(Picture from here.)
I’ve been biking in Boston for the last three years
via the Hubway system.
Hubway is a bike rental system. You find a corral
where the bikes are located, pick one and rent it and then drop off at a corral
near your destination. Since I come into Boston on the train, I only had two
choices: one of those collapsible bikes or the Hubway. The train won’t allow
regular bikes during my commute time.
It’s sort of a choice between the sublime and the ridiculous.
The collapsible bikes are pleasant, light and as nice to ride as a regular
bike. But they’re expensive and once you bring the bike in you’re committed to
riding the bike out again.
Remember those clunky bikes you rode when you were
eight? Coaster brakes, three speeds—and only two worked—balloon tires fit for
the moon and it outweighed you by ten pounds? That’s a Hubway bike. They have
hand brakes instead of coaster brakes but the rest is much the same. They’re
built to be tough. Elegance and pleasantries are distant luxuries. But they cost $85/year for an unlimited
number of 30 minute rides. There are a bunch of corrals near the endpoints of
my commute and if it rains in the middle of the day I don’t have to get the
bike home somehow.
Ridiculous wins again.
So, over the last three years I’ve seen a lot of
miscreant biking.
The hierarchy of vehicles in Boston goes cars to
pedestrians to bicycles. The peds might disagree with this. I have seen a man
in the middle of green lit lane staring at the oncoming cars
and daring them to run him down. I take
that as evidence that at least in the mind of some pedestrians they are on top.
Still, I have to give it to the cars. The old kinetic energy = ½ mv**2 still
holds better for cars, given their mass and
velocity.
In the hierarchy of bikes, it starts with the Olympic
multithousand dollar bikes ridden by people wearing not much more than an oil
slick, the plethora of medium cost bikes, collapsible and then Hubway.
Yup: bottom of the barrel again.
I’ve come up with some rules by which one might
bike in Boston and live to tell the take.
Rule Number 1: Wear a Helmet
Really. This one should be obvious but I see about
half of the bicyclists without them. I mean it won’t protect you from broken
bones or wrenched ligaments but it will keep your noggin alive. Isn’t that what
it’s all about? My Dad used to say as long as he had his right eye, right hand
and his brain intact, he wanted to live. And the eye and hand were optional.
I did know one bicyclist who didn’t wear a helmet
because he said it made him more wary of the traffic. He also said that he
shouldn’t wear a helmet because it was the cars’ fault. If it wasn’t for them
he wouldn’t need it.
The nice thing about helmets is it protects the
stupid and smart equally. It’s a democratic safety measure. If you make a
mistake—and all of us have done that—it helps you. If the other guy makes a mistake, it still helps you.
Yeah. Helmets are a pain. So are concussions.
Hell, you could make a case for pedestrians to
wear a helmet. They’re the ones that get hit the most. Not drivers, though. If
airbags, seat belts and crumple zones don’t save you, nothing will.
Rule Number 2: Pay Attention
The thing about riding around Boston is that nobody is looking. They don’t see you.
They don’t even look up. When I’m riding and run into a situation, nine times
out of ten it’s because somebody wasn’t paying attention. They were arguing
with someone next to them, listening to music, yelling into a cell phone,
arguing with their child. And then there were the pedestrians who weren’t
looking either.
Nobody evades physics. The sharp pants and
teardrop helmet are not going to save you if you’re not looking where you’re
going. Or, worse, you’ve made the decision to make a curl around a pedestrian
with half an inch to spare and they suddenly turn towards you. It’s not their problem. It’s yours.
And while we’re talking about physics, remember
that old KE=½ mv**2? Cars have both ends of that equation. They are your
predator. You should feel about them the way gazelles feel about a lions. Moral
superiority has no effect on physics. You might be right turning into traffic
the correct way and still get squished. We’ll put “He was right” on your
tombstone.
Rule Number 3: Survival Trumps Traffic Rules
It only takes a drop of quinine to spoil a bowl of
ice cream. It only takes a few idiots to mess up traffic—driver, pedestrian or
bicyclist.
I have absolutely no qualms about running a red
light or slipping through stopped traffic. That said, if you decide to do this
you are in the wrong. You have no special dispensation because you’re a
bicyclist so someone obeying traffic has the perfect right to give you the
finger. But, then, if you were paying
attention (See rule 2) you wouldn’t have cut them off and put yourself and
them in danger.
Traffic rules are not bad things and not things to
be ignored without thought. If I come up into an intersection that has a red
light on four sides to let pedestrians cross the intersection, I don’t have a
problem going through it. But—and this is a big but—I have no right to put
people in danger when I do so. It’s incumbent on me to go through safely.
(Again, see rule 2)
Survivorship doesn’t just mean the cyclist. It
means everybody concerned. It means stop the bike when it’s clear you can’t get
through without hitting someone. It doesn’t mean plow ahead they’ll get out of
the way because slowing down will bring down your time. It means going slow
over bridges and hanging behind a pedestrian until it’s safe to pass. It doesn’t
mean yelling at them to get out of your way.
Rule Number 4: You Are Not That Important
Yeah, yeah. You want to make your train. You want
to shave a few seconds off your time. You want to get a good workout and look
good doing it.
So what?
If you’ve caused a driver to brake unnecessarily
or a pedestrian to run to get out of the way or made another cyclist who had
right of way stop to avoid hitting you, you
messed up! It’s not their fault. It’s yours.
Get over it. Cope. Don’t give them the finger. If
you’re lucky enough not to hit somebody or get hit, take it as a lesson and
quit doing it. There’ll be another train. Those seconds were eaten up by the
stoplight anyway. Ride a little bit further to make up the workout.
Rule Number 5: Don’t Do Anything Stupid
Emblazoned in my mind is a woman I saw going up
Broadway in Cambridge on the wrong side of the street, without a helmet and carrying
a puppy. I am not making any part of this up.
I see people willfully doing really dumb things
all the time. Riding up Charles Street the wrong way. I’m not against
disobeying traffic rules (See rule 3) but Charles Street, Boston, is a hot
street. You are asking for trouble. Remember KE=½ mv**2? That’s velocity squared. Which means if the car is
coming towards you at 30 and you’re traveling towards it at 15, the velocity of
impact is 45. If it’s the other way, the velocity of impact is 15. 225 is a lot
less than 2025.
These are my rules. They all apply to me—at one
time or another I’ve violated all of them. But that’s no reason to continue the
violation.
When I was learning to fly, one of the lessons was
about not being stupid. Every risk is statistical. So if you act irresponsibly
there’s a significant chance you’ll get away with it. The tendency is, then, to
downgrade the risk.
But the risk hasn’t changed. If there’s a 30% risk
you’re going to get clobbered by the oncoming truck and it misses it doesn’t
change the risk the next time. It’s still 30%. The only change is you have
decided the risk doesn’t apply to you.
Physics hasn’t changed. Physics always wins.
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