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Old 11-16-13 | 08:36 PM
  #90  
Walter S
Senior Member
 
Joined: Jan 2013
Posts: 3,782
Likes: 1
From: Atlanta, GA. USA

Bikes: Surly Long Haul Disc Trucker

Originally Posted by rekmeyata
Sidewalks are NOT the safest place to ride much to your disappointment and disbelief, in fact it's the most dangerous place to ride unless you're a small child. First you have to deal with pedestrians that are able to all sorts of unexpected things and their not expecting a faster object nor looking for them; you have old folks who can't hear or walk well, wheelchairs, people with baby strollers, pets, and children; then you have to deal with crosswalks; then you have deal with driveways where motorists are zipping in and out of and not looking for nor expecting a 15 mph plus object to suddenly be where it wasn't and smacko the motorist won't have time to stop from hitting you. You are at a greater chance of being hit by a car on a sidewalk then the street and this is common knowledge.

The only time I ever use a sidewalk is where it is a designated bike path and then I very careful and ride slowly; or if traffic is too busy and I need to make my way across an intersection to turn left I will pull over the side of a road, dismount the bike and use the crosswalks to get to the other side so I can continue on the street. One the things I hated about riding a bike in California along the coast in places like Santa Barbara was that the bike path, which was designated a bike path, instead became a pedestrian path at which point it was too dangerous to ride on due to the crowds so onto the street I went.
I ride 20 miles to work. Of that about 3 miles is an off-road paved trail (Atlanta Beltline). About 12 miles of it are low traffic neighborhood roads I've gone out of my way to learn about in the interest of safety and a peaceful existence. Another few miles are busy multilane roads up and down significant hills where I ride with road traffic. About 3/4 mile (cumulative estimate) is sidewalk in areas with fast narrow busy lanes and big trucks and a nice wide empty smooth sidewalk. Often I'm on the sidewalk for 500 feet. It's an important 500 right there.

Your points are dead wrong for the sidewalks I'm talking about. I have one rule. Love thyself. I'm not hurting anybody.
Walter S is offline