On Nov 10, 1:54 pm, "Graham" <
h2gt2g42-micenewgro...@yahoo.co.uk>
wrote:
> <
frkry...@gmail.com> wrote in messagenews:2f2607ef-72c0-425a...@googlegroups.com...
> On Saturday, November 10, 2012 5:40:20 AM UTC-5, Graham wrote:
> > "Frank Krygowski" <
frkry...@gmail.com> wrote in messagenews:00da9765-f9ed-48e5...@r5g2000yqo.googlegroups.com...
> > Well, I must say your record astonishes me. I've had two on-road moving falls in 40 years, and that may be unusually good;
>
> As I said you lead a charmed life or you are an exceptionally cautious cyclist. For those of us where the fun of cycling comes from travelling at more than a snails pace through challenging terrain life is a little more risky.
No, Graham, I don't ride at a snail's pace. Maybe I do lead a charmed
life - I couldn't disprove that, I guess - but I tend to believe in
knowledge, awareness and good judgement a lot more than I believe in
magic.
That doesn't mean I've never been lucky. One of my closest calls in
recent years was on a 20+ mph downhill on a club ride. I was all
tucked in, when a groundhog scampered out of the weeds on the right
and started sprinting downhill parallel to my path. I hit the brakes,
but for a moment he was right beside me and matching my speed. If he
had turned into me then, I might have crashed; but I did slow enough
that I dropped behind him before he cut left across my path.
I can't say I was watching specifically for groundhogs. But watching
for potholes allowed me to spot the groundhog. It would probably work
for sheep droppings, too.
> > Of course, I can post data (again!) showing that normal riders go great distances between falls, so the extant data (again!)
>
> Please don't. Forget your obsession with data. Those are only the RECORDED statistics.
The statistics they record are usually the important ones - i.e the
KSI ones. The ones they don't record are the ones that aren't
important - i.e. the "I toppled and tore my new jersey, and I needed a
band-aid too" kind.
Really, that should not be difficult to understand. Why is it that
some cyclists point to every torn jersey and band-aid as an incident
where they "might have died"?
> I guess most of the readers here who cover between 5,000 and 10,000 miles a year in all weathers and across all terrains fall much more frequently than your once every 20 years. It would not surprise me if that does not apply also to children and novices. I assume your "normal" category excludes these riders.
Any country's data on cycling tries to include _all_ cyclists. They
don't ignore a pro racer killed by a car, saying "Oh, he rides too
much to count." Besides, I would _hope_ that people who are avid,
high-mileage cyclists would be much better than average. They
certainly _should_ be, if they have any curiosity about how to stay
out of crashes!
> > But if you crash once per year, it may be advisable to figure out why you're crashing so much more than average, and what causes the crashes, and how to prevent them.
>
> The last crash was just over a year ago - a tight bend on a 20-25% mountain descent travelling at what I considered to be a safe speed for the conditions only to find just beyond the apex a herd of mountain sheep had crossed with several leaving their calling cards. Now you could say I should have anticipated that (which I might have if I had actually seen the sheep crossing) but its one of those low probability risks I am prepared to accept. The crash before was on black ice so should I not ride in winter. The two prior to that were losing my back wheel on wet leaves while climbing out of the saddle on steep climbs so should I stay clear of steep wooded climbs in the Autumn? These are risks I know exist but I take them in my persuit of the enjoyment of cycling rather than not riding at all or reducing my pace to a crawl whenever that level of risk becomes non-zero.
I guess we all have our stories to tell. I can't say much about
mountain sheep. Around here, it's Amish horse droppings instead. Ice
in the winter? Sure. Wet leaves in autumn? Hardly a surprise, and
something I've warned others about along with wet steel (e.g. manhole
covers and RR tracks). But honestly, I'd never before heard of
falling while _climbing_ because of wet leaves; I've heard of braking
and turning falls. Still, I watch carefully for such stuff and I don't
crash. Maybe I'll crash tomorrow - but I doubt it.
> > Hold on, please. If a fall is so minor that it causes no problem, why should it be held up as proof that we need armor?
>
> Why are you so incapable of nuance. Why is everything so black and white. I do not regard bruising and road rash as causing no problem. They are just injuries that do not require hospitalisation and are not recorded in your beloved statistics.
<sigh> Graham, you now seem to be constructing a "bicycling is
dangerous" argument based on phantom, unrecorded injuries. Are you
claiming that these unrecorded injuries happen only while cycling, and
that the public health people who try to assess relative danger
somehow capture _all_ the tiny scratches from other activities?
Sorry, that's silly. I can cite papers where they've looked precisely
for those sorts of injuries in cycling, as well as in other
activities, and _still_ found cycling to be very safe! (I know, you
don't want data or citations, but still....)
> My reason for wearing a helmet is to minimise whatever injuries might result from a crash regardless of their severity. I am in no way trying to suggest cycling is so inherantly dangerous as to warrant armor as you put it. Nor am I going to try and convince people that cycling is perfectly safe and that a helmet will offer no benefit whatsoever. It is personal choice.
Fine. Make your choice. If data disagrees with your choice, you're
still allowed your choice. But if data disagrees with your choice,
don't claim that data is worthless, or that phantom data proves your
choice is correct.
> All this nonesence of linking cycling helmets with walking helmets is to my mind is exactly that, nonesence. If I were to adopt your attitude and meaninglessly quote my walking experience the number of accidents I have had walking since I was a child is zero!!!!
I'm curious whether you understand that in your country (Britain,
yes?) and in mine (USA) _and_ in Canada and in Australia and in all
others for which I've seen data, cycling does seem to be safer per km
than walking. (Actually, some very recent British data puts cycling
slightly worse than walking, but some have expressed doubts. In the
other countries I've named, it's not even close.)
If, as in the U.S., walking is over three times more dangerous per km
traveled than bicycling, why are we to treat that as "nonsence" [sic]?
> > I do a column for almost every monthly club newsletter. I encourage cyclists to avoid the problems that cause the crashes.
>
> Very laudable and something we would all support. However you should not try and convince people not to wear helmets when others think they have benefit. It should be down to personal choice.
I'm encouraging others to become aware of actual facts, and think
rationally. If a person decides to wear a helmet, I do not try to
talk them out of it. In fact, on "official" club rides, I do wear a
helmet, just so I won't have to spend the ride arguing about the
topic. But I feel this is a discussion group. If people want to
discuss the topic here, I'll certainly discuss it.
> > To me, that's much more sensible than saying "Bicycling is very dangerous, but as long as you wear a helmet you'll be OK."
>
> I and others are not saying this and again we are back to nuance. You will insist in this black and white argument which gets us nowhere. All I am saying is that if you ride a bike you have an above zero chance of a fall or a crash resulting in some form of injury and that chance increases the more "enthusiastically" you ride your bike or with the locality in which you ride it. I encompass, weather, terrain and speed in my definition of enthusiasm.
Hmm. I wonder how you'd feel about helmets for cross-country running
races. You know, up hills and down, grassy fields and rocky woods...?
> Further I simply go on to say that, in my opinion, wearing a helmet has reduced the level of injury I have sustained in several of the crashes I have had.
>
> To me it would me more sensible to say "that in certain types of crashes a helmet could reduce the severity of your injuries and you have to be the judge of whether, for your style of riding, that it is worth any inconvenience you might perceive in wearing one". I do not think any of the guys who have joined in here would claim that a helmet would do anything for you if you were hit full on by a fast moving vehicle.
Well, that last sentence counts as progress in my mind! Not sure if
you're aware, but in American papers, even if a cyclist is hit head on
by a speeding dump truck, they're sure to say "He wasn't wearing a
helmet" if they can.
(Oddly enough, in at least two local fatalities, they failed to
mention "they cyclist _was_ wearing a helmet." Almost seems like they
want to protect the myth!)
- Frank Krygowski