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Chris Froome mistaken for 'leisure rider' on French TV after being turned back due to forest fires; Presenter Storm Huntley hit by driver; Vigilante arsonist?; Schrödinger's cyclist; Vuelta team news; LTN thoughts + more on the live blog

It's Wednesday and Dan Alexander is here to take you through the middle of the week on the live blog...

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11 August 2021, 16:09
French TV shows 'leisure rider' stopped from passing due to forest fire...unaware it's Chris Froome

Poor Chris Froome. All it takes is a couple of bad years and now he's being mistaken for just a 'leisure cyclist' by a French TV report. Stopped by a marshall because of a risk of forest fires in the area near his Saint-Raphaël home on the Mediterranean coast, Froome was told he cannot pass in a clip caught on local news...the voiceover calls him "Ce randonneur à vélo", which we believe loosely translates to 'leisure rider'...

That randonneur has won four Tour de France titles, I'll have you know - all of which were broadcast on your TV channel. Perhaps it was the lack of Israel Start-Up Nation kit which threw France 2 off...or maybe the disc brakes...has Chris come round to the tech?

Froome did not seem too perturbed by the understandable road closure, giving a very French sounding "Okay". Earlier this week, French residents in at risk areas were warned to stay away from forests. 

It's not the first time Froome has been mistaken for an amateur rider...back in 2018 at the Tour de France a policeman called the then Team Sky rider to a halt as he descended back down the summit finish at Col de Portet. Maybe Start-Up Nation should make him a special 'I've won the Tour de France four times' hi-vis jersey?

11 August 2021, 15:09
Dolan Bikes named official partners of this year's Tour of Britain, Women's Tour and Tour Series
Joe Holt & Will Roberts from Wales Racing Academy (SWPix)

Lancashire-based Dolan Bikes have partnered with the Tour of Britain, Women's Tour and Tour Series to support the UK's biggest events in the domestic cycling calendar. As part of the deal, two fans will win a fully custom-built road bike worth £3,000 during the Tour of Britain (5-12 September) and Women's Tour (4-9 October). The lucky winners can choose between a Dolan Ares or Dolan Tuono with paint scheme overseen by Dolan Bikes' in-house team.

Dolan prides itself on offering bikes customised down to every component. The brand was founded in Liverpool in 1966 and supplied a series of pro teams, including ANC Halfords and Team Falcon Cycles who won six Kelogg's Tour and Milk Race events.

"Being a leading British bike brand and having supported our greatest on the road to success, we felt that supporting the biggest bikes races would celebrate the success of cycling in Britain," Terry Dolan, director of Dolan Bikes said.

11 August 2021, 14:24
Cable ties: The must-have jack of all trades
Forum post: Broken bolt cable ties

Over on the forum Brooksby asked for help getting a sheared mudguard bolt out...our favourite helpful suggestion was, "buy a new bike". That's the answer to everything, isn't it. 

As it turns out, a trip to the local bike shop and some cable ties were all that was required...

hirsuite remained unconvinced, preferring their new bike suggestion. Any other handy workshop uses for cable ties? 

11 August 2021, 14:03
Mario Cippolini takes a spin to the gun show

Legendary sprinter Mario Cippolini is 54 now, although you might not guess it looking at that bronzed physique...Cipo attracted amiring comments from his adoring fans on Instagram, including a certain Lance Armstrong. The look isn't really for us, we'll leave it to triathletes and good-looking Italians with 42 Giro stage wins...only a select few can pull that off.

Perhaps he's taken inspiration from Sir Bradley Wiggins' post-retirement modelling?

11 August 2021, 13:31
Three abreast road users selfishly hold up faster road users who need to get past...

I wonder what Angela Epstein would make of this? Presumably, based on yesterday's logic, these drivers should all pull over single file and allow the faster moving mode of transport to get to where they need to go...after all, what was it you said yesterday, Angela? Oh, that was it..."what gives them the right to block the road when there is a 30mph limit?" 

Somehow I don't think we'll be hearing her thoughts on this one...

11 August 2021, 12:55
Brutal pre-season forces Watford goalkeeper Ben Foster to ease off the two-wheeled training
Ben Foster Garmin partnership.JPG

Watford goalkeeper Ben Foster has eased of the cycling in recent times as he prepares for another shot at the Premier League. The Hornets begin their top-flight campaign against Aston Villa on Saturday and have been putting in the hard graft to be ready for the big kick-off.

Foster, who has built a following on YouTube as the Cycling GK and regularly documents his travels by bike, has said the bike hasn't received as much love as usual during the gruelling prep phase...

"[Pre-season training] has been brutal this year, absolutely brutal,” he told the Evening Standard. "It’s been double session after double session. I come back home and see my bike and say, ‘Sorry, babe, I can’t take you out tonight. I’ve got to get in bed because I am shattered’."

Back in March, Foster told us on Drink at Your Desk Live! that he wishes a pro cyclist could come into the training ground to show just how hard they train. Catch the full episode here, if you missed it...

11 August 2021, 11:35
Laura and Jason Kenny set to become dame and knight after Tokyo success
Laura Kenny and Katie Archibald win Madison gold in Tokyo (Copyright Alex Broadway, SWpix.com).JPG

Husband and wife duo Laura and Jason Kenny are set to become dame and knight after winning their record-breaking golds in Tokyo. According to the Independent, the pair are at the top of the list to receive honours. Laura became the first female British athlete to win gold at three different Olympic Games, while Jason became GB's most successful Olympian after winning his seventh gold with an audacious attack in Sunday's keirin.

A royal source at the Sun has said the pair absolute certainties to be at the top of the list come the end of the year. Arise, Sir Jason and Dame Laura...

11 August 2021, 10:40
Jeremy Vine presenter Storm Huntley hit by driver - urges cyclists to wear helmets

TV presenter Storm Huntley, who co-hosts Channel 5's Jeremy Vine show, was hit by a driver as she cycled home from work in London on Monday. Huntley told the programme on Tuesday that she hit her head on the pavement after the driver collided with her - cracking her helmet on impact. The driver reportedly cut across her to make a left turn.

"If I wasn't wearing that, that crack wouldn't be on my helmet, it would be on my skull, so I would not be here this morning," Huntley said. "The driver was shaken, there was no aggression, there was nobody being competitive on the road, it was an accident. Accidents happen, please put your helmets on, and even if you think you're a good driver, double check."

The broadcaster said her partner has encouraged her to give up cycling after seeing the damage to her bike and helmet. Huntley's co-host Jeremy Vine said people should not be put off cycling, adding the motorist is "a shocking driver" who "shouldn't be on the road." 

In a tweet, Huntley urged others to wear a helmet: "I’m sad to say I was knocked off my bike cycling home from work by a car turning left who hadn’t seen me. My helmet is cracked but at least it wasn’t my skull! If I wasn’t wearing my helmet this could have been a very different story. Please wear a helmet!"

Some have questioned the presenter's helmet comments...Pompey Cyclist said: "Very unlikely that your skull would crack from an impact that merely did that to your helmet. Your skull is around 10 times stronger than a polystyrene hat. It’s a bit like wrapping a brick in a tissue to protect it. People like you stating anecdote as if it’s fact is dangerous."

11 August 2021, 10:12
Schrödinger's cyclist
11 August 2021, 09:18
Vuelta a España team news: British rider Matt Holmes selected for Lotto-Soudal

We're up to five Brits at the Vuelta a España now: Tom Pidcock and Adam Yates for Ineos Grenadiers, Scott Thwaites with Grand Tour newbies Alpecin-Fenix, James Knox for Deceuninck-Quick-Step and now Matt Holmes with Lotto Soudal. Add Hugh Carthy to the list once EF Education-Nippo announce their line up and we should have six home riders to cheer on over the next three weeks.

What odds a Yates/Carthy one-two and a couple of stage wins between the rest? Let a man dream...

11 August 2021, 09:15
Biking in Brighton

I was just waiting for the lane to come to an abrupt halt, chucking riders out into the path of oncoming traffic... 

11 August 2021, 09:00
Where would you rather live?

Kirsty could be on to something here, surely Netflix will soon be on the phone for a three-part utopia/dystopia Black Mirror-esque drama. Jeremy Vine's poor 360-degree camera wouldn't be able to keep up with the action as he rides through B-side...the live blog would be on fire for weeks...and CyclingMikey, presumably living on A-side, would have nobody to catch.

11 August 2021, 07:48
The work of a vigilante arsonist? Mystery over flaming SUV blocking Denver bike lane

What do we have here? Vigilante cyclists setting light to bike lane blockers? Or was the flaming SUV moved into the cycle lane to get it 'out of the way'? Or, was it already there when it caught fire another way? The cyclists of Denver, Colorado, have been speculating if they have a vigilante arsonist in their midst. One dubbed it "justice via flames"... 

And while of course we can't recommend setting vehicles alight, regardless of where they're parked, the visual karma is strong in this one. Denver Bike Lanes, a page supporting cycle infrastructure in the city, replied to reporter Chase Woodruff's video calling it "SUV-towing-SUVs-parked-in-bike lane karma". While an LA-based photographer went for "The Beginnings of the Bike Lane Uprising".

Dan is the road.cc news editor and has spent the past four years writing stories and features, as well as (hopefully) keeping you entertained on the live blog. Having previously written about nearly every other sport under the sun for the Express, and the weird and wonderful world of non-league football for the Non-League Paper, Dan joined road.cc in 2020. Come the weekend you'll find him labouring up a hill, probably with a mouth full of jelly babies, or making a bonk-induced trip to a south of England petrol station... in search of more jelly babies.

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72 comments

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Hirsute replied to sheridan | 2 years ago
1 like

I thought you were being facetious until I discovered that you refer to a takeaway !

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sheridan replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

hirsute wrote:

I thought you were being facetious until I discovered that you refer to a takeaway !

Look Mum No Hands! is more of a cycle cafe and bike workshop than a takeaway - the original one is anyway - there's another in Hackney which may be a takeaway.

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HoarseMann | 2 years ago
9 likes

Does anyone ever come back from a Centre Parcs holiday and think, well it was alright, but I really missed the motorised traffic?

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LastBoyScout replied to HoarseMann | 2 years ago
14 likes

Think most people come back from a Centre Parks holiday thinking "well, it was alright, but not worth the size of the hole in my wallet".

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Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
5 likes

It's infrastructure, anything is better than nothing, but to call it top class is subjective. It's the usual woeful approach from Sustrans who still haven't learnt a thing from our Dutch and Danish neighbours.

Oh well, at least someone is happy.....

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Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
1 like

Jeremy Vine is boring the tits off me.....

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Hirsute replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
2 likes

I was looking at the edge and wondering how long it would last ...

Cycle path right at the end looks overgrown but don't tell your local Cllr !

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IanMK replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
1 like

What is the point in putting in a nice wide shared path and then allowing half of it to become overgrown. What a waste of money.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

Did Hirsute respond to the wrong OBE post and wverybody followed suit like cars at a red light. Or did OBE edit both posts to reverse them?

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Hirsute replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
0 likes

I replied to "It's infrastructure, anything..."

The JV vine wasn't there when I posted.

I do oldest to newest order when viewing.

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AlsoSomniloquism replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

It is threaded as the reply to JV so you probbaly clicked the wrong one if he posted that fast (if OBE edited one it might have pushed it newer as well as the JV one is older on my view).

However It is more that every other reply followed suit that made me chuckle more. 

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Owd Big 'Ead replied to AlsoSomniloquism | 2 years ago
0 likes

No, I added a second post moments after the first once I saw Jeremy Vine spaffing over Twitter on a quiet day in August.

I'll post remarks far slower in future.....

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Captain Badger replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
2 likes

Owd Big 'Ead wrote:

It's infrastructure, anything is better than nothing, but to call it top class is subjective. It's the usual woeful approach from Sustrans who still haven't learnt a thing from our Dutch and Danish neighbours.

Oh well, at least someone is happy.....

Exactly. I saw a badly laid bit of tarmac (look at those edges....), which just happened to be going the same way as the rider wanted in this instance.

infra means that all people get the opportunity to go quickly, safely and efficiently by bike or foot to their distination, and requires fully integrated transport policy.

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Awavey replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
1 like

Well I suspect it was just a footpath originally and was adopted as a cycleway, rather than someone thinking hey let's build a cycle path next to the A259.

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Daveyraveygravey replied to Captain Badger | 2 years ago
1 like

Captain Badger wrote:

Owd Big 'Ead wrote:

It's infrastructure, anything is better than nothing, but to call it top class is subjective. It's the usual woeful approach from Sustrans who still haven't learnt a thing from our Dutch and Danish neighbours.

Oh well, at least someone is happy.....

Exactly. I saw a badly laid bit of tarmac (look at those edges....), which just happened to be going the same way as the rider wanted in this instance.

infra means that all people get the opportunity to go quickly, safely and efficiently by bike or foot to their distination, and requires fully integrated transport policy.

 

I think that is the cycle lane from Newhaven to Seaford, in which case it is relatively good.  There's a bit of loose gravel, there's a car park entrance you have to negotiate and then ride through the car park, there's dog walkers, runners, families etc to be aware/wary of...but it is quite long, and you do feel protected from the motorised morons.  It ends abruptly in Newhaven where you have to cross the access road for a small shopping development including several of your favourite fast food restaurants, which is always brilliant (!) but the end at Seaford comes out on the sea front which is very wide.

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Captain Badger replied to Daveyraveygravey | 2 years ago
1 like

Daveyraveygravey wrote:

.....I think that is the cycle lane from Newhaven to Seaford, in which case it is relatively good.  There's a bit of loose gravel, there's a car park entrance you have to negotiate and then ride through the car park, there's dog walkers, runners, families etc to be aware/wary of...but it is quite long, and you do feel protected from the motorised morons.  It ends abruptly in Newhaven where you have to cross the access road for a small shopping development including several of your favourite fast food restaurants, which is always brilliant (!) but the end at Seaford comes out on the sea front which is very wide.

I shall defer to your knowledge of this stretch

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IanMK replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
1 like

Not sure that lone women (or in fact anybody) will be too keen to use it after dark.

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IanMK replied to Owd Big 'Ead | 2 years ago
6 likes

Meanwhile, in the Netherlands

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EddyBerckx | 2 years ago
0 likes

Re. the thought experiment. This pretty much already exists in this country, London at least. 

The most desireable areas are LTN's, the shitholes not so much. Hell even the east london estates I grew up on had a form of LTN in that you couldn't cut through the developments, only people who lived there would drive their cars (mostly slowly). Kids on bikes messing around on the street were no problem because cars were calmed down naturally.

All this is there, now and has been for many decades...

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brooksby | 2 years ago
5 likes

It's funny how many people will be more than happy to move vehicles, park vehicles, whatever, on a cycle lane or even on a footway so that they are "Out of the Way" rather than leave it at the side of the road but on the roadway.

I mean, it's not like anyone ever actually uses the cycle lane or footway, is it...?

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quiff replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
7 likes

Pavement parking really boils my p***, and I am now old and grumpy enough that I have started challenging people when I see them doing it (e.g. last week: Me: please don't park on the pavement, park on the road. Driver: but then I'll be in the way of that bus stop. Me: why have you parked by a bus stop then? EDIT: Her: why don't you get a job, etc)

But, without endorsing it, I can understand the psychology because of the relative volumes of pedestrians vs cars - chances are, a car is actually going to inconvenience fewer people when parked half on the pavement (leaving room for pushchairs, wheelchairs etc) than it is if parked fully on the road.      

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Hirsute replied to quiff | 2 years ago
5 likes

Most of the pavement parking round here still leaves a gap on the road of 1.5 cars so if the misguided approach is to allow traffic flow, then it shows they can't work out clearance.

I think they are really doing it to stop a scratch for some driver who can't drive properly.

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quiff replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
1 like

Yeah, depends on the road obviously. I can think of larger suburban roads round me where pavement parking on both sides will allow two lanes of traffic to flow without blocking the pavement. I can also think of smaller residential roads nearby where the road would effectively be impassable if everyone parked wholly on the road, because of the size and number of cars versus size of road. Also agree it's probably often perceived more as a way of protecting their own car. Have to admit, I am guilty of doing it out of long-formed habit when visiting one of my family - it's psychologically difficult to be the one to park fully on the road when everyone else is on the pavement, but I am trying to mend my ways.       

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Hirsute replied to quiff | 2 years ago
5 likes

Just don't get me started on the person with 2 horse boxes who parks them partly on the pavement not far away. When did public goods become a storage area for people's private property ?

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Dicklexic replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
7 likes

There'sa a family just up the road from us that bought a motorhome, and park it on their drive, yet one end sticks out into the pavement, crossing it almost completely. Thankfully it's a very quiet dead end road so isn't actually much of an issue, but still it smacks of selfish entitlement that that they would think it acceptable to permanently park like that.

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quiff replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
1 like

Much of the pavement parking around me appears to be by people who have either already filled their driveways with other cars or (worse) seem to find it inconvenient to use their own driveway for parking at all. 

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wycombewheeler replied to quiff | 2 years ago
1 like

my road is about 2.5 cars wide, so parking is allowed on one side but bizarrely the other side has only a single yellow.

So blocking the road in the evenings and at weekends is OK, but not suring the week. Or drivers will park mostly on the pavement. I really can't understand why the council would endorse this practice.

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wycombewheeler replied to Hirsute | 2 years ago
0 likes

hirsute wrote:

Most of the pavement parking round here still leaves a gap on the road of 1.5 cars so if the misguided approach is to allow traffic flow, then it shows they can't work out clearance.

I think they are really doing it to stop a scratch for some driver who can't drive properly.

do they drive half on the pavement for the same reason? or do drivers find it easier to avoid moving cars (presumably 2 feet from the kerb) than stationary cars (presumably tight to the kerb)?

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IanMK replied to quiff | 2 years ago
2 likes

On a local facebook page I once suggested that the solution to pavement parking was to make residential streets "shared space". You can imagine the reaction. #nocompromisenosurrender 

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wycombewheeler replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

It's funny how many people will be more than happy to move vehicles, park vehicles, whatever, on a cycle lane or even on a footway so that they are "Out of the Way" rather than leave it at the side of the road but on the roadway.

I mean, it's not like anyone ever actually uses the cycle lane or footway, is it...?

often half on half off, the pavement so they are still not leaving two clear lanes free on the road, while also restricting the pavement.

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