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"But cyclists!": Count the red light jumpers in this clip; Adam Tranter addresses "nonsense" talked about Highway Code changes; Second Ineos rider hospitalised in Colombia; Pro Jake Stewart offers old kit to young riders + more on the live blog

Happy Friday! It's (almost) the weekend...let's start it with the final live blog of the week with Dan Alexander...
28 January 2022, 17:30
It ain't over 'til it's over

Second time this makes an appearance today, mainly just so I can watch it again, but hey it's quite fitting for half five on a Friday...listen to Primoz..."it ain't over 'til it's over". Well, that's another week on the live blog that IS over...we'll be back on Monday, but until then enjoy your weekend on two wheels...

P.S. There was no rule six, but if there was I'm sure it would be 'go and crack open a beer'...

28 January 2022, 17:06
Egan Bernal grateful for treatment — says there was "95% chance of becoming a paraplegic"
Egan Bernal training crash (Mundo Ciclistico/Twitter)

Egan Bernal has tweeted for the first time since his crash while training on home roads in Colombia. The 2021 Giro d'Italia champion thanked his fans for their support, saying:

> Egan Bernal in intensive care following successful surgery on training crash injuries

"Having had a 95% chance of becoming a paraplegic and nearly losing my life doing what I love to do most. Today I want to thank God, the hospital, all the specialists for doing the impossible, my family and all of you for your wishes. I'm still in the ICU waiting for more surgeries but trusting in God everything will be fine."

28 January 2022, 15:58
Cycling UK: Communicating the Highway Code changes
Highway Code.PNG

With various reports circulating in the media, some deliberately misleading and spreading fake news, Cycling UK has created a simple toolkit to help everyone communicate the rule changes accurately...

Have a read here...

28 January 2022, 15:36
cYcLiStS sHoUlD bE lIcEnSeD aNd InSuReD

You may have already seen the story about the driver in his 80s, stopped by police in Nottingham, who told officers he'd never had a licence or insurance...it's doing the rounds today and is quite amusing in the context of the eternally tedious 'why don't cyclists have insurance?' line, especially in a week where Highway Code changes have got many feeling a bit insecure of their place on the road...

The Guardian reports the man was stopped by Nottinghamshire Police officers in a Tesco car park. Just a regular stop? Nope...

The driver born in 1938 soon explained he'd been driving since 1950...without insurance or a licence...

Posting on Facebook, Bulwell, Rise Park and Highbury Vale Police said: "We can't quite believe what happened next, as the driver, who was born in 1938 (!!), coughed that he had been driving with no licence and no insurance, since he was 12 (yes TWELVE) years old.....and somehow had managed to never be stopped by the police. (We'll let you do the maths!!)

"Thankfully he had never had an accident, caused anyone an injury, and never made anyone lose out financially, by hitting them whilst uninsured! Due to the increased number of ANPR camera's in Nottingham, even on the small trips, you are likely to hit a camera, so make sure your documents are in order.....because it will catch up with you.....one day....."

28 January 2022, 15:01
Canyon appoints Nicolas de Ros Wallace as new CEO
Canyon

Nicolas de Ros Wallace will step up to Canyon's top job having been appointed CEO of the brand. Winfried Rapp, who has held the role of leading the executive management on an interim basis since October 2021, will continue to be part of the senior leadership team.

De Ros Wallace has decades of experience in international management positions and worked as vice president and general manager of the Jordan brand for more than ten years.

"I am convinced of the superior value proposition offered by Canyon in the bicycle industry. Above all, there is a passionate culture and love for cycling, as well as strong entrepreneurship mindset. I look forward to working with the team to continue to build on the great track record of Canyon, in a context of a structurally growing industry," Nicolas de Ros Wallace said via a press release.

28 January 2022, 14:00
Try not to laugh challenge: UK cycling infra edition

Presumably called the road to nowhere? Or just part of an upcoming cyclo-cross race?

Better or worse than Wednesday's painfully bad piece of 'cycle lane', complete with a four-year-old's painted bike, that was knocking about on the live blog? 

Sad cycle lane (Paul Baker/Twitter)
28 January 2022, 13:55
Nothing to see here, just people getting from A to B under their own steam. No pollution, quieter roads, better health, nicer place to live, natural security for everyone on the street. It’s exactly the non story we need

Newly appointed interim commissioner of Active Travel England Chris Boardman spoke to us on the road.cc Podcast, saying ironically he has much less time to ride bicycles now because he is "trying to enable lots of people to ride a bike."

He also told us how he reluctantly came around to the world of indoor training...and that the only bike he rides regularly outside is his gravel bike...don't tell Alex Dowsett.

28 January 2022, 12:30
Primož Roglič's top tips for the Winter Olympics

I'll be thinking about this for the rest of today...

28 January 2022, 12:01
"Cycling is super expensive and I dread to think how much it is for parents to support their kids in this sport": British pro Jake Stewart's a good lad

FDJ pro Jake Stewart started the week proclaiming "cycling in the UK is doomed" after seeing some of the reaction to the Highway Code changes. He's ending it back on the blog after once again showing himself to be an all-round decent chap...

And before any of you lot try weaselling your way in for a team-issue freebie..."it ain't for you lot on full carbon set-ups"...so I guess if you ride titanium or aluminium your good? Just kidding...

28 January 2022, 11:10
Second Ineos rider hospitalised in Colombia — Brandon Rivera suffers multiple fractures
Brandon Rivera (Ineos Grenadiers)

Egan Bernal's Ineos Grenadiers teammate, and fellow member of the team's Colombia training camp group, Brandon Rivera is being treated at the same hospital as his compatriot after a crash on Thursday. The team confirmed Rivera fell three days after Bernal and suffered a fractured and dislocated elbow, and has dislocated his AC joint.

There is little information about how the crash happened, but it now means two of the seven Ineos riders preparing for the season in Colombia are now being treated at Clínica Universidad de La Sabana hospital in Bogotá.

On Tuesday, Bernal was taken to hospital after crashing his TT bike into a parked bus at a toll. The reigning Giro champion's Tour de France return has been plunged into uncertainty after doctors revealed he was operated on twice and remains in intensive care with serious injuries.

His teammate's crash prompted Tom Pidcock to yesterday claim time trial bikes now too dangerous for training on public roads.

Both crashes in Colombia came the week after a video of the group narrowly avoiding being hit by a driver overtaking on a blind bend surfaced on social media.

28 January 2022, 11:02
"There aren't actually a huge amount of changes. A lot of this just formalising basic courtesy": Adam Tranter addresses "nonsense" written about Highway Code changes
28 January 2022, 10:59
London’s rental e-scooters are all going to produce the same sound so that pedestrians can hear when they’re approaching
London e-scooters (TfL)

London’s three e-scooter operators – Tier, Lime and Dott – are working with University College London (UCL) to develop a universal sound that will alert pedestrians when the vehicles are approaching. The work could result in an industry standard, which operators across the UK could then adopt.

Read the full story over on our sister site e-biketips...

28 January 2022, 09:25
Restrap adds new colourways to Canister Bag and Tyre Boot Kit
2022 Restrap canister bag

Restrap’s Canister Bag (£44.99) for keeping tools, snacks and spare layers out of your pockets and on the bike is now available in two new colours: Olive and Orange.

Handmade in the brand’s Yorkshire workshop from 100% waterproof textured nylon with a waterproof nylon inner lining, the bag features elasticated side pockets and a Hypalon loop that offers an attachment point for hanging a front light. 

2022 Restrap tyre boot kit orange

A new Orange colour option has also been added to the Tyre Boot Kit (£8.99) which we rated as a neatly packaged, effective kit for patching tyre cuts or tears. The kit can now be more easily spotted in the dark depths of a fully-packed dry bag or frame bag. “The Orange colour will also add contrast to the black of a tyre, allowing you to easily locate the boot inside a tyre,” Restrap says.

> road.cc review: Restrap Tyre Boot Kit

28 January 2022, 09:01
"But cyclists!": Count the red light jumpers in this clip

This might be a new regular game for the live blog...count the red light jumpers.

After all, we've heard plenty from certain circles about how terrible it is for drivers to have to give priority to more vulnerable road users in certain situations, as per the new Hierarchy of Road Users in the Highway Code changes, when cyclists just race through red lights without helmets or road tax...

If you watch to the end of the clip you'll find it hard to argue, as we've heard before, 'oh, the lights must have been faulty' it's not against the Highway Code to proceed with care if that happens.

You've probably had time to have a count by now, so spoiler alert, it's four road users (not on bikes) who nip through this temporary traffic light set-up...the last of which jumps a whole seven seconds before the lights turn to yellow...always good to sit in your next traffic jam as soon as possible.

Should probably stress we're only sharing this as a thought provoker considering how often people on bikes jumping red lights is used as a stick to beat any idea that cyclists might deserve to feel safe on the road. In this week more than any other, it feels quite apt...

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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94 comments

Avatar
speculatrix | 2 years ago
0 likes

Here in Cambridge, it's the exception rather than the norm for cyclists to stop at red lights. I'm serious when I write that I'm actually surprised when I see a cyclist stopping.

https://youtu.be/84BwdkfFdjA

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Oldfatgit replied to speculatrix | 2 years ago
0 likes

This video followed on from the one you linked ...
https://youtu.be/sxsOBnkKTKk

It's easy to see why other road users hate us.
Ok, it's a minority - but a significantly visible minority in a world where people only remember the mistakes that have been made.

Some of the riding in this video is potentially defendable ... But not the majority.

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chrisonabike | 2 years ago
6 likes

I'm such a scofflaw, instead of a registration number tabard it'll be a red light jumper.

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IanMK | 2 years ago
2 likes

Pretty sure that's just an entrance to the Upside Down

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brooksby | 2 years ago
4 likes

I was looking at that twitter thing from Abergavenny, and someone further down had posted the meme below (I think, not really sure how twitter displays...)

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BudgieBike | 2 years ago
6 likes

Nationally, the number of convictions for failing to stop at a red light increased by more than 5,000 to over 67,000 last year.  Figures from 2016

Source:  Birmingham Live (birminghammail.co.uk) 

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chrisonabike | 2 years ago
5 likes

road.cc wrote:

London’s rental e-scooters are all going to produce the same sound so that pedestrians can hear when they’re approaching

Ooh - more possible skeuomorphs!  I think there should be a public vote with options to choose from:

Squeaking wheel
Rattling shopping trolley
Running dog barking and growling
Ogmios gently intoning "here's a scooterboy"
Vincent Price's laugh from Michael Jackson's "Thriller"
Yackety sax

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andystow replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
3 likes

I think they should whistle a whimsical tune, maybe The Bridge on the River Kwai. Second choice would be calliope music from a carousel. Either would discourage riding aggressively.

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chrisonabike replied to andystow | 2 years ago
3 likes
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SimoninSpalding replied to andystow | 2 years ago
2 likes

How about Barwick Green?

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andystow replied to SimoninSpalding | 2 years ago
0 likes

SimoninSpalding wrote:

How about Barwick Green?

I like it, but too much pomp and not enough whimsy.

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ktache replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

Ice cream van Greensleeves 

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chrisonabike replied to ktache | 2 years ago
2 likes

ktache wrote:

Ice cream van Greensleeves 

Oh, nice! Although sadly for me, ice cream vans have also acquired a Glasgow / Shameless association.

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Awavey | 2 years ago
0 likes
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Creakingcrank replied to Awavey | 2 years ago
3 likes

They are looking for a candidate with a "track record of delivering contested infrastructure". I imagine that, in England, many of the people with the most up-to-date experience delivering contested infrastructure are working on the High Speed 2 rail project. 

So I Googled "HS2 Management" and "Keen Cyclist". Linked-In tells me there is a man at the Department of Transport whose most recent role was overseeing land aquisition by HS2, but whose background is in cycling policy development for the gov. Enthusiastic triathlete too, it says.

I wonder if he is already lined up for the job? If not, headhunters may feel free to contact me for the name. I'll take my finders fee!

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chrisonabike replied to Creakingcrank | 2 years ago
1 like

Creakingcrank wrote:

They are looking for a candidate with a "track record of delivering contested infrastructure". I imagine that, in England, many of the people with the most up-to-date experience delivering contested infrastructure are working on the High Speed 2 rail project. 

So I Googled "HS2 Management" and "Keen Cyclist". Linked-In tells me there is a man at the Department of Transport whose most recent role was overseeing land aquisition by HS2, but whose background is in cycling policy development for the gov. Enthusiastic triathlete too, it says.

I wonder if he is already lined up for the job? If not, headhunters may feel free to contact me for the name. I'll take my finders fee!

I was with you until I re-read:

"...delivering..."

I guess he could claim he'd delivered on the contention part?

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Creakingcrank replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
0 likes

Ha! HS2 has bought a lot of land and done a lot of of "digging up" round where I live. Time will tell if they end up filling in and selling back....

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brooksby replied to Creakingcrank | 2 years ago
1 like

That would be the HS2 that decided building cycleways and underpasses where B roads had been severed was far too expensive and too much trouble, so cyclists or pedestrians can jolly well go 50 miles north to the next main A road that does cross the rail route.

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Creakingcrank replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
5 likes

Yes. I have cuts on my legs right now from an attempt to find a diverted footpath past the route this weekend. Quite possibly, the same individual was involved in all those missed opportunities to build brilliant new bike/walk infrastructure alongside it too. I'm not recommending the guy, just trying to imagine how these hiring decisions are made.

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
11 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

More unphased, broken, irrelevant temporary traffic lights - for all we know, there might even have been a "traffic lights not in use" sign just before the video started. Show me motorists consistently jumping permanent, unbroken traffic lights in the same way many cyclists do and I'll eat my hat. But generally - for balance - I think motorists driving through a newly established red light (i.e. gambling on timings) should have stricter sanctions, as that is a frequent occurrence.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WhhxErABoa0

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tLwwHU6cf6U

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GaPbZiyrXog

There are a quick few videos I've found..... all permanent unbroken traffic lights.

Now we wait to find you are not a man of your word and wont eat your hat.....

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
6 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

Er no, because they are either gambling when the lights have just changed (which as I mentioned is a frequent occurrence), or in the case of the guy next to the police car has made an error of judgement.

Seriously?

The first car in the first clip was gambling when the lights have just changed?  The lights went to red at 4 seconds.... the car crossed the ASL at the 6 seconds mark.

So you consider someone crossing the line after the lights have been at red for 2 seconds...... gambling when the lights have just changed?

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
6 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

No, I'm not saying that no one ever criminally drives through traffic lights in a car, what I'm saying is that it is a rare occurrence. Hence why people have faith in things like pedestrian and zebra crossings.

No Nigel what you said was this.....

Garage at Large wrote:

Show me motorists consistently jumping permanent, unbroken traffic lights in the same way many cyclists do and I'll eat my hat.

You have been shown that mulitple instances of exactly what you asked for yet you continue to say you haven't

You are flip flopping like a dying fish like you did yesterday.... you can't make up your mind what you are objecting to and when evidence is provided you say it doesn't prove anything.

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
5 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

My two comments are in lockstep with each other, and revolve around the word "consistently".

For example, you could put up a compilation clip YouTube video of birds spontaneoulsly falling out of the sky, and then say "aha", look at all these birds falling out of the sky, birds can't fly after all! All you're doing is presenting outlier events as if they are modus operandi.

Oh surprise surprise.... Nigel will only accept evidence if it is multiple clips from one set of traffic lights.

But in the first compliaton spread out through the video there are 3 different clips of drivers running red lights at the same roundabout.  Surely that passes your bar does it not?

But I know Nigeywigeywoowoo that you will say its a poorly designed roundabout with traffic lights on the roundabout  and that the drivers just had a momentary lapse of concentration, or that the driver set off when the lights were still on red because they could see the lights at the other side phasing so they really did nothing wrong..... or some other such excuse.

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brooksby replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
1 like

Garage at Large wrote:

No, I'm not saying that no one ever criminally drives through traffic lights in a car, what I'm saying is that it is a rare occurrence. Hence why people have faith in things like pedestrian and zebra crossings.

However, if I cross a pedestrian crossing or zebra crossing and a cyclist is approaching, there's a good chance they'll ignore it - like this guy https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G4K8AjNIVPA

In my experience - YMMV, obviously - I feel the same way about approaching motor vehicles.

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
4 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

No, I'm not saying that no one ever criminally drives through traffic lights in a car, what I'm saying is that it is a rare occurrence. Hence why people have faith in things like pedestrian and zebra crossings.

Ok a rare event? 

In may 2016 a thismoney article stated "In fact, as many as one in four (24 per cent) of motorists admit to having driven through a red light in the past 12 months — equivalent to 9.3 million motorists’."

a uSwitch survey in 2018 said that around 1 in 5 motorists admit they've run a red light in last last 12 months.

or how about this excerpt from an article on The Express

"Jumping a red light can also be dangerous and statistics reveal the offence may be one of the biggest culprits for road injuries

Department for Transport data reveals there were 160,597 casualties of all severities in 2018 with 75,095 occurring at junctions.

This means 47 percent of all accidents happen at areas which are mostly governed by traffic lights in a safety warning to road users."

https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/cars/1218169/dvla-traffic-red-light-offences-data-glasgow-road-safety-warning

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wycombewheeler replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
10 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

Again, I've already covered this so I think we're in agreement - running a red light that has just changed is a relatively common event from motorists (i.e. your figures).

Running an established red light is a rare occurence. One place where I might concede this might be more frequent is in London, where its inhabitants might not be as familiar with the law, or the superior British justice system.

admits it is relatively common for drivers to break driving laws, despite cyclists having a badrep for doing likewise

makes potentially racist comments about the inhabitants of London

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Clem Fandango replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
8 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

Whoa there cowboy - it isn't "potentially racist" to state the fact that there is a higher proportion of immigrants in London's population, nor to hold the established view that Britain has a superior justice system to many other countries of the world.

 

You are correct.  There's no potentially about it.

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wycombewheeler replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
6 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

Whoa there cowboy - it isn't "potentially racist" to state the fact that there is a higher proportion of immigrants in London's population, nor to hold the established view that Britain has a superior justice system to many other countries of the world.

OK, I'll consider it is not potentially. It is definitely racist to make sweeping assumptions that the justice system in their home country is inferior, or that they are not able to understand the rules here, particularly pertaining to red lights which mean the same everywhere.

 

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
6 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

Again, I've already covered this so I think we're in agreement - running a red light that has just changed is a relatively common event from motorists (i.e. your figures).

Running an established red light is a rare occurence. One place where I might concede this might be more frequent is in London, where its inhabitants might not be as familiar with British law, or the superior justice system we have here.

Nigel..... what colour is a light that has just turned red?  I will give you a clue it is RED.

There are rules and regulations dictating the length of time that a traffic light must show an amber light based on the speed limit for the road in question.

The time for the amber phase is long enough to give cars the ability to safely stop from the given speed limit..... which means your excuse of a light that has just turned red is just that.... a flimsy excuse

No matter how you try and dress it up, if a person goes through a red light they are in the wrong.  Particularly given the fact that many people see Amber as "accellerate to get through the lights" as opposed to "stop if it is safe to do so"

EDIT

Even so, in the videos I have posted there are a mix of people amber gambling and running established red lights but it is indicative that there are a lot more people who run established red lights than you think.

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TriTaxMan replied to Lance ꜱtrongarm | 2 years ago
5 likes

Garage at Large wrote:

I completely agree, it's wrong to gamble and drive through red lights under any circumstances. However, talking about "amber gambling" is tangental to today's story.

The underlying point which was brought up by the video in today's blog is "how often do cars drive through established red lights". The answer to this is "very rarely", in direct opposition to the very frequent manner in which many cyclists will do the same.

The only person that even mentioned "established red lights" was you.

And I'm not sure your statements when read together make any sense... you agree that driving through red lights is wrong under any circumstances..... but you also want to consider "established red lights".

It's either a red light or its not.

The only reason I can see for you wanting to segregate the two kinds of red light jumping is to push some anti-cycling agenda.  Along the lines of "I can prove more cyclists run estabilshed red lights, which means more cyclists deliberately run red lights than drivers"

Whereas when all red light jumping is concerned cyclists and motorists are broadly on par with each other in terms of proportions that run red lights.

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