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Are cyclists supposed to ride single file?
Edit: Found this...don't know if this link was posted....don't want to go through the whole thread Info for Group Riding | Florida Bicycle Association. |
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First let's assume that no one petitions, successfully, to forbid ebikes from the pedestrian paths or change the recent state law which allows ebikes on those paths. Walkers: walk on one side of the path. Be aware of your surroundings, yes that means get off your phone and do not use ear buds. Listen for the cyclist warning you of their approach. That may be verbal or a bell ringing. Acknowledge that you hear it (a hand wave). Keep your dog on a reasonable length lead, no one wants to hurt a dog or get a bite. Male walkers, get your hearing checked and treated. Bikers: signal your approach, treat everyone as a blind deaf walker. In my experience 50 to 70% of male walkers don't hear the frantic bell ringing behind them. Either they are deaf or think the ice cream man is coming. Women are much more likely to hear you if they aren't talking on the phone or listening to music. Most people appreciate the warning if they hear it. We can all get along! |
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"traffic" on pedestrian paths. No you don't ride head on to every walker, you ride with them, on the same side of the path |
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Just asking |
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Bicycles have a choice, they can be on the pedestrian lane or the diamond lane. At many points walkers also have a choice. In either lane someone thinks cyclists are a nuisance and shouldn't be there but in the other lane. Carts don't like following you until they pass and as demonstrated here, and walkers think you are in "their" path. |
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If a motorist traveling in a RB plows into a pack of cyclists who have blown through the yield sign, who is to blame???? |
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But it can definitely be confusing when a big group of cyclists is going into a traffic circle and must split because of a car. Confusing on both sides! |
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However, if I were doing a 3/4 turn in a roundabout and saw a group of bikers coming thru, I would definitely stop for them. In our case, we love to ride our bikes but we do not do it anywhere north of Route 44. We go down to St. Catherine or Marsh Bend to ride on the beautiful trails that do not allow golf carts. |
I was an avid runner and bicyclist in northern New England. Lots of fantastic hills. Remember those? So, please, I do know the appeal and benefits therein.
We rode a bit down here until my wife had an awful accident riding through a Village's tunnel. Major surgery and rehab followed. Now I look upon bicyclists and sans helmet motorcycle riders much the same as do physicians. And that is as potential organ donors. |
Where I come from, bicycles aren't supposed to ride on the sidewalks (other than kids on kiddie trikes or with training wheels who are still learning how to ride, in front of their own houses). If you want to ride a 2-wheeled bike, you're supposed to ride it in the road. I'd never ride a bike on a *pedestrian* path. The only "vehicle" that should be allowed on a *pedestrian* path would be your feet, roller skates, a wheelchair (manual or electric), one of those neat knee-scooters for people with a bad leg, maybe a skateboard. Whether that's the rule or not, I don't know. But that's what it should be.
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