Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the "I hope you're not married" PP: maybe you would be happier being not married?
If it means not being sentenced to a life of caretaking someone who wanted ride a bike in dangerous weather? Yes. There’s something about a bike that makes bikers extremely selfish.
Or perhaps the bike is their mode of transportation and they got caught by an early rainshower??
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It was actually pretty nice. They've recently come back and painted them green here and there near the intersections to be more apparent that there's bike infrastructure. I'd feel better if the whole thing was green the whole way, but even the pieces they've done is a marked improvement from the first time I rode in them a couple months ago. Anyway, the buffer is great too. I took them from Democracy to the past where they end headed to Bethesda (not sure why they end abruptly without continuing to Bethesda? Seems like it would be obvious to keep them going all the way there?). Then I went north to Tuckerman and out Tuckerman to Falls Rd. MoCo is making good strides with bike infrastructure. I'd like to see River Road's updated to be more like OGR's.
Also, I saw more than a few people out using the lanes on both sides, despite the weather being a bit gloomy.
Did you get a sticker for being the 100th rider?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:To the "I hope you're not married" PP: maybe you would be happier being not married?
If it means not being sentenced to a life of caretaking someone who wanted ride a bike in dangerous weather? Yes. There’s something about a bike that makes bikers extremely selfish.
Anonymous wrote:To the "I hope you're not married" PP: maybe you would be happier being not married?
Anonymous wrote:Right-of-way is not a question of intuition, and bicyclists aren't "cutting across", they're following the bike lane. Hopefully the green paint will indicate to drivers that they can't just look at the traffic signal, they also need to watch out for bicyclists.
Anonymous wrote:It was actually pretty nice. They've recently come back and painted them green here and there near the intersections to be more apparent that there's bike infrastructure. I'd feel better if the whole thing was green the whole way, but even the pieces they've done is a marked improvement from the first time I rode in them a couple months ago. Anyway, the buffer is great too. I took them from Democracy to the past where they end headed to Bethesda (not sure why they end abruptly without continuing to Bethesda? Seems like it would be obvious to keep them going all the way there?). Then I went north to Tuckerman and out Tuckerman to Falls Rd. MoCo is making good strides with bike infrastructure. I'd like to see River Road's updated to be more like OGR's.
Also, I saw more than a few people out using the lanes on both sides, despite the weather being a bit gloomy.
Anonymous wrote:I don't know if drivers have the right-of-way there, and I doubt the police do either. I do know that, as a driver, I don't want to hit a bicyclist, regardless of who has the right-of-way. I also know that, as a bicyclist, I don't even expect drivers to see me, let alone know when I have the right-of-way and yield it to me. I do agree that, in the long term, this is one of the parts of the design that could be improved. The bike lanes are surprisingly good, but they could be even better.