Yes, yes, of course you do – well, a significant proportion of you who must all be quite weathered looking. Although not everyone is a snow bird by any means.
Perhaps no surprises that the majority of road.cc uses appear to be a rufty tufty and probably slightly weathered bunch with 39 per cent of you saying you would ride in whatever nature chose to throw your way, followed by another 20 per cent taking the slightly more nuanced approach of pretty much everything but ice. So far so predictable, the first real surprise in terms of those willing to tackle riding in bad weather is that a full 4 per cent of you would chose to ride in ice rather than snow which the had the assembled road.cc psephologists scratching their heads - on the other hand 4 per cent is roughly the amount of traffic we get from the Netherlands so maybe it was the Dutch vote… or it’s about the percentage of people who might not read the question properly, this being the internet.
So that was all the people who’d go riding in wintry weather of one sort or another - the next single biggest tranch of votes – we’re calling it the sensible vote – were those who’d chose to take a day off the bike rather than risk a fall and have to spend weeks or months off the bike. Given the changing nature of the British weather a day is probably all that it would take before things went mild and mizzly again. As things have proved in large parts of the country this time around too.
Some members of the road.cc team amongst the sensible 25 per cent chiefly the ones who’ve fallen on black ice or frozen mud and ended up out of action for a couple of months – Top tip: if you’re going to crash try not to land on your elbow unless it’s a choice between that and your head or face.
Finally the second and possibly biggest surprise (to us) in the vote was the relatively low numbers opting to ride through the snow from the comfort of their lounge/kitchen/back bedroom or garage on smart trainer or rollers. Okay, maybe ‘comfort’ isn’t the right word in this context.
If you’re wondering how the less sensible members of the road.cc team voted? Mostly in the anything but ice camp – although there were a few who would chance it on the ice too so long as their ride was on a treated road… something that’s not always easy to predict. Funnily enough the thing most likely to put us off was cold rain that’s just too warm to be snow matched up with a strong wind. Yuk!
Those results in full
39 per cent – ‘Bring it on!' Winter do your worst
24 per cent – ‘Don’t bring it on, it’ll be gone tomorrow anyway
20 per cent – Yes to snow, no to ice, the nuanced approach
13 per cent – It never snows in Wattopia. Probably
4 per cent – ride in ice but not snow – the definitive margin of error?
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7 comments
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Burtthebike suddenly my hero
While we're at it, how about adding in "absolutely" instead of "yes" or "and also as well" or "haitch"?
My wife has instructions to tell me if I start picking up any of the above bad habits. I have enough other bad habits!
Fake News!!! LOL. (I have never said or written that phrase before but it seems to be very popular in some circles here in the U.S.A.)
I see that Mr. Biniam Girmay Hailu was born on the 2nd of April in the year 2000.
The 20th Century ended on 31 December, 2000.
So I guess we are still waiting but we probably won't have to wait long for a 21st Century born winner.
I'm still a big fan of Mr. Kelly!
(something to think about - you cannot spell HATRED without Red Hat)
Love to All!
Yeah, no. I remember 99/00, that was the start/end of the millenium, you mustn't have been invited to the party.
The other thing I'd bring back the death penalty for, after bike stealing, is saying "yeah-no". It is such an abuse of language and so utterly nonsensical that the people who use it are clearly incapable of communicating on any rational level, and are best removed from the gene pool before they create more monsters.
If you stop them and ask them did they mean "yes" or "no" they look at you confused because they don't remember saying it, and will vehemently deny saying it.
So was the year 1900 not included in with all the other 19** as part of the 20th Century?
No.
There was no "year 0". First century: years 1-100. Second century: 101-200. Third century: 201-300 . . . 19th century: 1801-1900. 20th century: 1901-2000. 21st century: 2001 - 2100.
If you do nothing else today, watch the first ten minutes of the select committee video; it's a master class in everything that cycling and walking groups are fighting for.
Great to see that pedestrians and cyclists have got together to fight the common enemy, car domination and agree that there is a huge amount of common ground.