Quote:
Originally Posted by aberdeen5698
I fully agree with his point about training. If all high school students were mandated to take bicycle safety training it would (a) produce a generation of cyclists that are more likely to ride safely, and (b) produce a generation of motorists that have at least some concept of the cyclist's point of view. A bike share system would be great for this as it would provide a supply of bikes that could be used for this purpose.
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I don't see how a bike share system has anything to do with it. You'd be hard pressed to find a kid out there today that doesn't already have a bike. I had one growing up, every friend I had had one in school, and today all my friends still have bikes and their children too and children's friends.
Maybe a lack of bikes is a city thing? In the suburbs, kids have bikes and ride them pretty early in life trust me.
I absolutely agree though that training needs to be made a priority when children are young. It just pisses me off every time I see a family ride their bikes past me and the two kids in the front have their helmets on and the parents are following behind, sans-helmet. If they can't lead by example for that simple little reality of keeping your head safe, I doubt very much they are teaching their children correct safety rules of the road/bike lane. That ridiculous parental hypocrisy isn't limited to cycling though unfortunately, I see it on the sky slopes all the time. Kid goes by wearing helmet, parent goes by following without helmet. I just shake my head.
As for the bike lane debate, I think it is a waste of time and space. The truth is the bike lanes are being installed and not just in Vancouver. Every city is putting in bike lanes. The other cities though can do so much easier and less costly due to not being as developed. Unfortunately in Vancouver the city is quite constrained and the only option is to retrofit lanes after the fact.
Where they put them though, I don't really care since I am not a Vancouver resident. As an outsider I happen to think some of the roads they pick are fairly stupid and they could have just been over a block or two to make it less disruptive to already existing road/pedestrian traffic, but again at the end I don't care and I'm sure they had their reasons.
For people not following the rules, everyone breaks the bloody rules. Drivers, cyclists, and even pedestrians. I just went to get Sushi and 5 people ran straight across a red light and almost got run over. 1 person started running then another person clearly thought "oh better get to the other side too!" and like a bunch of mindless machines, they all proceeded to run out in front of traffic.
There are stupid people everywhere. All you can do if they flip you off for them being wrong, is to laugh at them.
My beef with bike lanes though is the same beef I have with many roads in the cities I drive. When the city designs them, they seem to put stupid obstacles in the way they shouldn't.
For example:
WHY do they insist on putting man-hole access points on roads where your TIRES ARE in a car?? Why not in the center of the road where there is no contact with the road. No, on many roads (41st anyone?) you are in 1 lane and baboom baboom baboom baboom all the way as half your car is constantly running over the damned things.
For bike lanes, why are we not extending them just a bit wider out in the suburbs so that they can be truely separated. You don't need much, just a bit more so a small curb can be put in.
I understand this notion of broken down vehicles, but really how often do you see broken down vehicles on the side of the road? And what happens is all the cars driving kick rocks to the side of the road to the point you now have cyclists riding in their lane full of debris like sticks, massive rocks, dirt patches, and garbage. Either that or clean them more frequently imo.
I applaud more infrastructure being build across Metro-Vancouver including cycling lanes, I just think a bit more thought needs to go into infrastructure design so it isn't annoying and frustrating.