ADAJackMcCoy
Found this in the UW Daily today. I thought it was great that they printed an article like this, especially in an college campus with so many novice bikers. I liked the way that it didn't imply at all that helmets are sort of a cure-all for accidents. Vehicular cycling is much more effective in preventing those accidents.
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A red 4x4 occupies the IMA parking lot where David Smith gives a bike-handling lesson. The name "DAVE SMITH" pops from its license plate. It's just coincidental, because it's not Smith's car. Smith arrived on two wheels, not four -- his bike.
"Turn your head and tell me which hand I'm holding up," he said during the lesson, when he rides alongside students next to the long, two-inch thick white line striped across the lot.
The idea, Smith explained, is to emulate lane change preparation in traffic. He refuses to rely on helmet mirrors. Nor does he buy studies attributing helmets to 85 percent accident reduction. Rather, he says safe cycling is largely about "social skills."
Smith is an advocate of riding bicycles with the flow of traffic as opposed to on sidewalks or in bicycle lanes. It's a safer approach that has led to significantly fewer accidents, he said. To get his message across, he holds bike safety classes for a wide audience, which includes UW bike riders, and has also produced an instructional video that demonstrates his principles of safety.
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here's the whole article: http://thedaily.washington.edu/features.lasso?-database=DailyWebSQL&-table=Articles&-response=featurespage.lasso&-keyField=__Record_ID__&-keyValue=12488&-search
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A red 4x4 occupies the IMA parking lot where David Smith gives a bike-handling lesson. The name "DAVE SMITH" pops from its license plate. It's just coincidental, because it's not Smith's car. Smith arrived on two wheels, not four -- his bike.
"Turn your head and tell me which hand I'm holding up," he said during the lesson, when he rides alongside students next to the long, two-inch thick white line striped across the lot.
The idea, Smith explained, is to emulate lane change preparation in traffic. He refuses to rely on helmet mirrors. Nor does he buy studies attributing helmets to 85 percent accident reduction. Rather, he says safe cycling is largely about "social skills."
Smith is an advocate of riding bicycles with the flow of traffic as opposed to on sidewalks or in bicycle lanes. It's a safer approach that has led to significantly fewer accidents, he said. To get his message across, he holds bike safety classes for a wide audience, which includes UW bike riders, and has also produced an instructional video that demonstrates his principles of safety.
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here's the whole article: http://thedaily.washington.edu/features.lasso?-database=DailyWebSQL&-table=Articles&-response=featurespage.lasso&-keyField=__Record_ID__&-keyValue=12488&-search