I’m so sorry to hear about that accident and wish the best for all the individuals involved. I can imagine how much that could shake up the local cycling community, even those not directly involved.
Like many worthy activities, cycling has some inherent risks that come with it (obviously) and different kinds of riding come with different risk profiles. Personally, I believe group road riding, especially group rides with drafting, has pros and cons. Obvious pros include camaraderie and the group being easier for cars to see. For people that care, it’s also a lot easier to go “faster” by sucking someone else’s wheel. For me, as someone that likes to enjoy the view while I’m riding, having my wheel five inches from someone’s rear wheel is more of a con, even if my average speed goes up when compared with a solo ride or a group ride where drafting is less prioritized. I just have to look right down at their wheel to feel safe. I remember one ride through a pretty part of the Salinas valley and the whole group was drafting off of a fast tandem… and I just looked at someone’s back tire for 30 minutes straight. Not exactly my ideal! But other people liked getting the speed bump. I don’t mean to knock hauling ass as a group! I totally think it’s fun to try to go fast (obviously a relative term). But most days I actually enjoy being a little spread out where everyone can see in front of them and their own thus saving my vocal cords from all the “car back,” “car up” yelling and need for constant hand signals flagging random road detritus.
I’ve definitely hit potholes with my larger tire bikes (38mm to 48mm tires) and thought “I’m glad that wasn’t on the 28mm tires on my road bike!” but I also think that every situation is different and blanket statements about how something would have played out differently with different gear are hard to make and probably not very useful, given the multitude of variables involved. My road bike has about 2500 miles on it and I’ve never crashed it once. But that’s just luck of the draw, NOT because of skill. I’ve definitely had to hop the road bike over potholes I’ve seen too late! But those were potholes I could see, and I wasn’t drafting, so even that was situationally specific. I think if people are tightly grouped and someone hits a significant pothole head on, that’s going to cause an abrupt change to the lead bike’s speed and trajectory, even if the person stays in the saddle. Once bikes start piling up, longer wheel bases and fatter tires (or steel frames, lugs or the latest Riv handlebar) are unlikely to make much of a difference. That being said, sure, if I was riding along alone and hitting a pothole that I hadn’t seen… I’d definitely rather do that with 48mm tires than 28mm, any day of the week. Then again, it would be even better to hit it with my hardtail with 2.6” tires on 700c wheels and a suspension fork. And even BETTER would be a full suspension mountain bike that wouldn’t even notice the pothole. All of these things exist on a continuum. Most people don't do group road rides on FS MTBs.
Unfortunately, accidents do happen and in different situations, slight changes in inputs could result in very different outcomes. But I like to think that most of the time, if we go out there with an attitude of reasonable caution, we’ll have a pretty good chance of coming home with a smile on our face. And for me, for most rides, that means I’m gonna grab a steel bike with big tires and, for me, ride at a speed I can sustain myself rather than by riding someone’s wheel. Let’s me see what’s going on better and enjoy the view.
Wear helmets. Wear visible clothing. Be cautious. Hope for the best. Have fun. Be kind. Pet your cat.
- gabe
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This has really shaken our cycling community. To be riding on a normal summer night and then this…we are all reeling, whether we knew him or not. It seems like one of those things that cannot be avoided; the group had good etiquette and the hazard was called out - what else can you do?
I wondered whether equipment could have saved him from this. I don’t know what tires he was running, but I wonder if wide tires and upright bars could have withstood that pothole. I wondered if my Charlie Gallop would have sailed over that hole or if it just wouldn’t have mattered. I do have a photo of the pothole with someone’s Garmin jammed into it for scale, if we all want to see it. I thought about being leaned over with more weight forward of the bike, on a bike with a shorter wheelbase. Could that have made him more at risk to crash? Did it make him more likely to be pitched headfirst?
I think about safety more as I age. Some injuries you don’t get a second chance to come back from. I love to group ride, but if I thought I would one day wake up a quadriplegic, I wouldn’t say it was worth it. This man was set to ride coast to coast with a friend of mine next summer. He was a good, strong rider and a nice man. Just one fluke on his ride and now everything has changed. It has haunted me since I heard.
On Jun 22, 2026, at 2:26 AM, Joe Bernard <joer...@gmail.com> wrote:
I agree with Valerie. Theoretically - in my mind - my long flexy Clem with slack fork angle, high bars and fat tires is more likely to push through a pothole than a short-coupled aluminum or carbon road bike with steep carbon fork, low bars and skinny tires, but the element of surprise is the dealbreaker. If I don't see that hazard 'til my front wheel is in it I'm not having any kind of "pull up and back" reaction, my full forward steam is going straight in. Conclusion: A different bike in the same situation would have crashed, too.
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… The most talented, most miles ridden, most vertical feet ascended, worldwide climbing mega-achiever man I’ve ever ridden with would tell me that he considered bike paths the biggest danger because of random holes, two-way direction, people of various skill levels, and many not paying attention. He was supreme at looking ahead and pointing out hazards. He died on a tour while on the lead out bike path where he did not see the fixed divider pole in the middle of the path. Crashed, flipped, and broke his neck. My guess is that the group obscured his view and he had no time to react when he saw it. He may have been riding adjacent to someone and chatting on the carefree-seeming start to the day.


On Jun 22, 2026, at 10:18 PM, ascpgh <asc...@gmail.com> wrote:
Firstly, and above all, may those injured have good and speedy recoveries. To you as well, Leah. Who you are and what you do has been hurt, even if you weren't there. May your recovery be full and timely also.
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On Jun 23, 2026, at 1:41 AM, Joe Bernard <joer...@gmail.com> wrote:
I don't understand how a weekly group ride would be surprised by a pothole. If you're out there head down and hammering so fast that you can't adequately worn of a hazardous on a familiar road, you're doing something wrong.
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On Jun 23, 2026, at 9:28 AM, Mathias Steiner <mathiass...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Jun 22, 2026, at 10:18 PM, ascpgh <asc...@gmail.com> wrote:
Firstly, and above all, may those injured have good and speedy recoveries. To you as well, Leah. Who you are and what you do has been hurt, even if you weren't there. May your recovery be full and timely also.
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On Jun 23, 2026, at 6:00 AM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:There are more potholes than anyone can even count on Michigan roads. We don’t ride the same routes every time. The hole was called out but partially obscured by shadows. It did not even look like all that menacing:
On Jun 23, 2026, at 6:13 PM, Ted Durant <tedd...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Jun 24, 2026, at 1:25 PM, George Schick <bhi...@gmail.com> wrote:
!!!! I missed that in the OP! Since that was the longest daylight of the year I hope "at night" simply means during early evening hours when it was still daylight. Otherwise, it'd just be asking for trouble.
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Almost 2 years ago (this happened in July) I was riding a paved bikes only path (no cars = no problems, right?) and managed to get in a pretty bad accident. I was drafting behind a couple of riders that had passed me going just a little faster, so I thought I'd tuck in behind them, because I'd done that with other riders in the past and had fun.
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On Jun 24, 2026, at 10:27 PM, Christopher Young <nmtr...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Jun 25, 2026, at 9:55 PM, Jay <jason....@gmail.com> wrote:
I think it's wise to revaluate a situation after a turning point. In some situations it doesn't mean we run away from something, but consider what makes sense for yourself, taking into account some new information or perspective. You assessment of the women's group ride, vs. the MNR ride, is so practical.
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One of the first things they told me when I joined was “Don’t cross wheels. If you do, YOU’LL be going down.” I’ve seen it once or twice and it was 100% true. I don’t know why but I know it holds.
All:
First and foremost, my thoughts and prayers are with those who were injured, as well as those who witnessed the crashes. That kind of experience can be very unsettling.
As I approach my 59th trip around the sun, I’ve noticed that I ride with a greater sense of caution, particularly around cars, but also increasingly around younger riders on electric bikes. (Here in NJ, licensure and insurance requirements are now being introduced for riders 15 and under.)
I’ve always enjoyed group rides in the past, but over time I’ve grown more concerned about the variability in skills within the group. It may just be my perception, but with the rise of Zwift and indoor training, riders are often stronger and faster without necessarily having the same level of real-world bike handling skills. That mismatch can make group riding feel unpredictable, and at times, risky.
I live along what Bikesnob NYC calls the “Great Fredscape” out of NYC, and I’ve had more than a few encounters with large, aggressive groups heading toward Nyack. To be candid, those situations sometimes make me more uneasy than riding in traffic. There can be a strong “pack mentality,” and I’ve experienced moments where it felt like there was little regard for surrounding riders—being pushed toward curbs or obstacles.
I think it is a natural progression to be more risk adverse as we age, and presumably become wiser, although my wife may beg to differ on the wiser note.
My advice, follow your instincts, be cautious, but never lose the joy of being on a bicycle.
Kindest regards,
Jay LePree
Demarest, NJ
On Jun 26, 2026, at 8:13 AM, Jay LePree <jayml...@gmail.com> wrote:
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On Jun 26, 2026, at 1:36 PM, Leah Peterson <jonasa...@gmail.com> wrote:the dog was right on Sue’s wheel and I just exploded; I don’t even know what came over me. I was so angry and I just screamed. Like, the most horrific, angry, primal scream you can imagine. The kind of scream that you’d never let anyone hear you make. I yelled so hard my throat burned for the rest of that ride. It was, “GET OUT OF HERE NOW!” but came out more like..well, snarling… but it was a language the dog understood. Stunned, it just stopped, right there on the highway and looked at us.
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On Jun 26, 2026, at 3:32 PM, George Schick <bhi...@gmail.com> wrote:
Back in the day, so to speak, I rode routes along country roads where there were a few dogs here and there who would run out and chase me. I tried everything from yelling to throwing rocks I'd carried in a fanny pack to swinging at them with a Silca frame pump I'd reconfigured with thin wall electrical conduit to replace the plastic. Nothing really worked very well. Then I got the idea to carry bits of beef jerky in the fanny pack that I'd throw whenever a dog came running out, kinda like the chaff that air force planes use when their automatic detection systems encounter a missile. It worked great! The dogs would immediately stop to sniff and see what that was and, of course, chomp in down. Next time down that stretch of road the dog would come out with its head up instead of down and snarling to see what treat it was going to get ;-).
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On Jun 26, 2026, at 3:30 PM, Garth <gart...@gmail.com> wrote:Besides purposely running into stuff and all that, there's nothing like riding rollers for riding in a straight line and getting to know how every little movement on the bike can change the bikes direction, and how to correct your line with minimal movement. I know most people love their trainers that don't involve the front wheel or actual riding, but rollers are for riders who like the feel of riding while it's snowing outside. Once you hit the road your ability to ride straight and narrow is easy.