When I first came to Belgium, I
was shocked by the ridiculous bike-paths in the land of Eddy Merckx. They are obligatory to use, even if
you might seriously endanger others, yourself or destroy your equipment. I
collected some pictures of horrible stone paved bike paths (with loose stones
of course). I especially fear those alongside front doors of houses, with no
room to go in case somebody steps out the door.
All this is even more horrible
given the "Code de la Route"
which - surprise surprise - is very much focused on cars. Thanks, Belgium. The bike paths are obligatory without exception.
What a contrast to Austria where on a road bike you are even allowed to ride
next to each other in a group on the normal road. My favourite part in the
"Code de la Route":
- "Les cyclistes
ne reçoivent
pas la priorité sur un
passage destiné aux cyclistes."
In principle the "Code de la Route" makes the use of bike path obligatory as soon as there are the
round blue road signs. However, the very same article specifies that this is
only the case if the route is "praticable".
Now, there is some room for interpretation of what is and what is not "praticable" but I generally avoid
bike paths. The result is usually the klaxon (which btw is also not allowed in such a situation according to the
Code de la Route..).
In
a few cases cars
nearly ran me over when overtaking (with some few centimetres distance)
or did break right in front of me on purpose. I was also forced to stop a
few times by
some idiots. Just ignoring is probably the best. No use arguing that
the Code de la Route makes bike paths only obligatory
if they are "praticable".
Now some examples of what is
absolutely not "praticable"
for road bikes:
|
The infamous "D7 roadsign". This bike path is still one of the better ones... |
|
Praying nobody steps out the front door. |
|
those bloody curbs ruined my wheels just after 2 years |
|
perfectly safe, perfectly "praticable" |
|
Remember, obligatory... |
|
classic |
|
another classic |
and some genuine Belgian solutions:
No comments:
Post a Comment