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It might have been bad for you, but round here we had a cycle race that closed over 150 km of roads yesterday. Some businesses, including two garden centres were right on the route and were shut all day and a few pubs lost all of their Sunday lunch trade. The arrogance of the organisers to businesses affected was astonishing.
Maybe the organizers were a bit pissed off that some Kock decided to scatter tacks all over the road?
I think the cyclists would say it's one day a year, businesses have 364 other ones on which to grab their money!
I wonder how you would feel if it were your business that was stopped trading through no fault of their own by a few idiots who wanted a push bike race. These businesses pay rent, rates, taxes, employ people, etc. for 365 days a year.
Hey, wonder no more, i shall enlighten thee.....
a) I'd feel great, because:
b) it`s a day off work!
c) I'd be taking part in it me, you know, having fun?
d) there's always tomorrow (unless you die)
e) cycling's the best buzz ever and life's too short to chase money every day.
Hope this helps!
Maybe the organizers were a bit pissed off that some Kock decided to scatter tacks all over the road?
I think the cyclists would say it's one day a year, businesses have 364 other ones on which to grab their money!
Slightly, Yes but cyclists, unless riding to work are the devils spawn.
Hey, wonder no more, i shall enlighten thee.....
a) I'd feel great, because:
b) it`s a day off work!
c) I'd be taking part in it me, you know, having fun?
d) there's always tomorrow (unless you die)
e) cycling's the best buzz ever and life's too short to chase money every day.
Hope this helps!
Why can they not use proper race tracks like other race activities, plenty of motor race tracks spread around the country or are they to tight to pay to use them
There is a difference between a masochist's sense of fun and normal peoples.
The organisers were caught telling outright lies before the event. They didn't publicise details of the road closures until about ten days beforehand, obviously aware of the stink that it would cause.
Sure the people who scattered tacks were wrong. That doesn't make the decision to close all the roads right.
And as for your glib answer about there being 364 other days to make money, tell that to a garden centre that loses a whole Sunday's trade in spring. You expect that they take the same on 14 June as 14 January? Or the pubs who've lost their entire Sunday lunch trade. Their customers will obviosly fast on the Sunday and come out on Monday night to make up the loss. The pub trade is hard enough as it is.
To take the focus off the business owners, how about their employees? Regular workers would presumably still get paid but there are a lot of students and part timers who rely on bar and restaurant work. Shaft them in the attitude of the organisers.
I'd come down on the side of the businessmen, on this. A pastime taking precedence over rate-payers? For a whole day?
If you want to know if something is right, imagine it being done to you e.g. losing a day's salary because X organisation wants to close the roads. Army manoeuvres, yes. Concerned Alienists Against The Abuse of Courgettes, no.
I'm getting the impression that cyclists are becoming more unpopular in the UK. Personally I've been shouted at at least twice, recently, as a pedestrian, because I was in the way. I've also seen some reckless cycling. The kind that tells me that the cyclists doing it don't understand physics: Man in lycra, on a flimsy machine, going at 20mph, through a red light, sharing a road with 2-ton metal vehicles = good odds for a trip to the hospital, over time.
I mean, you can shout at trucks all you want; your fists and harsh words will dent them not. [shrugs]
The problem with cyclists is they clog up the roads with their 3 abreast having a chit chat totally oblivious to other tax and insurance paying road users on a sunday morning 10 mile shaven legged attention seeking glory ride out to nowhere in particular covered in pointless sponsor logoed tight lycra without the gimp mask usually just before or just after the Tour de France has been on the telly attitude.
Maybe my utter hatred for these skinny wierdos is bourne out of been dragged through the Catalan courts for allegedly knocking an off duty Guardia Civil officer off his (€3,500 plus expenses and damages to his little finger) bike.
I did win the appeal........
It's been a quiet week in general though.
The problem with cyclists is they clog up the roads with their 3 abreast having a chit chat totally oblivious to other tax and insurance paying road users on a sunday morning 10 mile shaven legged attention seeking glory ride out to nowhere in particular covered in pointless sponsor logoed tight lycra without the gimp mask usually just before or just after the Tour de France has been on the telly attitude.
Maybe my utter hatred for these skinny wierdos is bourne out of been dragged through the Catalan courts for allegedly knocking an off duty Guardia Civil officer off his (€3,500 plus expenses and damages to his little finger) bike.
It might have been bad for you, but round here we had a cycle race that closed over 150 km of roads yesterday. Some businesses, including two garden centres were right on the route and were shut all day and a few pubs lost all of their Sunday lunch trade. The arrogance of the organisers to businesses affected was astonishing.
Surely the pubs along the route could have taken advantage of the footfall from the spectators? I'm sure many people (especially those drinking alcohol) could have also parked nearby and walked into the pub (unless the entire footpath entrance was cut off, which seems unlikely).
They could have even offered take-away Sunday lunches in cartons for spectators to enjoy whilst watching the cycling.
You had ten days notice of the event.You might be sure, but you would be wrong in many cases. Our local is about 1.5 miles from the route, so no hope of footfall from spectators. All of the roads that customers would use to reach it connect with the main A road that was closed. There's another pub only about 1 mile from the route, and that was shafted as well. Even pubs in towns were cut off from their normal customers. And from the shots that I saw, the number of spectators was negligible.
My wife's normal journey to her mother's house would be about 4.5 miles. Due to the layout of the roads, and the fact that two of them were closed, the journey would have been (and I am not exaggerating) 27 miles each way. If the direct route is closed, then the natural detour was also on the route. There are things like mountains and rivers in the way.
On a personal level, anybody with a house directly on the route, and many on roads adjoining it, couldn't even leave their home. There was one house not far from here that had a sign outside saying "Prison"
1) Highway code advises no more than two abreast. Some irresponsible ones go 3 abreast when there's traffic about. Two abreast is the ideal, as it's much safer for a car to overtake something six feet long than fifteen feet long, or even longer if it's a larger group. Even my 14 year old son can work that one out.
2) We pay tax, and insurance. Roads come from general taxation, your RFL is based on your nasty emissions. So you're wrong.
You had ten days notice of the event.
Why not make alternative arrangements ?
Prison? Is their home that bad? Could they have been a spectator or given out bottles of water to the poor thirsty cyclists?
Could you have invited your mother in law over for a day or two?
A 20 minute walk to a pub doesn't sound too prohibitive.
You seem very negative as well as putting your personal issues in front of what positives there may have been in promoting the event in your area.
Are all Welsh people that selfish?
Hope not!
Uninformed comments?It actually didn't affect me, If I'd wanted to get out that wasn't a problem and there were plenty of choices of routes to use. That's the way the land lies. I don't have to go in to work on Sundays, so that wasn't a problem.
My concern is for businesses who lost a complete day's trade with not a sniff of compensation. I've already given examples, so I won't repeat them.
Pray do explain how that makes me selfish? But feel free to keep on making uninformed comments when you apparently don't know the area or the issues caused.
Ah, right. I think you'll find it's actually cars that kill & maim, not pushbikes![]()
Your 14 year old son may well be able to work it out but he doesn't have to overtake them whilst they idle and meander around the leafy B roads of Cheshire on a sunday morning
While I agree with you that by and large it is idiots in cars that cause problems to cyclists and motorcyclists (I no longer ride)
This guy knocked over a toddler, then proceeded to give a mouthfull of abuse to the mother. he then road off when the father appeared.
It hit the TV and he gave himself up (before he was grassed up I guess).
In short there is wrong on both sides.
I do think though that the event should have been cancelled as the organisers failed to follow the law in giving notice of road closures etc.
I am a firm believer in play by the rules, or not at all.
The "leafy" B roads of Cheshire are reserved for cyclists on a Sunday morning.Your 14 year old son may well be able to work it out but he doesn't have to overtake them whilst they idle and meander around the leafy B roads of Cheshire on a sunday morning