@hc4361
Good point, as a general point but there was only a slim chance of me ever buzzing a deaf person as, knowing themselves to be vulnerable, they wouldn't stray across the white line, onto the part if the road marked as a cycle route. I only ever buzzed gaggles of laughing, joking, clearly not hearing impaired youths who *gave the appearance* of not caring to stick to the part of the road allocated to them.
M'lud.
Had any actual collision occurred it would be me who loses the case, due to witnesses siding with fellow trespassers but at least I'd go away knowing I was in the right, riding in my appropriate lane.
@QuizPQ
As the video clip of the pushbike at the mini roundabout proved, legal right of way is all very well but the not-stopping milk tanker will squish you, if you assert yourself, rather than take life-saving evasive action.
Likewise, at the time, Volvos were built like tanks and their owners drove accordingly. Motorbikers advised me to give them a wide berth, on roundabouts which is probably why I'm still alive. (Footnote: modern cars are designed with more skull-friendly body panels, to save lives in pedestrian impacts. For cyclists, it's pot luck where the point of contact is and it's kerbs and road furniture which you have to protect against being punted into).
Anyway, as the Dutch suburb road design style has proved, when you deliberately remove the demarkation lines between road and pavement and allow pedestrians to cross the non-road wherever they like rather than at light-controlled fixed positions, it dissolves the drivers' sense of "right of way", they slow down, pay more attention because pedestrian choices are less predictable and, having lost the urgency to reach point B, even stop to let pedestrians cross in safety.
On cycle tracks which are not rigidly partitioned by a dividing line I have no sense of "owning" a particular lane any more and take it easy when passing pedestrians.
Footnote2: I'm already seeing an Advert for cycle insurance cover, in the panel below. Oh the wonders of t'internet.
p.s. R.I.P. Bradley Wiggins' mum. Brave road cyclist to the last.