+1 Thank you! |
| People who jog in the street |
| I'm out riding a bike and some jerk doesn't understand how to pass safely. |
If you can walk to the park, you can have your kid walk his or her bike to the park. Push the bike and walk next to it. How is that confusing? |
Riding on the sidewalk is legal in DC, outside the central business district, in all of Arlington, and in Alexandria except for two streets in Old Town. It is often the safer place to bike. Cyclists must yield ROW on sidewalks to pedestrians, but are not obligated to walk their bikes, and IMO should not be. Of course in many places and at many times there are few or no pedestrians on the sidewalk. |
| Hey dude loudly talking on his cell phone about his colonoscopy as he walks around the lake -- TMI, guy, way too much information. |
People are taking the lane on a 55MPH road? Where is this? I never take the lane on a road faster than 35MPH posted limit. For that to make someone go 30MPH below the speed limit would mean I am riding at 5MPH (I go faster than that even uphill, and I do not take the lane uphill on steep grades) Also if I am taking the lane on a 35MPH road, there is usually either an easy way to pass in an adjacent lane, or I do it for a very short distance only. Most of the places I take the lane are 30MPH posted limit or 25MPH. You do the math. |
| Bikes that dont defer to pedestrians (hierarchy in exercise spaces is cars defer to bikes, who defer to pedestrians). Pedestrians have the right of way but a lot of smarm bikers know they can intimidate people since they have a motor vehicle that can essentially be used as a weapon |
Exactly! |
I ride and I walk on the trails, and I really do not find that many cyclists who do that. I think many pedestrians may not understand that ringing a bell is a warning of a pass, not a demand that you move out of the way (assuming you are correctly on the right side of the trail, and moving) Note - walkers who are not moving should move off the trail, and people should try to avoid being on the left hand side of the trail, except to pass. |
+1. My 8-year-old and I commute by bike to school, and then I ride on to work. We've done this since he was 3 and learned to ride without training wheels. No way is he riding in the street. I've taught him to stop at every alley, ride very slowly and use his bell when approaching pedestrians, and get off his bike and walk with it when necessary. I supervise very closely, and he knows that bikes are guests on the sidewalks. P.S. In DC, biking on the sidewalk is legal everywhere outside of downtown. Doesn't mean bikers should be jerky about it, but it's legal and certainly advisable for children. |
|
Runner here. My arch enemy: owners of unleashed dogs. Yesterday an unleashed dog jumped on me in the woods as I was running, almost knocking me over (he probably weighed more than I do). His owner's response, after she caught up to him: "Oh, sorry. He loves to play with runners!"
And of course many these owners, strolling way behind their dogs and yapping away on their phones, conveniently fail to see when the dogs poop on the path. |
So you live in the suburbs? Cool. But not everyone does. We live in the city and walk or bike everywhere. My kids aren't going to ride on Mass Ave, sorry. |
| I live in the suburbs and everyone rides bikes on the sidewalks or trails, except for the Serious Bikers, who ride in the street. |
A kid walking his bike on a sidewalk takes up FAR more room than if he rode it. |