Yesterday afternoon KOS Media announced that the Highways Agency were to replace 121 signs on the A2 from Brenley Corner (Junction 7 of the M2) to Dover, next week.
This was quite a surprise.
It's not been flagged up anywhere before and there's nothing on the agency's website.
Why is this important?
When the A2 was modernised, I think some 30 years ago, some bright spark thought it would be a good idea to direct cyclists on to it.
This is a primary dual carriageway.
Effectively a motorway without the advantage of a hard shoulder.
The last place any cyclist should be riding is a quasi motorway.
But the signs are there and many unwary cyclists are led into danger.
There have been deaths.
There have been serious injuries.
But the signs are still there.
The thing is, that since those signs were installed on the modernised A2, a comprehensive network of good alternative cycle routes has been developed with the help of Spokes East Kent Cycle Campaign and Sustrans.
In fact, one of the catalysts for the creation of Spokes was the death of a young cyclist on the A2 back in the early 90s. This led to the surveying and eventual development of Regional Route 16, which runs parallel to the modern A2.
Consequently, cycling on the A2 is completely unnecessary.
So, Highways Agency, lets get those cycling signs down next week.
Oh, and Highways Agency, it would be nice if you could at least acknowledge our emails...
You do work for us you know!
Thursday, 31 May 2012
Monday, 28 May 2012
Wednesday, 16 May 2012
An Earlier Broadsheet Ode to the Joy of Cycling
We have The Times' marvellous campaign at the moment - Cities Fit For Cycling. Sadly the campaign is built on tragedy, but this single trigger event is blooming positive change.
Going through my files I re-discovered this joie de vivre piece of prose to cycling written by Tarquin Cooper (a serious adventurer currently relocated to the Austrian mountains - http://tarquincooper.wordpress.com ) that appeared in The Daily Telegraph almost two years ago.
I hope neither will object to me sharing this joyous piece with you.
It is the prescription for happiness, the panacea for illness, the
solution to global warming and the greatest invention of all time. Listen to
any cycling buff and you can be forgiven for thinking you have stumbled upon
the secret elixir of life, like a character from The Da Vinci Code.
Of
course you would be right, for the humble bicycle is not only the finest and
most enjoyable means of transport on the planet, it has the power, literally,
to revolutionise your life. Forget the financial and health benefits, it has
the ability to liberate the soul.
"When
the spirits are low," wrote Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, "just mount a
bicycle and take a spin without thought on anything but the ride you are
taking."
Its
devotees range from Zen Buddhists to George W Bush. Iris Murdoch called it the
most "civilised conveyance known to man" while celebrities from Brad
Pitt to Boris Johnson attest to its enduring appeal.
Learning
to ride is also a cherished landmark in childhood. Pushing my son down a hill
recently, I witnessed that life-changing transition from ungainly wobble to
freewheeling flight and recalled my own father's hand on my back some 25 years
earlier doing exactly the same. I don't know who was more proud when the cry
came back, "I did it, dad!"
Forget
football. Cycling should be our national sport. It brought us success in the
Beijing Olympics and gave us sporting heroes we can look up to. As the credit
crunch bites, more and more of us are rediscovering the simple joys of cycling,
whether to burn off the calories or to provide an excuse to consume them.
With
National Bike Week under way and the National Cycle Network now clocking more
than a million journeys a day, there really is no better time to join the
cycling revolution. Remember, it was while cycling that Albert Einstein came up
with the theory of relativity.
What
will it do for you?
There are many reasons to explain
cycling’s new-found popularity; fitness, fashion, affordability and our
increasing eco awareness all play their part. But riding a bike is just one of
those fundamentally enjoyable life experiences and one that can be shared by
everyone from the smallest toddler to the most bandy-legged veteran.
So
why not get on your bike and discover the buzz of the chain gang?
And here is joy:
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