Anonymous wrote:There is a hierarchy of who should move.
Baby strollers and wheelchairs always get to stay on the sidewalk. I'd stay the stroller probably goes off road if they meet a wheelchair since it is being pushed by an able bodied adult.
Walkers next, joggers have to go around walkers. Bikers shouldn't be on the sidewalk, but little bikers, like 6 years and under, get precedence over walkers and joggers because they can't control themselves fully. Bikers aged 7-10 should usually go around walkers, maybe get precedence, depends upon the skill of the biker. Adult bikers should GET OFF THE SIDEWALK.
Anybody going faster and coming up from behind is responsible for going around the slower person.
Wheelchairs that are speeding included, but I usually see the speeding wheelcharis in the street.
The elderly walkers (cane or no cane) also get precedence over all other walkers and bikers, although the 3-5 year olds need to be taught to defer to them.
Anybody with a dog should move out of the way as a courtesy.
All that said, when somebody goes by me I just hold my breath because I don't want to smell them anyway, Covid-19 or not.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA, how about you move?
PSA the 1/100th of a second a person with lungs robust enough to run takes to pass, will not get you sick.
PSA if you have this much irrational anxiety, please never leave home. Ever.
Oh well arent you impressive. You pass people at 1/100th of a second?
Your incredible passing SPEED does not mean mouth spray cant land on something. Good God.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Path, sidewalk., trail etiquette:
- Stay on the right. Do not cross the middle unless you are passing someone.
- Pass on the left
- If passing, look behind you
- Keep your dogs on the right - ideally on the grass on the side to give pedestrians more room. Not on a retractable leash that's like a big diagonal clotheslines
- do not "thread the needle" (especially true if you're a cyclist). That is, do not squeeze in the middle of two people going in opposite direction.
- if walking on a wide path, do not walk more than 2 abreast. No matter what, none of you should be walking past the middle of the path.
- pass with good clearance.
- NEVER just stop on a path. Never ever. It's like driving. You "pull over." You don't just stop to check your phone
- have good sense of your surroundings. This means even knowing when people are behind you.
I want to make this law in Rock Creek. On placards everywhere.
Anonymous wrote:PSA, how about you move?
PSA the 1/100th of a second a person with lungs robust enough to run takes to pass, will not get you sick.
PSA if you have this much irrational anxiety, please never leave home. Ever.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA - when running last pedestrians, you need to give 6 feet of distance. If that means you go in the street, you go in the street.
F*ck you.
YOU go in the street.
Nope. The person with the most crazy should move.
DP. I would definitely say that the royally anxious person has the most crazy. I think most people would.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA - when running last pedestrians, you need to give 6 feet of distance. If that means you go in the street, you go in the street.
F*ck you.
YOU go in the street.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA - when running last pedestrians, you need to give 6 feet of distance. If that means you go in the street, you go in the street.
F*ck you.
YOU go in the street.
Nope. The person with the most crazy should move.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:PSA - when running last pedestrians, you need to give 6 feet of distance. If that means you go in the street, you go in the street.
F*ck you.
YOU go in the street.
Anonymous wrote:PSA - when running last pedestrians, you need to give 6 feet of distance. If that means you go in the street, you go in the street.
Anonymous wrote:Path, sidewalk., trail etiquette:
- Stay on the right. Do not cross the middle unless you are passing someone.
- Pass on the left
- If passing, look behind you
- Keep your dogs on the right - ideally on the grass on the side to give pedestrians more room. Not on a retractable leash that's like a big diagonal clotheslines
- do not "thread the needle" (especially true if you're a cyclist). That is, do not squeeze in the middle of two people going in opposite direction.
- if walking on a wide path, do not walk more than 2 abreast. No matter what, none of you should be walking past the middle of the path.
- pass with good clearance.
- NEVER just stop on a path. Never ever. It's like driving. You "pull over." You don't just stop to check your phone
- have good sense of your surroundings. This means even knowing when people are behind you.