Jump to content

Recommended Posts

On the roads section there is discussion on cyclists on the pavement 

In part this will be younger children with a parent of carer.

It's great to see so many families out on bikes but a shame that more don't make use of the wonderful traffic calmed roads.  I'm probably talking more about the Village.  Welcome views.

Also what do you reckon to Bikeability?  Have your kids done this at school?  Have you had your own, free, individual or family lessons.  I'm a big fan.

We should encourage children to cycle on the pavement!

I was recently in Japan, very refreshing to see cyclists being welcomed everywhere. When the roads were busy, it was common to see people cycling on the pavement, it never seemed to cause any issues for pedestrians. 

It feels like there's a widespread hostility toward cyclists - people seem to look for any reason to be upset about their presence. 

Infrastructure is a big one, but it would be nice if pavement riding was acceptable for when the infrastructure doesn't exist to get somewhere safely. 

Ohhh Nutty.   

The culture in Japan is all built around respect and compliance.  They even have beautiful music playing in the toilet to cover anyone's private embarrassment.  I personally would love kids to be safe riding on the pavements.  But I can't see it working here.  Only last week I just dodged a speeding cyclist a teenager who was flying down the pavement.  The road was empty at the time. The cyclist had no regard for others. Imagine the damage a speeding cyclist would cause to a small child or  elderly person. I love cyclists but I am hoping that they are going to be forced to register and get insurance.   LOL Malumbu. I await your response.

Yesterday driving down LL into Grove Vale on our way to Sainsburys, going slowly as a bus was about to depart from the Elsie Road bus stop when a young child on bike dashed across the road from Elsie Road to Kwik Fit. Child was about 3 or 4 riding a bike without  pedals. Fortunately there was a gap in the traffic otherwise the child would have been killed. Noticed an adult (father?) on bike looking to do a right turn from Elsie Road- not sure whether he had anticipated crossing with the child by his side and that the child took it upon themselves to charge across the road.  I am all for children learning how to be safe on the road but that struck me as irresponsible. I would have got off my bike and wheeled it on the pavement to the traffic lights outside the  school so both of them could cross safely. It was around 3.30 pm with all the school traffic etc,

Our 10 year old grandchild has recently graduated to a larger bike as her mother wishes her to cycle to secondary school eventually as where she lives in Durrington  Sussex  there very few bus routes to secondary schools. She rides on the pavements alone 'round the block' to give her confidence but her area is residential with light traffic and no shops, a far cry from London streets/traffic.

  • 2 weeks later...

If the road is residential with light traffic then it should be fine for children to cycle on, dependent on their age with or without adult supervision.   West Sussex offer family cycle training: https://www.westsussex.gov.uk/roads-and-travel/road-safety/one-to-one-cycle-training/

Year six's should have also had the opportunity to have cycle training at scool: https://www.westsussex.gov.uk/roads-and-travel/road-safety/cycle-safety-courses-for-schoolchildren/#level-2-term-time-course

And they also offer holiday courses and advanced children's courses: https://www.westsussex.gov.uk/roads-and-travel/road-safety/cycle-safety-courses-for-schoolchildren/bikeability-level-3-booking-form/

Finally the school should have a travel plan to reduce the reliance on being driven to school and increase active travel.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • But they were going to cut down a tree that had no notice on it ? Either way thank goodness people intervened. My total lack of confidence in Southwark tree dept is justified it would seem… 
    • Hopefully the confusion won’t lead to injury. 
    • To clarify a few points- I didn't just happen to be passing, I saw the workmen setting up equipment worryingly close to the tree from my front window, so put my shoes on and headed over there as quickly as possible just in case. Unfortunately they had already lopped a few branches off in the two minutes it took me to get there. Although I didn't see them attach a notice, the wording on the notice pictured above has the same terminology that they used with me - fungal brackets - so presumably it was them. I have no idea who removed the sign, or why. Also worth mentioning that they were third party contractors, carrying out work orders from the council. I'm a bit confused by the 'mistaken tree' comments, as Councillor Renata Hamvas posted on a Facebook thread that she had raised the issue with the relevant council officers, and that the response she received is that the tree does have a fungal infection. So there seems to be conflicting info there, and I'm concerned that the tree is still in danger.
    • To be fair, do we know who put the notice on the wrong tree? The people wielding chainsaws almost certainly won't be the experts  who identify  the problems with the trees? They just go along and hack down what they're told to hack down? I might be wrong, but whilst actual tree surgery needs expertise, I wouldn't have thought hacking down a whole tree did? Apart from knowing how to use a chainsaw, obviously.
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...