On my transcontinental trip and in subsequent rides, it seems dogs west of the Mississippi don't chase cyclists as much as dogs east of the Mississippi. Any corraboration on that? I owe one of my collarbone breaks to one in the East.
Dave Boston Tucson, AZ
Nick March <nicbordeaux@yahoo.fr> wrote: Hang on, who said "riding against traffic" implied entering one way streets the wrong way, or cycling on the wrong side of the road ? That could be construed to mean "hit by oncoming traffic". Some clarification needed here methinks.
Furthermore, the most important point, and the one I'd like details on, is the 59 % which involve only the rider. If I read right, 60 % of bikes crashes are due to mechanical failure (deraileur trouble mainly I'd guess), or loss of control due to other factors which I imagine range through cornering to fast, brakeless bikes, undue use of the front brake, too much wine, overoptimism, staring at cute blondes. What part of this 60% is due to bad road surface ? How many bike crashes has Dolly Parton caused in her carreer ? Hang on, this could mean that plastic surgery breast enlargement causes anything up to 60 % of falls. When do we see road signs warning of dangerous areas in this regard ?
Regarding 3% pedestrians, I find that hard to believe, or the pedestrians where that study was done are very alert (or dispear fast). As to 3% dogs, come live in rural France. If you ride without a big stick or a gun, your probability of being bitten, block-passed or otherwise thrown from your bike by a dog is about 95 %.
Nick March, Mont de Marsan, Aquitaine, France
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