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Live blog: MP calls for Minister for Cycling in cabinet, “Hygiene” –Sainsbury’s kicks out cyclist who wanted to bring bike in shop, “Get lights, wear bright colours and a helmet" - Skoda's cycle safety message; New Rapha jacket; Pro tip – zip it! +more

All today's news from the site and beyond.....
30 April 2019, 15:18
Rapha reveals Pro Team Lightweight Shadow Jacket
Rapha Pro Team Lightweight Shadow

Eagle-eyed viewers might have spotted a new Rapha jacket being worn by members of EF Education First racing Liège–Bastogne–Liège on Sunday. The updated version of the Pro Team Lightweight Shadow Jacket is similar to the previous design but it uses a much lighter fabric.

"Our proprietary Shadow fabric is back, but not as you’ve seen it before," says Rapha. "Constructed using the same technique of stretch weaving yarns dipped in a durable water repellent (DWR) treatment, our new fabric incorporates threads that are just as strong but even lighter. Treated for a second time with DWR, the technique creates an out-of-the-pocket jacket whose feathery weight belies its incredible wind and water-resistant properties."

Unlike most fabrics designed to do a similar job, Rapha's doesn't rely on a membrane. Rapha reckons that this makes for exceptional breathability.

RAPHA PRO TEAM LIGHTWEIGHT SHADOW JACKET

"The woven fabric also provides an element of mechanical stretch and wraps around a rider’s body to create a tight race fit. A full-length, two-way zip allows for easy adjustments on the fly while a reflective armband combines with reflective bands to vastly improve your visibility while riding through the gloom."

Tanel Kangert, Michael Woods and Simon Clarke were all spotted wearing the Pro Team Lightweight Shadow Jacket at the weekend.

We'll ask the nice people at Rapha if we can get one in for review.

Get more details from Rapha's website. 

30 April 2019, 14:13
Oxford promise to keep your chain minty fresh with launch of mint lubes
oxford mint lube

Why you would want or need to we're not sure, but you can now buy minty chain lube from Oxford Products. The range contains 75ml and 150ml bottle sizes and there are wet, dry and a general '365' version to choose from. You can search for your nearest stockist at oxfordproducts.com

30 April 2019, 14:04
Pro tip: When showing off the new sponsor, maybe zip the jersey up?

Introducing Team Ineeoos ...

30 April 2019, 12:59
“Get lights, wear bright colours and a helmet" - Skoda's safety message to cyclists

“Get lights, wear bright colours and a helmet and that will keep you safe” – that’s the message to cyclists in a video from Skoda’s We Love Cycling website that has seen the Czech car manufacturer accused of victim-blaming.

The video, called To Hell and Back on a Bike, attempts to point out to cyclists (and motorists) things they should and shouldn’t do to keep safe, and the first thing you’ll notice is that despite it being voiced in English by a certain ‘Paul’ it certainly wasn’t filmed in the UK – it was shot in Rijeka, Croatia.

That means that the video, in which the male cyclist is a professional stuntman, contains some advice that is contrary to the situation in the UK, given that in Croatia, as elsewhere on the continent, driving is on the right.

It’s accompanied by a three-level safety quiz on the website, and was flagged up by road.cc reader James, who said: “ Nice bit of victim blaming from Skoda under the banner of ‘We Love Cycling’.

30 April 2019, 11:28
this_is_the_line.jpg
So farewell then, Team Sky

So farewell then, Team Sky.

“This is the line ... ”

Yes, that was your mantra.

Some disliked Murdoch’s backing.

Jim Ratcliffe’s response?

“Hold my beer."

In a plastic cup.

 

(With apologies to EJ Thribb)

 

30 April 2019, 11:10
Labour MP Fabian Hamilton calls for Minister for Cycling in the cabinet at All Party Cycling meeting

At the meeting in London this morning, Hamilton also said that says that Leeds has a population of 800,000 but has never received any significant funding for cycling. Cycling UK's Roger Geffen also spoke earlier, talking about Cycling UK's campaign to encourage people to write to their MP's to ask for more funding for cycling. Also discussed was a confusing graph made by the government that states a driver is worth more to the economy that cyclists, pedestrians and rail passengers. 

30 April 2019, 10:59
Nothing to see here...
30 April 2019, 07:39
Sainsbury's refuse entry to man with a bike because it could "contaminate the food"... cue sarcastic responses on Twitter

Edouard Guidon questioned the supermarket on Twitter about them refusing him entry into their Paddington Station store in London. When asked to elaborate on why it was a hygiene issue, this was their response...

This left many folks questioning if such a policy actually existed; plus bikes aren't the only objects with wheels that could end up in a Sainsbury's shop, wheelchairs and their own trolleys being two examples...

One reply questioned the complainant's failure to spot that there are in fact 380 bike racks in Paddington, however, to which he said Sainsbury's could have been a little more helpful in guiding towards the bike parking. 

To be fair to Sainsbury's we're not sure if the bike in question was brand spanking new or just back from a CX race, but even so banning anything with wheels from their stores would seem to be pretty unworkable... what do you reckon? 

30 April 2019, 07:34
What the?!

Odd, funny, highly entertaining, perhaps a bit disturbing... the competitors in the video are apparently four years old. Such speed, desire and hunger to win at all costs must be down to god-given talent... that plus some very enthusiastic parenting no doubt. 

Jack has been writing about cycling and multisport for over a decade, arriving at road.cc via 220 Triathlon Magazine in 2017. He worked across all areas of the website including tech, news and video, and also contributed to eBikeTips before being named Editor of road.cc in 2021 (much to his surprise). Jack has been hooked on cycling since his student days, and currently has a Trek 1.2 for winter riding, a beloved Bickerton folding bike for getting around town and an extra beloved custom Ridley Helium SLX for fantasising about going fast in his stable. Jack has never won a bike race, but does have a master's degree in print journalism and two Guinness World Records for pogo sticking (it's a long story). 

Add new comment

36 comments

Avatar
srchar | 5 years ago
5 likes

Skoda wrote:

some statistics indicate that 60% of cyclists who lose their lives in the saddle seal their fates themselves

"some statistics".  SOME!  Do I even need to comment on this complete drivel published in the name of marketing?

Avatar
ragtag | 5 years ago
0 likes

Tried to take my bike into the Apple store in Covent Garden a few years ago. Forgot my charger and had to pick up a spare. Security said I couldn't take it in, no reason, just wasn't allowed. No where to lock bike. Thankfully a lovely lady said she would look after it for the 5 mins I went in to pick up what I needed and pay. 

 

Avatar
brooksby replied to ragtag | 5 years ago
0 likes

ragtag wrote:

Tried to take my bike into the Apple store in Covent Garden a few years ago. Forgot my charger and had to pick up a spare. Security said I couldn't take it in, no reason, just wasn't allowed. No where to lock bike. Thankfully a lovely lady said she would look after it for the 5 mins I went in to pick up what I needed and pay. 

I'm always kind of surprised that Apple stores don't make all visitors wear those blue shoe-covers like scientists and CSIs wear.

Avatar
Glov Zaroff | 5 years ago
1 like

Rapha continue to use a photo of Woods in a short sleeve Shadow Jersey with arm warmers while advertising the new Shadow Lightweight Jacket. Nobody bothered to check the ads that came back from the graphics department. 

Avatar
ktache | 5 years ago
2 likes

Didn't Scoda use Bradley Wiggins in one of their ads, was he responsible when hit by a woman driving her van out of garage forecourt?

And it's almost as though those who open the car door without looking have no responsibility for their (illegal and dangerous) actions.

Avatar
IanGlasgow | 5 years ago
5 likes

Here's some more choice victim blaming from Skoda's We Love Cycling website:

"some statistics indicate that 60% of cyclists who lose their lives in the saddle seal their fates themselves."

"The bottom line is that in the majority of cases, fatal injuries of cyclists are caused by the cyclists themselves."

It requires a lot of cherry picking to find any data that supports those claims; the overwhelming majority of reports put the blame on drivers somewhere between 50-80% of the time.

I've cancelled my new Skoda.

Why not go to their website and let them know how you feel..
https://www.welovecycling.com/wide/2018/11/07/the-most-dangerous-things-...

Avatar
burtthebike replied to IanGlasgow | 5 years ago
5 likes

inicholson wrote:

Here's some more choice victim blaming from Skoda's We Love Cycling website: "some statistics indicate that 60% of cyclists who lose their lives in the saddle seal their fates themselves." "The bottom line is that in the majority of cases, fatal injuries of cyclists are caused by the cyclists themselves." It requires a lot of cherry picking to find any data that supports those claims; the overwhelming majority of reports put the blame on drivers somewhere between 50-80% of the time. I've cancelled my new Skoda. Why not go to their website and let them know how you feel.. https://www.welovecycling.com/wide/2018/11/07/the-most-dangerous-things-...

They could at least have had it checked by a native English speaker "....or if you stop for refreshment and treat yourself with a little more pints than you should to successfully get into a tunnel."  Apart from the grammar, does anyone know what this might possibly mean?

And of course the usual victim blaming for not wearing a helmet "Cycling without a helmet as a way to commit suicide?"

Just sent them this "I've just come across this website, and frankly, I haven't seen a more misleading, misinformed, inaccurate site for a very long time. At the very least you should change the name to wehatecycling, otherwise you could be infringing the trades descriptions act."

info [at] welovecycling.com for anyone who feels like emailing them.

Avatar
growingvegtables replied to IanGlasgow | 5 years ago
0 likes

inicholson wrote:

Here's some more choice victim blaming from Skoda's We Love Cycling website: "some statistics indicate that 60% of cyclists who lose their lives in the saddle seal their fates themselves." "The bottom line is that in the majority of cases, fatal injuries of cyclists are caused by the cyclists themselves." It requires a lot of cherry picking to find any data that supports those claims; the overwhelming majority of reports put the blame on drivers somewhere between 50-80% of the time. I've cancelled my new Skoda. Why not go to their website and let them know how you feel.. https://www.welovecycling.com/wide/2018/11/07/the-most-dangerous-things-...

 

Written by the cheap-skate (and downright ****ing ignorant) purchasers of Skoda vehicles - ****ing  private-hire/taxi drivers/firms.

 

Aye ... but Skoda ain't Skoda any more; they're the second most profitable of the Volkswagen Group's brands?  Remember Volkswagen's "Dieselgate".  See U Next Tuesdays.

Avatar
burtthebike | 5 years ago
2 likes

"So farewell then, Team Sky

So farewell then, Team Sky.

“This is the line ... ”

Yes, that was your mantra.

Some disliked Murdoch’s backing.

Jim Ratcliffe’s response?

“Hold my beer."

In a plastic cup.

 

(With apologies to EJ Thribb)"

 

Having read some of Master Thribb's compositions, no apology required.  I'm pretty sure he would be proud.

Avatar
danhopgood | 5 years ago
1 like

THat safety video doesn't really work - trying to cover too many issues too quickly.  I think the point being made is we've all got a responsibility to act sensibly on the roads -it just doesn't do it effectively.  I don't have an issue with the points about being visible and wearing a helmet - that's as recommended in the Highway Code and a sensible precaution in my view. 

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to danhopgood | 5 years ago
5 likes

danhopgood wrote:

we've all got a responsibility to act sensibly on the roads

https://theconversation.com/cars-bicycles-and-the-fatal-myth-of-equal-re...

Avatar
ktache | 5 years ago
7 likes

Are all Skodas painted in Hi Viz then?

Drivers kill each other in far greater numbers than us.

Oh, and as an edit because I forgot- Driving helmets.

Avatar
burtthebike | 5 years ago
4 likes

What is it with drivers who feel that they have to tell me what to do to be safe?  Some of the info for drivers was useful though, but helmets and hi-viz..........omg, not again.

The fact that they voiced it over in English, presumably for a Brit audience when it's the wrong way around is farcical, stupid and possibly dangerous.  If that is typical of Skoda's approach to road safety, I won't be buying one of their cars any time soon; or ever.

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to burtthebike | 5 years ago
4 likes

burtthebike wrote:

What is it with drivers who feel that they have to tell me what to do to be safe? 

I was approaching a junction about three years or so ago.  Left lane was 'left turn only' and right lane was straight on or right turn.  I was in the right lane as I was going straight on, and there was a car driver pulling up in the left lane and indicating left.   On the left kerb, was an elderly lady on a mobility scooter.  

As I approached, the driver extended his right arm out of his window, and started to wave his hand in a 'slow down!' motion.   I found this curious as I was probably going at walking pace by that time.

As I drew alongside, I looked at him with an arched eyebrow, kind of 'what was that all about?' look. 

'Didn't want you to hit the old lady,' he said. 

'Your lot kill five people every single day,' I replied.  'And I'm the one you think needs to be careful?  You think I'm fucking blind?'

By this time, the lady was across, and I cycled away, rather pissed off.  

Avatar
brooksby replied to Legs_Eleven_Worcester | 5 years ago
3 likes

Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

... and I cycled away, rather pissed off.  

I'd sort of assumed that was your default setting... yes 

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
3 likes

brooksby wrote:

Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

... and I cycled away, rather pissed off.  

I'd sort of assumed that was your default setting... yes 

LOL.

Not quite.   1  

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
4 likes

brooksby wrote:

Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

... and I cycled away, rather pissed off.  

I'd sort of assumed that was your default setting... yes 

My wife has instructed me to tell you that she agrees with you.  

Avatar
PRSboy | 5 years ago
9 likes

Now that was the most exciting bike race I've watched!

- Bike handling

- Sprinting and action from the word go

-About long enough for my attention span.

UCI please introduce a balance-bike stage in all stage races.  

Avatar
srchar | 5 years ago
3 likes

I've been refused entry to Tesco, with the security guard giving the same reason.  He was fine with the woman who followed me in wearing a pair of pyjamas and some old slippers with holes in though.

Some people just hate other people who ride bikes.

Avatar
ktache | 5 years ago
1 like

I have seen people popping folded Bromptons in their supermarket trolleys.

Avatar
workhard replied to ktache | 5 years ago
0 likes

ktache wrote:

I have seen people popping folded Bromptons in their supermarket trolleys.

Was once refused entry to my local Waitrose when doing just that.

I draw the line at taking my Big Dummy into supermarkets.

Avatar
Rick_Rude | 5 years ago
3 likes

If Sainsburys were that bothered about hygiene they'd be better starting with people rather than wheels. Never seen a tyre cough all over the produce.

Avatar
Kendalred | 5 years ago
1 like

Th only thing I'm getting from this is the relief that I don't live in an area that needs security guards in supermarkets!

Avatar
FluffyKittenofT... replied to Kendalred | 5 years ago
2 likes

Kendalred wrote:

Th only thing I'm getting from this is the relief that I don't live in an area that needs security guards in supermarkets!

 

I didn't know there were such areas!

 

  Do you live in Trumpton?  Whatever town it is that Postman Pat lives in, or that island with Thomas the Tank Engine?

Avatar
Crippledbiker | 5 years ago
6 likes

What's funny is that I'm allowed in with my handcycle, and they literally legally aren't allowed to tell me otherwise (at least, if I'm not on my recumbent).

I've had, uh, discussions with some guards, in particular at the one by UCH - who generally freeze up and go very quiet once I point out that it's a wheelchair.

Having said that - Paddington has loads of bike storage. The guard should probably have just directed him there, that store is rather small...

Avatar
peted76 | 5 years ago
3 likes

Poor young Edouard Guidon, it sounds like the phrase snowflake was coined just for him. 

 

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... | 5 years ago
1 like

As HP says, it's an excuse.  A Tesco security guard (admittedly, in a small 'Express' store, rather than in a superstore) let me take my bike into the shop once.  And another - in an equally small store - refused.  It's entirely arbitrary, probably depending on the mood of the bloke at the door, and when questioned, the stores fall back on the 'health and safety' gobshite.  

Avatar
brooksby replied to Legs_Eleven_Worcester | 5 years ago
0 likes

Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

As HP says, it's an excuse.  A Tesco security guard (admittedly, in a small 'Express' store, rather than in a superstore) let me take my bike into the shop once.  And another - in an equally small store - refused.  It's entirely arbitrary, probably depending on the mood of the bloke at the door, and when questioned, the stores fall back on the 'health and safety' gobshite.  

Presumably he wouldn't have been so miffed off if the guard had openly said, "Sorry, there isn't room - but there's parking round the corner" or some such.

I think he went off the deep end at being told only that he couldn't come in because his bike was dirty and unhygienic (which *is* stupid, because the wheels of a bike are no more unhygienic than a pair of shoes, as others have said).

Avatar
Legs_Eleven_Wor... replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
2 likes

brooksby wrote:

Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

As HP says, it's an excuse.  A Tesco security guard (admittedly, in a small 'Express' store, rather than in a superstore) let me take my bike into the shop once.  And another - in an equally small store - refused.  It's entirely arbitrary, probably depending on the mood of the bloke at the door, and when questioned, the stores fall back on the 'health and safety' gobshite.  

Presumably he wouldn't have been so miffed off if the guard had openly said, "Sorry, there isn't room - but there's parking round the corner" or some such.

I think he went off the deep end at being told only that he couldn't come in because his bike was dirty and unhygienic (which *is* stupid, because the wheels of a bike are no more unhygienic than a pair of shoes, as others have said).

Indeed.  At the end of the day, it is their shop, and it's really up to them whom they allow in, and under what conditions.   I would love to nip to the local Asda and wheel my bike around whilst filling my apidura bags with shopping, before paying and cycling back home.  But they won't let me, so... whatever.  There's really not much I can do about it.  

Avatar
jh27 replied to brooksby | 5 years ago
0 likes

brooksby wrote:

Legs_Eleven_Worcester wrote:

As HP says, it's an excuse.  A Tesco security guard (admittedly, in a small 'Express' store, rather than in a superstore) let me take my bike into the shop once.  And another - in an equally small store - refused.  It's entirely arbitrary, probably depending on the mood of the bloke at the door, and when questioned, the stores fall back on the 'health and safety' gobshite.  

Presumably he wouldn't have been so miffed off if the guard had openly said, "Sorry, there isn't room - but there's parking round the corner" or some such.

I think he went off the deep end at being told only that he couldn't come in because his bike was dirty and unhygienic (which *is* stupid, because the wheels of a bike are no more unhygienic than a pair of shoes, as others have said).

The only possible difference, from a hygene point of view, is that a bicycle tyre is higher up than a shoe is likly to be - more comparable with (say) a wheel chair tyre.  I would be very surprised if Sainsbury's is selling ready to eat fresh produce that isn't covered in several layers of plastic.  Fresh fruit and veg isn't generally considered 'ready to eat' - consumers are advised to wash or peel before consumption.

Regarding 'parking round the corner' the x00 cycle parking spaces in Paddington Station is woefully inadequate - I've never seen an empty space there.

I've never tried taking my bike into a supermarket, but I have often considered it. I don't think it is an unreasonable thing to do (assuming it is not ridden) - it is probably less of an obstruction than the average supermarket trolley.

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