Driver Repays a Kindness—Breaks Stereotype
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Driver Repays a Kindness—Breaks Stereotype
Every once in a while, a driver does something nice for a cyclist. That happened to me yesterday.
I was in foggy Sky Londa in the Santa Cruz Mountains, at the summit of Highway 84, ready for a speedy descent back to sunny Woodside. 84 is a nice, twisty road with excellent pavement a fun and fast ride if you enjoy technical descents. And I do.
CA-84 from Skyline Blvd to Portola Rd, Santa Cruz Mountains, California
I often catch up to motorists on the way down 84, so it's nice to ride this road on weekdays when there's little traffic. But as I'm riding the straight and flat upper section, I hear a "honk honk" behind me. It's a white pickup truck, wanting to pass. Drat! Do I pull over and let him pass, only to ride his bumper? Or do I stay in the lane and prevent him from passing?
Thinking it's better to have a boring ride than an angry truck driver, I pull over immediately, and he passes.
Of course, I catch up with him after a couple of curves. I keep a respectful distance of a few car lengths, resigned to completing the descent at a slower page.
But then something I never expected to happen, happens. The truck driver pulls over and signals me to pass.
Amazing! A pickup truck driver giving way for a faster cyclist.
Kindness repaid. Stereotype broken.
It almost makes up for all those other pickup truck drivers who yell insults, hurl things from their opened windows, "teach me a lesson" with a close pass, or simply raise their middle fingers.
Almost.
I was in foggy Sky Londa in the Santa Cruz Mountains, at the summit of Highway 84, ready for a speedy descent back to sunny Woodside. 84 is a nice, twisty road with excellent pavement a fun and fast ride if you enjoy technical descents. And I do.
CA-84 from Skyline Blvd to Portola Rd, Santa Cruz Mountains, California
I often catch up to motorists on the way down 84, so it's nice to ride this road on weekdays when there's little traffic. But as I'm riding the straight and flat upper section, I hear a "honk honk" behind me. It's a white pickup truck, wanting to pass. Drat! Do I pull over and let him pass, only to ride his bumper? Or do I stay in the lane and prevent him from passing?
Thinking it's better to have a boring ride than an angry truck driver, I pull over immediately, and he passes.
Of course, I catch up with him after a couple of curves. I keep a respectful distance of a few car lengths, resigned to completing the descent at a slower page.
But then something I never expected to happen, happens. The truck driver pulls over and signals me to pass.
Amazing! A pickup truck driver giving way for a faster cyclist.
Kindness repaid. Stereotype broken.
It almost makes up for all those other pickup truck drivers who yell insults, hurl things from their opened windows, "teach me a lesson" with a close pass, or simply raise their middle fingers.
Almost.
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Unheard of and awesome!
Imagine what he told his family over dinner...
Imagine what he told his family over dinner...
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Bad news seems to be way more attention getting than good news. I'm happy to see good interaction between people.
Just a few days ago I was riding the bike in town when approaching an intersection to a small street, a pickup was signalling a turn in front of me. He was towing a large Cigarette type speed boat from the town launch ramp a few hundred feet away. I stopped and waved him through which momentarily made his life easier. I got a friendly wave in return and maybe as he encounters cyclists on the road he will see them as considerate human beings. I grew up in a rural and agricultural town and consideration was part of living in such a place. This is called building community. I'm appalled at the behavior reported every day in the news. I suppose such reported antisocial behavior is due to a feeling of being passed over and disenfranchised by society.
Just a few days ago I was riding the bike in town when approaching an intersection to a small street, a pickup was signalling a turn in front of me. He was towing a large Cigarette type speed boat from the town launch ramp a few hundred feet away. I stopped and waved him through which momentarily made his life easier. I got a friendly wave in return and maybe as he encounters cyclists on the road he will see them as considerate human beings. I grew up in a rural and agricultural town and consideration was part of living in such a place. This is called building community. I'm appalled at the behavior reported every day in the news. I suppose such reported antisocial behavior is due to a feeling of being passed over and disenfranchised by society.
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Love hearing that!
My club has more positive encounters than negative - cars waving our group through 4-way stops, etc. But the best...
... on our weekend ride a while back - same route every Saturday; 60-mile suburban to rural route - 12-15 of us got passed by a county cop. He had to gun it and pass on a double yellow. One mile later, we see him - sitting in the intersection where we have a stop sign, cross-traffic does not. Blue lights on - waves us by. He passes us again - blocks another intersection. Last time was where the road dumps into a 4-lane. He was there, blocking only the south bound lanes - he knew we were turning right/south. Only thing missing was a helicopter overhead. Felt like pros.
We considered posting on the department's FB page - thanking him. Decided there was a chance he'd get in trouble from his captain... and definitely would catch hell from local non-cyclists. Our waves had to suffice.
My club has more positive encounters than negative - cars waving our group through 4-way stops, etc. But the best...
... on our weekend ride a while back - same route every Saturday; 60-mile suburban to rural route - 12-15 of us got passed by a county cop. He had to gun it and pass on a double yellow. One mile later, we see him - sitting in the intersection where we have a stop sign, cross-traffic does not. Blue lights on - waves us by. He passes us again - blocks another intersection. Last time was where the road dumps into a 4-lane. He was there, blocking only the south bound lanes - he knew we were turning right/south. Only thing missing was a helicopter overhead. Felt like pros.
We considered posting on the department's FB page - thanking him. Decided there was a chance he'd get in trouble from his captain... and definitely would catch hell from local non-cyclists. Our waves had to suffice.
Last edited by Zaskar; 08-21-19 at 06:46 AM.
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Motorists on gravel frequently allow cyclists to pass.
-Tim-
-Tim-
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...But then something I never expected to happen, happens. The truck driver pulls over and signals me to pass.
Amazing! A pickup truck driver giving way for a faster cyclist.
Kindness repaid. Stereotype broken.
It almost makes up for all those other pickup truck drivers who yell insults, hurl things from their opened windows, "teach me a lesson" with a close pass, or simply raise their middle fingers.
Almost.
Amazing! A pickup truck driver giving way for a faster cyclist.
Kindness repaid. Stereotype broken.
It almost makes up for all those other pickup truck drivers who yell insults, hurl things from their opened windows, "teach me a lesson" with a close pass, or simply raise their middle fingers.
Almost.
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Yeah, probably. Although perhaps a generic - "Thanks officer X for looking out for our cycling group this afternoon!"
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Love hearing that!
My club has more positive encounters than negative - cars waving our group through 4-way stops, etc. But the best...
... on our weekend ride a while back - same route every Saturday; 60-mile suburban to rural route - 12-15 of us got passed by a county cop. He had to gun it and pass on a double yellow. One mile later, we see him - sitting in the intersection where we have a stop sign, cross-traffic does not. Blue lights on - waves us by. He passes us again - blocks another intersection. Last time was where the road dumps into a 4-lane. He was there, blocking only the south bound lanes - he knew we were turning right/south. Only thing missing was a helicopter overhead. Felt like pros.
We considered posting on the department's FB page - thanking him. Decided there was a chance he'd get in trouble from his captain... and definitely would catch hell from local non-cyclists. Our waves had to suffice.
My club has more positive encounters than negative - cars waving our group through 4-way stops, etc. But the best...
... on our weekend ride a while back - same route every Saturday; 60-mile suburban to rural route - 12-15 of us got passed by a county cop. He had to gun it and pass on a double yellow. One mile later, we see him - sitting in the intersection where we have a stop sign, cross-traffic does not. Blue lights on - waves us by. He passes us again - blocks another intersection. Last time was where the road dumps into a 4-lane. He was there, blocking only the south bound lanes - he knew we were turning right/south. Only thing missing was a helicopter overhead. Felt like pros.
We considered posting on the department's FB page - thanking him. Decided there was a chance he'd get in trouble from his captain... and definitely would catch hell from local non-cyclists. Our waves had to suffice.
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Yeah, divide and conquer. It's the cookie gif. And when the culture is degraded past a certain point, game theory dictates that courtesy is a liability...
Last edited by Kimmo; 08-21-19 at 07:30 PM.
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