Upset
Only logged in members can reply and interact with the post.
Join SimilarWorlds for FREE »

I love humanity ... It's humans I have an issue with ...

I'm training this spring with three of my friends for a triathlon coming up later this year in June. We are pounding the miles in the water, on our bikes, and running. Well, yesterday we were out for a ride and practicing what cyclists call drafting. This is where one cyclist rides very close to the one in front in order to take advantage of their draft and not have to cut through the wind alone. 🚴‍♀🚴‍♀🚴‍♀🚴‍♀

Anyway, we are moving pretty quick and there are just inches between one bike and the next as the four of us proceed down the trail. The "rail trail" (former railroad bed converted into a multi-use biking / walking trail) that we are on is not yet too busy because it is early, but there are people out and about. We are keeping it below 20mph as is the rule on this trail and we slow anytime we pass a group.

Suddenly, a kid (14 years old) on an off-road electric dirt bike pulls onto the pavement from the grass side of the path without looking our way at all. He slams into the second bike of our four and you can just imagine what happens next. I was third in line so I slam into my teammate and the kid and the fourth slams into all of us.

Two out of our four bikes are wrecked and unrideable without serious maintenance and parts (yes, mine was one of them). I was wearing only a tank top and sport bra with biking shorts so my right leg, right arm, and shoulder were spewing blood from serious road rash. My teammate in the #2 position landed on her shoulder and definitely as serious soft tissue ouchies.

No broken bones, but lots of damaged equipment and skin. What kind of idiot puts their 14 year old on a vehicle capable of doing 40-50+ mph and then allows that 14 year old to take that illegal dirt bike onto a multi-use trail with a 20 mph speed limit. 🤦‍♀

As for my bike, I was in the market for a new one anyway so this is just accelerating my buying plans. But I'm going to need to walk into the lecture hall tomorrow looking like an Egyptian Mummy with all the bandages. And then will start the questions. 🤦‍♀🤦‍♀🤦‍♀
This page is a permanent link to the reply below and its nested replies. See all post replies »
ArishMell · 70-79, M
Incident show the utter stupidity and cowardince of the lout on the motorcyle - for that is what it is - and his parents who presumably bought it for him.

It also shows the stupidity of the policy that allowed electric motorcylces to be sold without eny registation as motor-vehicles, Road Fund Licence (even if low to encourage legal use of them as electric motor-vehicles) and compulsory Third Party Insurance.

In this case the rider could not possibly be insured, but even if he was he would not be covered for any loass or damage to himself because the collision was all his own, useless fault.

It's even possible although I think it is actually illegal, to modify electrically-assisted cylces to raise their low designed speed. It should be physically impossible to do that, and any attempt to do that, to sell or buy modification parts, made an offence with very high fines and (if the rider of such a vehicle causes an accident, unlimited costs.*


If I were a landscaping-contractor owning a large ride-on mower capable of maybe 10mph flat-out I would need it registered, taxed and insured to be able to drive it on public roads between sites.
If I owned a 1960s moped, managing little more than 30mph, it would be registered anyway and I'd need tax and insure its use on the road. If I were to build a large-scale miniature traction-engine (maybe 8mph at top speed), I'd need have it registered with DVLA and I'd need at least 3rd-party insurance to drive it in on the road.

So why the hell were electric bikes allowed from the start to be used un-registered, with the ownersahip of the vehicle for the time being registered as its "keeper"?



*(NB for non-UK readers. In the British legal system the types and levels of sentences and any compensation are set by the Magistrates or in Crown and Appeal Court trials the Judge, at the end of the trial, sometimes at a later hearing after time to consider background reports not trial evidence. Not called for by the victim or the prosecution in advance.)