RogerS
Established Member
An article in today's Times got me intrigued. It talked about an App for lorry drivers that would give them a route from A to B avoiding a lot of left-hand turns and so, it was suggested, minimise the risk to cyclists. Sounded like a good idea.
Now I am not a cyclist and so have no idea if this is a sensible idea or not. Nor do I want this thread to degenerate into cyclists vs cars vs motorbikes vs pedestrians.
The thing that intrigues me is this. Surely it is well-known among cyclists that if you are at a set of traffic lights and there is a lorry in your queue of traffic that there is the strong possibility that if you were to cycle up the inside of the lorry while it was stationary at red lights to the front of the queue, that when the lights turned green there was a fair chance that the lorry might turn left across your path? Therefore to wait at the back of the lorry behind it so that if, when the lights go green, it turns left you are well clear? Doesn't self-preservation come into it?
As I say, I'm not a cyclist and so may well be missing something here.
Now I am not a cyclist and so have no idea if this is a sensible idea or not. Nor do I want this thread to degenerate into cyclists vs cars vs motorbikes vs pedestrians.
The thing that intrigues me is this. Surely it is well-known among cyclists that if you are at a set of traffic lights and there is a lorry in your queue of traffic that there is the strong possibility that if you were to cycle up the inside of the lorry while it was stationary at red lights to the front of the queue, that when the lights turned green there was a fair chance that the lorry might turn left across your path? Therefore to wait at the back of the lorry behind it so that if, when the lights go green, it turns left you are well clear? Doesn't self-preservation come into it?
As I say, I'm not a cyclist and so may well be missing something here.