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Three quarters of Brits want drivers to retake their driving test; Alexandar Richardson smashes London to Brighton (and back) at 40km/h solo; Burgos organiser blames RIDER for crash; Fly tipper caught thanks to cyclist's camera + more on the live blog

It's another sunny Friday and Dan Alexander is in the house for one final live blog this week before we all disappear off into the weekend...

SUMMARY

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05 August 2022, 15:30
Three quarters of Brits want drivers to retake their driving test
London cyclist in traffic (picture copyright Simon MacMichael).PNG

Almost three quarters (74 per cent) of Brits believe you should have to retake your driving test, with two thirds (66 per cent) saying this should happen before drivers turn 80. That's according to research from personal finance comparison site finder.com.

There is currently no law that drivers must retake their test when they reach a certain age, although 74 per cent said there should. 10 per cent suggested this should happen before drivers reach 55 years old. Laws apply to drivers who have been disqualified or have certain medical conditions, but the research suggested only 18 per cent of Brits agree with the current regulations and think drivers should never retake their test at a set age.

In the age-specific breakdown, Gen Z (18-25 year olds) said 65 years old was the right age to retake a driving test, while those aged 74 and above said 76 years old would be an appropriate age.

Thoughts?

05 August 2022, 14:59
Want to host bike races? Sort your potholes out then

Editor Jack, having watched the Commonwealth Games TT visit his local roads, might baulk at the suggestion bike races only visit areas with good road surfaces...BUT Derby City Council is in the market for hosting a bike race, with the Tour Series, Women's Tour and Tour of Britain on their radar, reports the Derby Telegraph.

However, concerns have been raised about whether the streets are "smooth" enough to host such events. With the Conservative council ready to approve a bid, Lib Dem councillor Lucy Care asked: "My question is about the renewal of roads to ensure they'll be smooth enough to be ridden on at speed because some of our roads at the moment are not as good as they might be. Is there going to be an additional budget provided or do we have to find it ourselves to ensure the race roads are to a very good standard?"

Before calling the state of their roads "dubious", aren't they all, Lucy, aren't they all...

05 August 2022, 13:40
"It would be an achievement to average that speed on that route in a car, let alone a bike... astonishing": We're all in awe of Alexandar Richardson's speedy seaside smash

Of course, I'm sure that local legend is his proudest achievement from this one...

Under the live blog comments, PRSboy suggested it would be a decent average speed in a car, let alone on a bike, given the built-up nature of the route (and avoiding the M23/A23).

peted76 added: "London to Brighton and back at 25mph..  the more I think about it, the more impressive it gets. Chapeau sir!"

Secret_squirrel replied: "Doubly amusing to me as the First London to Brighton car rally had the cars limited to a top speed of 14mph."

Over on Facebook, Mikael Rasmussen commented: "Yeah OK .. now try that from Central London. rather than somewhere south of the South Circular 😉" We'll assume that's tongue in cheek, but I'm sure Alex could arrange a two-up TT to the south coast if you think you've got 41km/h in you, Mikael...

Seymour Yang commented: "At first I was like, L2B in four hours doesn’t sound impressive, then I saw that it was L2B and back again. Wow!"

05 August 2022, 07:46
Alexandar Richardson smashes London to Brighton (and back) at 40km/h solo

Chances are if you live somewhere in and around London or the the South East, you've had a big day out on the bike down to Brighton and back. It's a popular weekend route for riders in and around the M25 — you'll normally clock up close to 100 miles, and have a photo-worthy halfway stop by the coast with the added lure of ice cream or fish and chips...

Or, if your name is Alexandar Richardson, you can smash there and back in four hours at a quad-burning average speed of 40.5km/h... solo.

 

 To be fair Richardson isn't your usual club rider spinning the legs at the weekend, he was third at British National Champs behind that guy from Quick-Step whose name escapes me...

Mark Cavendish wins 2022 British road race championships (Alex Whitehead/SWpix.com)

Taking in a berg under 2,000m of elevation, the Saint Piran pro, who spent the last couple of seasons with Alpecin-Fenix, hit a top speed of 78km/h descending the South Downs on his way home and maintained a metronomic 91 cadence.

Brutally, the wind from the north meant a less-than-ideal tailwind out, headwind home, but he still managed to take six KOMs on the way out and a few top 10s back into the headwind.

Top of the KOM list? The 20km 'London to Brighton fast section' covered by thousands of riders at the annual charity ride (with the benefit of drafting and closed roads), which Richardson ticked off at 45.5km/h...as you do...

05 August 2022, 13:25
Which of these four WorldTour bikes is your favourite?

QuizMaker

05 August 2022, 11:24
Burgos organiser blames RIDER for sprint crash
Burgos crash (GCN/Eurosport)

Okay I think I've tracked it down...

Speaking to L'Équipe the race organiser Marcus Moral (dubbed Marcus Immoral by some clever people on Twitter) denied the speed bump was a speed bump...

"It was not a speed bump, but a zebra crossing no more than 2.5 centimeters high. On a slope," he said. "This obstacle was indicated by markings on the ground and by a signalman's flag. In preparation we showed the last three kilometers to the riders. It is impossible to find a track by removing roundabouts or passages like this one."

Brace yourselves... "It is a mistake by David Dekker," he continued.

Burgos crash (GCN/Eurosport)

"He has since realised this and has asked for forgiveness. I do now. I'm not saying it's just the rider's fault. It's everyone's fault. But we cannot attack the race organisation if the obstacle is indicated. I think the last kilometers of the second stage were correct. We take our responsibility, but people should not demonise us for that."

05 August 2022, 11:17
UPDATE: USA Cycling says Leia Genis was ineligible to race in the Elite Women’s category as she "had not completed the required steps to meet the UCI's Athlete Eligibility Regulations"
05 August 2022, 11:02
Vuelta a Burgos organiser blames THE RIDERS for huge sprint pile-up

This from Jos van Emden, teammate of Jumbo-Visma sprinter David Dekker, who was brought down by the speed bump on stage two's run-in, causing a terrible crash...

> "Disgrace": Pro riders rip into UCI over "unacceptable" speed bump sprint crash

We haven't yet seen any comments from the race director, so have to rely on Van Emden's word for the accusations. We'll see what we can find...

05 August 2022, 10:26
Count the cyclists
05 August 2022, 10:19
Fly tipper caught thanks to cyclist's camera

The Dorset Echo reports a man has received a hefty fine after a cyclist's camera footage proved he had illegally dumped stones and gravel on a roadside verge in Dorchester.

Richard Dunn appeared at Poole Magistrates Court after a rider's handlebar-mounted camera caught the act, with the cyclist reporting the footage to Dorset Council along with a statement.

The cyclist asked "That's not being fly tipped, is it mate?", to which Dunn replied "It's stones" before driving away. Last May he was issued a Fixed Penalty Notice of between £200 and £400 (depending on how promptly it was paid), but this was not paid.

Dunn was subsequently arrested and pleaded guilty to violating Section 33 (1)(a) of the Environmental Protection Act 1990. He was sentenced to pay £479, including £150 fine, costs of £300 and £29 compensation.

05 August 2022, 09:40
All of us seeing Alexandar Richardson's Strava activity...
05 August 2022, 09:20
Surrey traffic cops add Brompton folder to force fleet

The Surrey Roads Policing Unit, known for its social media schoolings of ignorant road users, has managed to go up even further in our estimation after revealing it has added a Brompton folder to the fleet of crime-fighting vehicles.

> Surrey traffic cops tell driver spouting Highway Code whataboutery to return licence

Apparently "many people" in the Surrey town were pleased to see the "bobby on a Brommy" and ITV reports the force will also launch a road crime reduction team this autumn with the aim of reducing "the number of people killed and seriously injured on Surrey's roads by targeting and reducing road crime", specifically by reducing the so-called 'Fatal 5' — inappropriate speed, not wearing a seatbelt; driving under the influence of drink or drugs; distracted driving, such as using a mobile phone behind the wheel; careless driving.

Dan is the road.cc news editor and joined in 2020 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 has been at road.cc for four years and mainly writes news and tech articles as well as the occasional feature. He has hopefully kept you entertained on the live blog too.

Never fast enough to take things on the bike too seriously, when he's not working you'll find him exploring the south of England by two wheels at a leisurely weekend pace, or enjoying his favourite Scottish roads when visiting family. Sometimes he'll even load up the bags and ride up the whole way, he's a bit strange like that.

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80 comments

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BalladOfStruth replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
10 likes

Ten minutes to walk 500m?!

This does back up what I've been saying for a while in that a worrying amount of people in this country would drive to their own fridge if they could, and that simply providing good alternatives to driving doesn't cut it. People making a one-mile journey already have a free alternative to driving glued to the ends of their legs, yet they would rather pay for petrol and sit in traffic.

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chrisonabike replied to BalladOfStruth | 2 years ago
2 likes

You say "lazy", I say "efficient"... but yes, people don't get the "time efficiency" or "consistent trip time" you get with cycling (where you're not subject to all the cars and traffic lights that is).

Change comes in baby steps.  Knowing / hearing about it, seeing it, knowing lots of other people do it, having friends or family or role modesl who do it ... and then there's making cycling a range of journeys (can't be just one or two) easier than driving.  Part of the last is making the driving less convenient, at least initially.

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BalladOfStruth replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
6 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

You say "lazy", I say "efficient"...

I suppose, but I'm also looking at it from an environmental persective too, by which someone using a car for what should be a five minute walk to the corner shop for some milk isn't just "lazy" it's utterly selfish.

chrisonatrike wrote:

...Part of the last is making the driving less convenient, at least initially.

100% agree with this, and it's something else I've been saying for a while. Providing active travel alternatives isn't enough by itself - I bet if most people had an uniterupted cycle lane from their front door all the way to their office, they'd still drive. At the same time as we improve public transport and active travel infra, we also need to take steps to make driving much less appealing/bearable.

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TheBillder replied to BalladOfStruth | 2 years ago
5 likes
BalladOfStruth wrote:

At the same time as we improve public transport and active travel infra, we also need to take steps to make driving much less appealing/bearable.

If we had mandatory drug / alcohol / fatigue sensors in cars that needed 5 mins to complete tests before driving was possible, might that help? My jalopy has corrosion* on a rear wheel that means the tyre needs pumping before almost every journey, which is a great disincentive to use the wretched thing.

*Either that or a latex tube.

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IanMK replied to BalladOfStruth | 2 years ago
4 likes

We need to get to a point where society accepts that the able bodied should not be driving less than a mile. Selfish prick shaming. The trouble is we've become so neo liberal and Thatcher's 'no such thing as society', that people think they can do what they like. So government sets up ATE to do the messaging but stays well below the parapet themselves.

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lonpfrb replied to BalladOfStruth | 2 years ago
2 likes
BalladOfStruth wrote:

At the same time as we improve public transport and active travel infra, we also need to take steps to make driving much less appealing/bearable.

I found my Father's third heart attack and ten medicines daily to be fairly convincing evidence that active travel was my priority.

3.5 years C2W burnt more than 500,000 calories, provided 38bpm resting heart rate, and pulmonary embolism, but that's another story...

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wycombewheeler replied to BalladOfStruth | 2 years ago
5 likes

BalladOfStruth wrote:

Ten minutes to walk 500m?!

The average walking pace is 2.5 to 4 mph, so between 4.7 and 7.5 minutes to cover 500m

BalladOfStruth wrote:

worrying amount of people in this country would drive to their own fridge......they would rather pay for petrol and sit in traffic.

Point proved at any McDonalds drive through, people will rather sit in their car in the queue, engine running, than park up and walk to 25metres to get served quicker inside.

Just can't get them out of their cars

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mdavidford replied to wycombewheeler | 2 years ago
1 like

wycombewheeler wrote:

The average walking pace is 2.5 to 4 mph

A range can't really be 'the average'. Looks like that's Nike misquoting a CDC report, which defines walking 2.5 to 4 mph as 'moderate activity'. That doesn't say anything about the average speed at which people (or even just Americans) actually walk.

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mdavidford replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
4 likes

brooksby wrote:

Quote:

The maximum distance we are prepared to walk is just 537 metres

Huh - I'd swear I'd walked more than that, loads of times. I guess I must have been mistaken.

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chrisonabike replied to mdavidford | 2 years ago
2 likes

mdavidford wrote:

Huh - I'd swear I'd walked more than that, loads of times. I guess I must have been mistaken.

Short legs?

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The Larger Cyclist replied to brooksby | 2 years ago
3 likes

In a motel in the USA I joked to the receptionist that we English thought Americans were so lazy they probably drove to the Burger King on the other side of the road. Turns out that people did!  It's about 500ft/152m

 

https://www.google.co.uk/maps/dir/Burger+King/Super+8+by+Wyndham+Oneida+...@43.0784894,-75.646043,343m/data=!3m1!1e3!4m14!4m13!1m5!1m1!1s0x89d976e0b4122881:0xb0b71c5deb47bd10!2m2!1d-75.6455964!2d43.0791284!1m5!1m1!1s0x89d976e0982b22f7:0x809fa273bf348b57!2m2!1d-75.644857!2d43.0777874!3e0?hl=en-GB

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Rendel Harris replied to The Larger Cyclist | 2 years ago
6 likes

Pal of mine who lives in Washington DC tells me that neighbours look at him with horror when he says he's walking to the shops - "But it's way over half a mile! And then you'll have to walk back!" They actually offer to give him a ride; when he says he just enjoys a stroll they shake their heads at his Limey eccentricities.

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andystow replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
3 likes

Rendel Harris wrote:

Pal of mine who lives in Washington DC tells me that neighbours look at him with horror when he says he's walking to the shops - "But it's way over half a mile! And then you'll have to walk back!" They actually offer to give him a ride; when he says he just enjoys a stroll they shake their heads at his Limey eccentricities.

Is it somehow inherited? Because as a US transplant I walk way more than the majority of my American friends and colleagues would be willing to. Maybe it's because I was raised doing it. My dad used to have us walk home from church sometimes in the US, not every time, but I doubt anyone else was doing it. I remember it as a long walk when I was 8-10 years old, but looking now it was 1.7 miles. That's about the same as I often walk to the pub now, although I usually cycle.

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Rendel Harris replied to andystow | 2 years ago
4 likes

I've known several Americans who have become keen pedestrians since they came to the UK – same goes for some I've known in Paris – simply because it's actually feasible to do. I remember a girl from Texas I knew in Paris years ago who absolutely eulogised the fact that she could get all her groceries just by walking around her neighbourhood, apparently in her hometown the only available options for shopping were edge-of-town malls reached by multiple lane highways with no sidewalk, literally you had to go in a car or walk along the culvert at the edge of the highway!

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andystow replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
1 like

Rendel Harris wrote:

I've known several Americans who have become keen pedestrians since they came to the UK – same goes for some I've known in Paris – simply because it's actually feasible to do. I remember a girl from Texas I knew in Paris years ago who absolutely eulogised the fact that she could get all her groceries just by walking around her neighbourhood, apparently in her hometown the only available options for shopping were edge-of-town malls reached by multiple lane highways with no sidewalk, literally you had to go in a car or walk along the culvert at the edge of the highway!

I wish I could say it's walkable where I am, but it's not really. Lots of roads lack any pavement at all, even in residential subdivisions full of culs-de-sac. Every time I go anywhere really I have to cross this stroad, with five lanes of 50 MPH traffic.

https://goo.gl/maps/b5GigLCFyGk1PXoK9

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Rendel Harris replied to andystow | 2 years ago
2 likes

Lord have mercy, that's what you call a really autocentric neighbourhood!

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lonpfrb replied to Rendel Harris | 2 years ago
2 likes
Rendel Harris wrote:

Lord have mercy, that's what you call a really autocentric neighbourhood!

Economic and planning put High Street against out of town development for a similar outcome in the UK. Active Travel must be supported by planning too.

Finland was smart enough to look at their health data and decide that all new build must include highways with separate side lanes for active travel; ski, skate, sledge, run, walk, cycle, scoot. Twenty years later improved health confirms that opportunity is a great investment. Some political courage and consensus required but absolutely possible.

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chrisonabike replied to The Larger Cyclist | 2 years ago
5 likes

A common trope - but it's often true.  Crossing some US roads - even a few UK ones - is practically impossible.  These "breaks in the network" / "barriers to access" are not just inconvenient for disabled people, or people with young children, or if you have a non-standard cycle.  They can make a journey impossible.

NotJustBikes has a good video presenting a typical story of this kind.

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nniff replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
5 likes

chrisonatrike wrote:

 Crossing some US roads - even a few UK ones - is practically impossible.  .......  They can make a journey impossible.

I found this in Atlanta - I was there on business for a week and my usual thing is to walk around a new place.  It was less than a mile from the hotel to the office, but that involved crossing three eight-lane roads.  It was a very lonely experience, made all the worse by unfamiliarity with the prevailing 'right on red' rules.  Additionally, there were so few pedestrians that you had to be quick off the mark before they changed to let the cars go before they got fed up waiting for no-one.  Electric scooters were the thing for those not in cars (no 'scooting' involved - just 'twist and go')

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Hirsute replied to chrisonabike | 2 years ago
1 like

That was ... horrific.

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