Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#61
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#62
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On behalf of the walkers, THANK YOU for giving an audible! The other day while walking the Hogeye, there were no less than 9 bicyclists who passed me. NOT ONE gave an audible. I do not wear earbuds, nor do I have any type of hearing issues so I would have heard if an audible was given. I normally walk on the left side-facing traffic but when other walkers are approaching, I cross to the right side (seems no one knows they will be safer walking on the left).
So here's a friendly reminder to anyone using the MMP's: Walkers - walk on the left- facing any potential oncoming traffic. This way, you are not surprised by a bike rider seemingly coming out of nowhere. Additionally, when you are on a path that allows golf cars, you will be in the habit of facing them. Bicyclists - ride on the right and give an audible (ring a bell, say "on your left", etc) when approaching those on foot from behind. Your radio or two of you chatting while you ride is not sufficient. Do not assume someone hears you coming. Those with e-bikes should slow down when approaching those on foot. If you're going too fast, you could lose control should someone (or their pet) decide to cross the path. Golf Car drivers - SLOW DOWN when approaching those on foot or on bikes and give them a wide berth when passing. There can be blind curves and when you are speeding around them, you never know whether you may encounter someone unexpectedly and they might be walking a furry friend that is a couple of feet away from the. Thank you for bringing up this topic. It gave me an opportunity to rant LOL. |
#63
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#64
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As both an advid cyclist and someone who uses a golf cart almost exclusively for transportation, I have my own take on the interaction between bikes and golf carts on the MMP’s.
As a cyclist, I ride for exercise, not transportation. I plan my bike rides to avoid the MMP’s as much as possible as I find riding through the vast network of low traffic residential neighborhoods to be much more relaxing and enjoyable. When I do find myself having to go on a MMP, I am constantly checking the rear view mirror on my bike. Whenever I see a golf cart approaching, I slow down and pull way over to the side and waive them by. I don’t do this because I think I’m better at determining when it’s safe to pass me. I do this because it’s common courtesy and I want to make it as safe as possible for the cart to pass me. I fully understand that the cart drivers can go faster than I ride (on a regular, non motorized bike), they have someplace to go, and I don’t want to be that selfish bike rider that erroneously thinks my time is more important than theirs. As a cart driver, I respect bikers right to use the MMP’s, but also fully expect them to respect the fact that they are sharing the path, they don’t own it. Cyclists should always be fully aware of when they are slowing down golf cart traffic and make it as easy as possible for carts to pass them when they are slowing someone down. Cyclists that slow down traffic flow and make absolutely no effort to rectify the situation, or worse, purposely block people from passing them, create a very dangerous situation. Many Villagers utilize the MMP’s almost exclusively for transportation, often traveling many miles at a time. When someone has been driving for over a half hour and has gotten stuck behind numerous cyclists (especially groups) that don’t allow carts to pass, patience eventually wears very thin. The worst is when multiple carts get stuck behind inconsiderate cyclists, with no possibility of getting by them. That is what causes people to lose their patients and take risks that shouldn’t be necessary if the bikers would simply recognize the situation and let traffic pass. |
#65
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#66
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What if lane not marked? Which seems the whole path is one lane? |
#67
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Do you often have head-on crashes with oncoming golf carts?
__________________
Why do people insist on making claims without looking them up first, do they really think no one will check? Proof by emphatic assertion rarely works. Confirmation bias is real; I can find any number of articles that say so. Victor, NY - Randallstown, MD - Yakima, WA - Stevensville, MD - Village of Hillsborough |
#68
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#69
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__________________
It's harder to hate close up. |
#70
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Generally, those cyclists are not "indicating", they are DICTATING. I don't care for it and I will not "give it a rest". When they blow through a stop sign forcing a car or cart to jam on their brakes, they are not "indicating", they have already decided FOR you. When they spread out across both the diamond lane and the car lane in a group of 20+, they are not "indicating", they are DICTATING. Again, not most, but some. And I'm sorry if some people don't see that relying on the cyclist's judgement rather than their own can cause problems if there is an accident. I don't see anyone having much of a chance with the excuse "the bicyclist said it was OK", because my first question as a LEO would be "What did YOU think?"
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#72
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Excellent advice.
__________________
It's harder to hate close up. |
#74
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Wish I could still do that. |
#75
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Are there really any major issues on walking path MMPs not associated near roadways? We only see bicycles and motorized scooters. There really isn’t a right or a left side priority because the paths are about half the width of MMPs designed for golf carts too. We have had bicycles without bells wiz by us on occasion but that’s about it.
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