of the van. I overtook and just called out that his manoeuvre was dangerous and terrifying. He got back in his back drove passed me, not too close either so maybe he realised he'd been dangerous.
The second driver was driving a school minibus. There's a road with a couple of pedestrian islands and some potholes to my left. I get myself in the middle of the lane to avoid the potholes and prevent dangerous passes through the pinch points. It's a fast road and I can hit 20 mph on my hybrid with winter tyres.
I perform my usual shoulder check, indicate, shoulder check, manoeuvre. There's a minibus behind me but far enough away that it's safe to move out. I'm now in the middle of the lane and I'm aware that the minibus is now right behind me. Between the two islands he just goes for it, cutting me up to get back in before the second island. The white van behind him looks like he's about to go too until I held my hand out in a stay back motion. Either he decided it was too tight or noticed my signal because he dropped back a bit.
On the plus side, 2 BT OpenReach vans gave me plenty of room. That's the fourth journey in a row that an OpenReach van has done that.