Events

PPA: Please obey the rules of the road

By Press Office · 118 comments

Cyclists in South Africa are a friendly bunch, and – most of the time – feel a special affinity with other cyclists. Even if they have completely different jobs, lifestyles and backgrounds, they have something in common- cycling.

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However, there are some occasions when cyclists can’t help but feel a little bit frustrated with other riders on the roads whilst preparing for one of South Africa’s largest cycling races, the Telkom 947 Cycle Challenge, in just a week’s time.

Thousands of cyclists are currently taking to the roads to train. “Most cyclists have been shouted at or abused by a driver at some point. This is never ok, regardless, ‘cyclists don’t obey the rules of the road’ is one of the most common arguments drivers use to justify their behaviour. Every time one of these drivers sees a cyclist flout the rules, it adds more wood to the furnace of their aggression,” explains Pedal Power Association CEO, Robert Vogel. “Cyclists also need to obey the rules of the road. It is a two–way street,” says Vogel.

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Some useful tips for cyclists when out on the roads training and sharing the road with other riders and drivers:

Pass other cyclists on the right with an audible verbal warning. Other cyclists expect you to pass on their right hand side

Use hand signals. Use hand signals so other road users know what your intentions are.

When you reach a red light, you should wait behind the cyclist who is already there. It seems to have become a standard practice to pass the rider and stop in front of him, even if it involves doing so in the middle of a pedestrian crossing or in the actual intersection, well ahead of the traffic light. This is an incredibly rude practice.

Don’t ride against traffic. Riding in the opposite direction on the opposite side of the road is extremely dangerous

Don’t ride with headphones. Don’t hinder your ability to hear warnings and approaching dangers on a bike in the middle of traffic. It’s also against the law.

Don’t jump read lights or stop signs. Why? If you want to be treated like a road user, you need to act like a road user.
Also no flitting from road to the pavement and back. Make life easy for drivers to predict what you’re going to do, and you will find it easier to stay safe.

Be predictable. Just like riding in traffic, riding in a group means you need to think about what other people expect you to do. The perfect group ride will be a seamless body of movement and this is, in part, due to the awareness of the riders. The natural extension of this is holding your line. If you have to take the hit and ride through that small pothole, you do it. Just don’t flick the bike around and weave all over the place – nobody can predict that and you’ll eventually cause a crash.

Don’t overlap wheels. This is like sitting in someone’s blind spot when driving. You know you’re there, but they might not. And if they move out slightly and hit wheels with you, one or both of you are coming down. The best places to be are behind, beside or in front of someone else, never overlapping wheels. Unless the group consists of experienced riders who know that you are riding half a wheel behind.

Ride single file on narrow or busy roads and when riding round bends. It is very frustrating for other cyclists as well as motorists if they cannot pass a group of cyclists riding abreast endangering the lives of other cyclists

Don’t leave your bicycle in the pathway of other cyclists if nature calls or to answer a call.
It is frustrating and dangerous to other cyclists to leave your bike in the middle of the road to talk on your cell . there is also lack of control over your bike should you answer a phone call whilst cycling.

Be on the lookout for road hazards and don’t cross the centre line when cutting corners.

Don’t expect to be granted right of way in any instance.
Please be careful and alert on the roads.

Comments

Eldron

Jul 9, 2018, 12:26 PM

Motorists should be following the rules.

Cyclists should be following the rules.

Pedestrians should be following the rules.

 

And each group should be doing it regardless of what the other group does.

 

Threatening each other (heck, even our own groups) with things like a PK, showing nasty signs, etc. is, to put it quite mildly, ineffective at curbing the problem. All you have now is someone who is not following the rules, while feeling angry and self-righteous, and who'll be telling all willing to listen about the stupid motorist/cyclist who wronged them, thereby spreading the bias.

You may have a doubke bells sir!

karma

Jul 9, 2018, 12:27 PM

Motorists should be following the rules.

Cyclists should be following the rules.

Pedestrians should be following the rules.

 

And each group should be doing it regardless of what the other group does.

 

Threatening each other (heck, even our own groups) with things like a PK, showing nasty signs, etc. is, to put it quite mildly, ineffective at curbing the problem. All you have now is someone who is not following the rules, while feeling angry and self-righteous, and who'll be telling all willing to listen about the stupid motorist/cyclist who wronged them, thereby spreading the bias.

 

To be honest, if someone offered me a PK I'd immediately assume they are familiar with Database design best practices and offers to create a physical index in a sorted order, that will not only serve a link for many joins to come, but also potentially improve any queries. 

lechatnoir

Jul 9, 2018, 12:50 PM

To be honest, if someone offered me a PK I'd immediately assume they are familiar with Database design best practices and offers to create a physical index in a sorted order, that will not only serve a link for many joins to come, but also potentially improve any queries. 

 

Next time, ask if you could join him. But, I'm not sure the PK guy would relate to that very well.

Hairy

Jul 9, 2018, 12:51 PM

Following the rules is one thing, but my feeling is that the vast majority of road deaths on our SA roads are due to alcohol or drug abuse.

 

I base this on the fact that I have been cycling the very same route for many years, along a busy road, and the week following a payday or "big event" weekend where people are consuming alcohol, the roads show clear signs of cars smashing into poles, walls, anything else that can't get away and as per a few occasions the poor pedestrians who could not get out the way or even knew there was a car coming for them.

 

The above said, people need to realise that speeding or reckless driving is just not acceptable, if you cause an "accident" whilst speeding or driving recklessly it is not an accident, but a crime.

Hairy

Jul 9, 2018, 12:51 PM

Next time, ask if you could join him. But, I'm not sure the PK guy would relate to that very well.

I recon the PK guy would just slip stream him all the way and not work in the front!

karma

Jul 9, 2018, 12:55 PM

I recon the PK guy would just slip stream him all the way and not work in the front!

 

Most famous line of every person who finished the Argus..."I did all the work"

Headshot

Jul 9, 2018, 12:55 PM

 

So you and your family don't own cars then? Or do you happily break the law in your car so you can reinforce your own stereotyping?

Nope, you're missing my point.  Mr Karma blames cyclists for the bad driving on our roads around cyclists. I'm simply refuting that. Our motorists are some of the most inept, impatient inconsiderate drivers around. Motorists do exactly the same thing to each other and kill each other regularly. Cyclists just get caught up in this. Riding like an angel isn't going to change anything. An impatient motorist will find fault just because they had to delay an overtake for 10 secs because of a cyclist.  I try and obey the rules whether I'm driving or riding. I'm especially careful around cyclists. 

porqui

Jul 9, 2018, 1:01 PM

Mistake number 1 - think that all cyclists are like us

Eldron

Jul 9, 2018, 1:03 PM

Nope, you're missing my point.  Mr Karma blames cyclists for the bad driving on our roads around cyclists. I'm simply refuting that. Our motorists are some of the most inept, impatient inconsiderate drivers around. Motorists do exactly the same thing to each other and kill each other regularly. Cyclists just get caught up in this. Riding like an angel isn't going to change anything. An impatient motorist will find fault just because they had to delay an overtake for 10 secs because of a cyclist.  I try and obey the rules whether I'm driving or riding. I'm especially careful around cyclists. 

 

That's not how I read it... He said we are our own worst enemies and said that he doesn't blame motorists for their bad attitude towards us. He said nothing about their driving - only their attitude.

 

Riding like an angel? You mean obeying the law?

 

Edit: I agree with Karma - have a read of any motoring forum and the common theme is that cyclists ride as they please with zero regard for their safety. We then blame all motorists for their *** attitude and poor driving habits. Then they blame us. Then we blame them. Then they blame us.Then we blame them... You see where I'm going with this?

 

How about we break that cycle? It costs us nothing to stop at red lights and ride responsibly. As long as we keep throwing our hands up and yelling nothing will change it won't.

karma

Jul 9, 2018, 1:04 PM

Nope, you're missing my point.  Mr Karma blames cyclists for the bad driving on our roads around cyclists. I'm simply refuting that. Our motorists are some of the most inept, impatient inconsiderate drivers around. Motorists do exactly the same thing to each other and kill each other regularly. Cyclists just get caught up in this. Riding like an angel isn't going to change anything. An impatient motorist will find fault just because they had to delay an overtake for 10 secs because of a cyclist.  I try and obey the rules whether I'm driving or riding. I'm especially careful around cyclists. 

 

No no no.. Hold on. 

 

This thread speaks to cyclists, to obey the rules, which I agree, some don't. 

 

I wholeheartedly agree with you that motorists are also to blame, but I was making a point that cyclists are not 100% innocent, and contribute to the attitude towards us. 

Hairy

Jul 9, 2018, 1:09 PM

I just want to say that we were crossing a pedestrian/bike crossing on the way in this morning ... and the ^$#&^%& taxi stopped at the red light, hooted at us and smiled and waved energetically ... for goodness sake, does he not know this is not how he is "meant" to behave whilst behind the wheel of a taxi!!!!!!

Quagga

Jul 9, 2018, 1:35 PM

I think that the biggest contributor to accidents is "distracted driving" not drugs or alcohol. 

 

 

Drugs and alcohol = Worst type of accidents

 

DieselnDust

Jul 9, 2018, 1:41 PM

No no no.. Hold on. 

 

This thread speaks to cyclists, to obey the rules, which I agree, some don't. 

 

I wholeheartedly agree with you that motorists are also to blame, but I was making a point that cyclists are not 100% innocent, and contribute to the attitude towards us.

 

I disagree. The attitude of motorists is that only their space is important. To heck with the busses, school busses, taxis, cyclists or anyone else using the road in a less grande manner than driving a passenger car /SUV /Fortuna /crossover etc.

The presence of a cyclist is incidental because the same behaviour is directed at the little old lady who just pulled out of a side street in front of said motorist and is now driving 19km/hr below the speed limit.

The same cyclist who ran a red light is going to do the same in their car. You won't change their behaviour while on the bike but you may if there is a ton of inconvenience while behind the wheel of their car.

I have discovered that if I obey the traffic laws while driving other drivers start to do the same.

I've seldom come across a motorist being positively influenced by a person on a bicycle

Hairy

Jul 9, 2018, 1:44 PM

 

I think that the biggest contributor to accidents is "distracted driving" not drugs or alcohol. 

 

 

 

Drugs and alcohol = Worst type of accidents

 

so we were again cycling home in the cycle lane, next thing a driver is up on the embankment in the outer lane and then somehow manages to save it coming back into traffic ... given the slow to medium pace of traffic and that the road is straight with a gentle curve where this person went off the road, one can only assume cellphone usage or being badly distracted.

DieselnDust

Jul 9, 2018, 1:47 PM

so we were again cycling home in the cycle lane, next thing a driver is up on the embankment in the outer lane and then somehow manages to save it coming back into traffic ... given the slow to medium pace of traffic and that the road is straight with a gentle curve where this person went off the road, one can only assume cellphone usage or being badly distracted.

 

 

Probably following Letour

Dirkitech

Jul 9, 2018, 1:50 PM

My point is here I told a FELLOW cyclist to aboey the rule and was told that he will give me PK? 

 

WHY? Because some motorist is driving like a ****** it give him the right to not obey the road rules ==== NO it does not.

 

I will keep telling my fellow motorist to get of his phone and my fellow cyclist to obey the rules. 

I get the same rubbish from a group of cyclists going from Blairegowrie to Linden, stopping in the pedestrian crossing lanes and yelling at cars, blissfully ignorant of their own unlawful actions.

 

Surely the cancer in cycling aren't necessarily me and you and everyone else on this forum, but those not active in the community, those who don't care about discussing and improving the current state.

 

As a side note, I admire your vigilance.

 

Following the rules is one thing, but my feeling is that the vast majority of road deaths on our SA roads are due to alcohol or drug abuse.

 

I base this on the fact that I have been cycling the very same route for many years, along a busy road, and the week following a payday or "big event" weekend where people are consuming alcohol, the roads show clear signs of cars smashing into poles, walls, anything else that can't get away and as per a few occasions the poor pedestrians who could not get out the way or even knew there was a car coming for them.

 

The above said, people need to realise that speeding or reckless driving is just not acceptable, if you cause an "accident" whilst speeding or driving recklessly it is not an accident, but a crime.

Of all the times people drove into my car (4 times) and total accidents ever (2 at least), all of them was caused by sober drivers driving negligently. Your experience may very well vary, but I've not had troubles with drunk drivers and I drive outside of peak hours.

 

While I'm on my bike, I don't feel threatened by drunk drivers, but the drivers who believe themselves the alma mater, above the law and self righteous.

Quagga

Jul 9, 2018, 2:05 PM

I get the same rubbish from a group of cyclists going from Blairegowrie to Linden, stopping in the pedestrian crossing lanes and yelling at cars, blissfully ignorant of their own unlawful actions.

 

Surely the cancer in cycling aren't necessarily me and you and everyone else on this forum, but those not active in the community, those who don't care about discussing and improving the current state.

 

As a side note, I admire your vigilance.

 

Of all the times people drove into my car (4 times) and total accidents ever (2 at least), all of them was caused by sober drivers driving negligently. Your experience may very well vary, but I've not had troubles with drunk drivers and I drive outside of peak hours.

 

While I'm on my bike, I don't feel threatened by drunk drivers, but the drivers who believe themselves the alma mater, above the law and self righteous.

My wife had 3 fender benders in the last 5 years. And every one was a person in morning traffic busy texting.

 

Myself had someone rear end me.....again I watched it in the rear view mirror as he looked down to text and drove into my T-bar.

 

Can not comment on Drunk driving as I am not out on the road when those creatures normally take to the roads 

City Cycling Athletic Club

Jul 9, 2018, 3:09 PM

i do a lot a fair share of driving during work hours and witness many indiscre

tions. CTown drivers imho drive like they don't know where their destination

is. cyclist riding like they bulletproof , i have given up on. i save my

verbals for the weekend. jump a red light while i'm waiting and i will shout

at you , catch up to you and tell you , "you giving cyclists a bad name".

has it helped , most likely not. but never had anyone telling me , i'll give you

a PK. most look at me like i'm an alien. so what, i've vented and i feel better

Patchelicious

Jul 9, 2018, 3:28 PM

Don’t shout at them, give them a disapproving thumbs down ???????? and a shake of the head.

Works a charm.

Hairy

Jul 10, 2018, 7:59 AM

Don’t shout at them, give them a disapproving thumbs down and a shake of the head.

Works a charm.

lol ... that shaking of the head really upsets people ... . probably my most favourite tactic for showing displeasure 

Headshot

Jul 10, 2018, 8:54 AM

lol ... that shaking of the head really upsets people ... . probably my most favourite tactic for showing displeasure 

What about biting your thumb? 

Pure Savage

Jul 10, 2018, 8:59 AM

This is the first time that twitter discussions regarding cycling are more logical than on the hub. 

HowardSteele

Jul 10, 2018, 9:14 AM

"Pass other cyclists on the right with an audible verbal warning. Other cyclists expect you to pass on their right hand side

 

The passing on the right seems to be confusing cyclist on the trail,and not only newbys .

It seems we need to clarify Pass an approaching cyclist to Your left unless the trail does not allow this .Passing the cyclist from behind (When overtaking.)..pass to the right and yes please give an audible warning "Passing " or ring bell

Headshot

Jul 10, 2018, 9:16 AM

You see when most of us ride on the road we are extremely aware of our surroundings. A motorist  on the other hand may be texting and or listening to the radio or loud music or chatting to the passenger. In a bubble and divorced from reality. Say I safely cross the road on my bike in front of said boy/girl in bubble who looks up from phone and gets a fright because he/she didn't see me sooner. I get a negative score in the motorists addled mind. 

 

When I hear that motorists moan about cyclists "riding without any concern for their safety", I smell a rat. These drivers could care less about the cyclists life. They are just venting and justifying their behaviour and attitude. If they were honest, they'd admit that most motorists break the law far more regularly and that cyclists barely warrant any attention on this front. 

 

I firmly believe that the vocal anti-cyclist motorists out there will always be on the look out for a group to vent on. They probably have the same attitude to motorcycles and pedestrians. No amount of good behaviour by cyclists will change that basic intolerant attitude.

Fat Boab

Jul 10, 2018, 9:30 AM

You see when most of us ride on the road we are extremely aware of our surroundings. A motorist  on the other hand may be texting and or listening to the radio or loud music or chatting to the passenger. In a bubble and divorced from reality. Say I safely cross the road on my bike in front of said boy/girl in bubble who looks up from phone and gets a fright because he/she didn't see me sooner. I get a negative score in the motorists addled mind. 

 

 

Sadly I see lots of road cyclists with headphones in, bopping to Eye of The Tiger or whatever is on their inspirational play list.....

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