(no subject)
Friday, November 17th, 2006 03:12 pmI came off my bike outside the entrance to the "Media Village" car park on my way in this morning. I was approaching the lower T-junction on the linked map along the left hand branch, which is a dead end ending where the red car is; a van was approaching from the lower branch. Assuming it was turning right, I started overtaking it on the right, so I could go through the right hand security barrier whilst it was going through the left hand one.
Only it wasn't turning right. It was doing a U-turn, straight into my path. I only avoided either it hitting me or me hitting it by standing on my brakes so hard I fell off my bike. The driver was apologetic, and got out to make sure I was okay, and the security people came hurrying up too; fortunately, because my landing was under my control, my only injury were minor scrape to my legs.
My question is: do you think the van driver was in the wrong here, or that I was, that both of us were, or that neither of us was, and I was just unlucky? I suspect I was actually in the driver's blind spot for most of the manoeuvre, though not whilst both of us were originally approaching the junction. I may, however, not yet have joined the road (from the pedestrian/cycle path going the opposite way along the M40, with a fence in between) at the point at which he last looked left...
ETA: I was wrong to assume my bike undamaged. I managed to shear off the derailleur on the way home. Unbe-infix-lievable. 400 miles. That's how long it took me to trash my new bike. :-(
Only it wasn't turning right. It was doing a U-turn, straight into my path. I only avoided either it hitting me or me hitting it by standing on my brakes so hard I fell off my bike. The driver was apologetic, and got out to make sure I was okay, and the security people came hurrying up too; fortunately, because my landing was under my control, my only injury were minor scrape to my legs.
My question is: do you think the van driver was in the wrong here, or that I was, that both of us were, or that neither of us was, and I was just unlucky? I suspect I was actually in the driver's blind spot for most of the manoeuvre, though not whilst both of us were originally approaching the junction. I may, however, not yet have joined the road (from the pedestrian/cycle path going the opposite way along the M40, with a fence in between) at the point at which he last looked left...
ETA: I was wrong to assume my bike undamaged. I managed to shear off the derailleur on the way home. Unbe-infix-lievable. 400 miles. That's how long it took me to trash my new bike. :-(
no subject
Date: 2006-11-17 10:47 am (UTC)I am traffic-ignorant so I don't really know.
Glad to hear you weren't injured too badly though.
Good Shabbos!
no subject
Date: 2006-11-17 11:12 am (UTC)Shabbat Shalom
no subject
Date: 2006-11-17 11:58 am (UTC)Take care,
SW
no subject
Date: 2006-11-17 01:07 pm (UTC)I think it was - quite probably - a misjudgement on all sides, and I am immensely glad that you're ok. The vans I drove had little inset mirrors which did not eliminate the blind spot, but greatly reduced it, but even so I've had a couple of cars that I only didn't flatten because I'd seen them entering my blind spot and blissfully staying there.
Anyone who turns should use indicators; anyone who does a U-turn should be doubly careful, and all of that, but no matter how defensive you drive, sooner or later you're going to mess up :-(((
With hindsight, both of you could probably have done things differently, but overall, it sounds like One Of Those Things.
Let me repeat, I'm glad you're ok. Have a nice cup of tea and a <HUG>
no subject
Date: 2006-11-17 01:14 pm (UTC)No, it was coming in from my right, I was assuming it was turning right to go the same direction as me.
What I should have done, and normally do do, is assume once I'm in a driver's blind spot they instantly forget about my existence. That's a strategy which has saved me more than once.
no subject
Date: 2006-11-17 02:33 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-11-19 07:40 am (UTC)