If you have to put up a sign asking cyclists to please use your shared pedestrian path, you've designed it wrong.

As a commuter cyclist, I want to get from point A to point B as fast as I can, without dying. Just like a car driver.

When given the option of riding on the road verge, or weaving in and out of people walking their dogs with headphones on and children walking to school and friends walking along chatting to each other, and giving way to cars at every little side road, then I choose the road verge. So do people on road bikes zipping past me at >30 km/hr.

I really like the separated cycleways that Christchurch city has built. They're safe and fast and well used.

I worry about the recent proliferation instead of "shared paths" in new road developments which combine cyclists with pedestrians and discourage bikes from being on the road at all.

Shared paths are useful for children on bikes, if we teach them how to ride around pedestrians, but they're impractical for an adult cyclist trying to travel 20–30 km/hr.

Please, let's keep investing in separated cycleways for cycle commuters. That's what will get more commuters out of cars, not shared paths.

#cycleways #bikeTooter #nz #biking

@joncounts Bikes at ~20Km/h mix far better with cars at ~40Km/h than with pedestrians at ~5Km/h. Shared paths are dangerous and a nuisance, except where they're rarely used.

I mean, locally, there is one 900 metre length of shared path on which you rarely encounter any other users, and I sometimes use that; but generally, the road feels safer and is faster.

@simon_brooke Yes, that's my approach too. I'll use shared paths when there are hardly any pedestrians on them, or when the road is stupidly dangerous. Otherwise, I tend to zip along using the road verge.

@joncounts I prefer to stay in primary position except where the traffic is congested enough to be slow, or else light enough that there are clear sightlines. Keeping in to the side of the road invites drivers to pass you close, which is dangerous.

However, it has to be said that here (Scotland) driving standards have improved remarkably over the past fifteen years, and it's now rare that a driver will pass you in the same lane, which makes riding on the road much better...

@simon_brooke
Oh, that just sounds like a dream. We aren't there yet in Aotearoa. I get grief for using a whole lane even when there are two in the direction of travel.and the other one is empty
@joncounts

@RedRobyn @joncounts It wasn't always this way! Like I say, fifteen years ago things were very different.

I'm not sure what's been the main cause of change. I've not been aware of very strong 'public information' campaigns. But more people are cycling, and, with electric bikes, more people are cycling in 'ordinary clothes'.

Roads around here are mostly 60MPH (~100km/h) speed limit, but cycling on them is now mostly pleasant and very rarely frightening.

@simon_brooke @RedRobyn That’s great to hear! There’s hope for NZ that there could be a big shift in driving habits when the conditions are right.