A cyclist said that he was made to feel like a second-rate road user after a stand-off situation on the road, in which a motorist decided to follow the car ahead to overtake ignoring the oncoming cyclist, and then when asked by the cyclist to go back, decided to mount the pavement and pass him on his left.
The incident took place last week on Watts Road in Thames Ditton, Surrey as the cyclist known by his username on Twitter ChaponaBike was making his way through a road which had cars parked on the right-hand side.
After managing to get past a number of other motorists, he was forced to come to a stop. The driver of a white Alfa Romeo decided to follow the driver in front, who had made their way across and rejoined their lane safely, to make the overtake on the parked car. But they failed to do so despite seeing the oncoming cyclist approach and were forced to brake even before they had inched ahead of the parked car.
The cyclist instructed them to go back, however other drivers had already lined up behind. Then suddenly, the driver decided to mount the pavement and overtake the cyclist on the left-hand side.
The cyclist told road.cc: “Driving like this just makes me feel like a second-rate road user, as motorists try and barge me out the way to get through.”
According to the cyclist, the driver broke three rules from the Highway Code, namely Rule 127, 162 and 163, which state:
Rule 127: A broken white line. This marks the centre of the road. When this line lengthens and the gaps shorten, it means that there is a hazard ahead. Do not cross it unless you can see the road is clear and wish to overtake or turn off.
Rule 162: Before overtaking you should make sure
- the road is sufficiently clear ahead
- road users are not beginning to overtake you
- there is a suitable gap in front of the road user you plan to overtake.
Rule 163: Overtake only when it is safe and legal to do so. You should
- not get too close to the vehicle you intend to overtake
- use your mirrors, signal when it is safe to do so, take a quick sideways glance if necessary into the blind spot area and then start to move out
- not assume that you can simply follow a vehicle ahead which is overtaking; there may only be enough room for one vehicle
- move quickly past the vehicle you are overtaking, once you have started to overtake. Allow plenty of room. Move back to the left as soon as you can but do not cut in
- take extra care at night and in poor visibility when it is harder to judge speed and distance
- give way to oncoming vehicles before passing parked vehicles or other obstructions on your side of the road
- only overtake on the left if the vehicle in front is signalling to turn right, and there is room to do so
- stay in your lane if traffic is moving slowly in queues. If the queue on your right is moving more slowly than you are, you may pass on the left. Cyclists may pass slower moving or stationary traffic on their right or left and should proceed with caution as the driver may not be able to see you. Be careful about doing so, particularly on the approach to junctions, and especially when deciding whether it is safe to pass lorries or other large vehicles.
The cyclist said: “Before committing to a manoeuvre, all road users MUST make sure their intended path is clear, and not assume that just because a car in front has started to overtake, that it’s okay just to follow them through and hope for the best. It’s not.
“The driver of the white Alfa Romeo was completely out of order, and decided to mount the pavement and pass me on my left. They didn’t want to wait a few more seconds for a resolution, which would have been me dismounting and walking along the pavement myself.”
He added that some of the comments on his post sharing the video seemed to think that “motorists have right of way and can just do what they want”.
> “This gives errant drivers carte blanche to do what they like”: Police tell camera cyclists they are “unable to deal” with motorists driving in bike lanes or the wrong way down one-way streets, while warning cyclists to “not confront” dangerous drivers
However, other cyclists joined in to criticise the driver. Mark Hodson, cyclist and retired traffic officer at West Midlands Police, said: “They've all just driven on the wrong side of the road directly at a vulnerable user causing fear and distress #S3RTA1988 all day, they all should have given way , all would fail a driving test , all below the standard expected of a safe and competent driver. You’ll be fine.”
Hodson referred to Section 3 of the Road Traffic Act, 1988, which states: “If a person drives a mechanically propelled vehicle on a road or other public place without due care and attention, or without reasonable consideration for other persons using the road or place, he is guilty of an offence.”
The cyclist was recently subject of criticism on social media last week after he posted a video of a taxi driver moving into a cycle lane to allow an emergency vehicle to pass, calling the taxi driver a “f****** lunatic” for doing so — which resulted in camera cyclist CyclingMikey as well as cyclist and Sky Sports broadcaster Sanny Rudravajhala weighing in and defending the cabbie.
> "I don't think the cab driver did anything wrong": CyclingMikey weighs in on widely shared video of cyclist frustrated by taxi driver pulling into cycle lane to let fire engine pass
The cyclist ChaponaBike also criticised the Met Police’s latest guidance issued to road users submitting footage of careless or dangerous driving to the Metropolitan Police, which notes that officers are “unable to deal” with instances of motorists driving in cycle or bus lanes, or the wrong way down one-way streets.
He said: “I fear this just gives errant drivers carte blanche to do what they like, without fear of prosecution. I understand there has been a huge increase in journey cam footage being submitted, as road users get sick and tired of witnessing bad driving, and decide to take matters into their own hands, video it, and submit the footage to the Met Police.
“It’s clear they’re lacking capacity to deal with it, as the number of positive actions I’ve received following journey cam footage submission has dwindled since the start of 2024.
“We understand the police have got far more serious matters to deal with, but whilst the government pumps money into road infrastructure projects, to the tune of £8bn a year, why can’t some of that budget be used to fund better enforcement and encourage more road safety initiatives?”
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17 comments
I have accidentally removed a few wingmirrors in my time, a pure survival instinct of course. Once whilst I was out running. It has nothing to do with the bicycle but more 'not car' or similar that makes us appear vulnerable/weak/easy to bully. No action from the police confirms this.
My local council (Southampton City Council) has a its official policy to use parked cars as traffic calming. So instead of putting in chicanes for example they'll just permit parking.
While this may help in some ways you then realise that e.g. chicanes or planters don't tend to crash when they pull into / out of their spots, and having parking tends to encourage people to drive. It's not just about speed - high traffic volume is also not good in multiple ways (even for drivers - on-street parking is a source of congestion as people try to park or pull out).
There really should be parking along that streach of road, the local authority should get the yellow paint out for some double lines.
But very common to just have cars bullying their way through when they don't have priority (more common when you are on a bike rather than driving).
I live in a village just outside of Loughborough. A very pleasant and quiet place. Many people walk on the roads which sounds pretty idyllic until you realise this due to poor footpaths and narrow, made worse with the plague of pavement parking. These same people drive too fast for the narrow lanes and have on several occasions driven straight at me when I have been on my bicycle or running. I stand my ground and am prepared to sit it out. I would gladly have moved out of their way if they weren't trying to bully their way through me.
Anyone else having issues trying to write a comment (longer than this) and the page reloading, losing all the text before being able to post?
Quite similar to my own instance (including threats) for which the driver recieved points and a fine I believe:
https://youtu.be/_qO2FIe5poE
This isn't entirely a car vs bike situation. There are a huge number of times when you have parked cars bringing the traffic down to a single lane and most people understand that it requires some give and take so its not a complete mess.
Yes you should give way to the people whos side of the road is empty but much like traffic lights, if we don't let more than a single or a few cars through at a time its fantastically inefficient.
Cars do behave differently towards bikes but in this situation I don't know how much of it is that and how much of it is just the usual "my mate in front is going so I'm going to follow him to avoid being stuck here for another few minutes".
Fair point, but would be fairer if the people in cars EVER gave way to the people on bikes when they have priority.
It - IMO - always seems to be that cyclists are expected to be nice and let motorists through even when the cyclist has priority "to keep the traffic flowing", and yet the motorists very rarely seem to do the same.
He added that some of the comments on his post sharing the video seemed to think that “motorists have right of way and can just do what they want”.
Only some? Must have been a quiet day on twitx.
The assumption that drivers have priority in any situation between them and a vulnerable road user, especially cyclists, is wide-spread and becoming more so, despite changes to the HC. The government should be doing more to inform drivers, and the police to prosecute those who ignore the information.
First we need to educate the current police and employ more road police. We also need to have proper scrutiny on how the police treat such cases.
This happens to me at least once every week when I'm riding through villages! Less so in towns!
There should be a complete review of where parking is allowed in this country. Streets, lanes, and even some B-roads that used to be relatively safe are now dangerous because the decisions on where to paint double-yellow lines were made back when cars were around 1.5 metres wide, and now they're around 2 metres wide. That means when a moving car overtakes a parked one, there is an entire metre less space for an oncoming cyclist to avoid them (not to mention the decrease in patience levels of drivers over the same time period, making the occurences more common.) But, of course, that'll never happen, because removing the parking space from outside a house would seriously affect its market value, and any remaining wealth in this country not yet siphoned off to tax havens is in property ownership.
The whole thing relies on people not being completely inconsiderate cunts which works most of the time but occasionally someone just thinks "fuck it". Parking on blind corners is a classic on country roads. Could park before or after it but the house I want to visit is on the corner so...
ChapOnABike is a bit of an attention whore tbh. In the right on this one but regularly makes a twat of himself on Twitter as per last week.
Slips over the edge from fighting for cyclists rights to activly courting trouble.
Tbh @secret_squirrel I have become more belligerent towards drivers due to experiencing many life-threatening behaviours. I am still polite, but only if the driver is also being courteous. Otherwise anyone driving can gft's. I can not rely on the police enforcing the law. If we could have more critical mass events and less 'cycle activist groups' that are in hand with councillors the better. I suppose one of my frustrations is that I had previously lived in a cycle friendly country.
I dunno - who got "rights for women": the suffragettes, the suffragists or was it just a change that ... happened (economics and social developments - or at least no single cause)? (Or was it the First World War?)
I was extremely suspicious of e.g. Sustrans as they got into their "cosy up to the councils" phase. BUT ... there are few "punk states" and eventually providing for cycling has to become another boring civic matter, like drains, resurfacing roads, trimming the vegetation etc. Complete with the same (possibly self-serving) types in positions of power. However even in NL (the greatest "mass cycling" developed country) there is still need and room for some activism (Cyclists' Union).