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Taxi drivers
What is it with taxi drivers? I was cycling to work this morning on the
left side of a long, road-like car park, and a taxi (Skyline, Milton Keynes) was coming the other way, on the other side of the "road". All of a sudden he's veering all the way over to my side, grinning at me, forcing me right up against the parked cars. I'm not used to this sort of behaviour, so I panicked, yanked my right foot out of my pedal and slammed on my brakes because I was coming up to a junction (another car was going across the junction in front of me, he had right of way). Does anybody has any advice (not involving breaking the law) on how to deal with such vindictive drivers? -Chris |
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#2
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Chris Wheeler wrote:
What is it with taxi drivers? The same as with pretty much every other class of road user: some are exemplary drivers and some are exemplary *******. Does anybody has any advice (not involving breaking the law) on how to deal with such vindictive drivers? Dangerous driving is breaking the law. Pete. -- Peter Clinch Medical Physics IT Officer Tel 44 1382 660111 ext. 33637 Univ. of Dundee, Ninewells Hospital Fax 44 1382 640177 Dundee DD1 9SY Scotland UK net http://www.dundee.ac.uk/~pjclinch/ |
#3
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Chris Wheeler wrote:
Does anybody has any advice (not involving breaking the law) on how to deal with such vindictive drivers? Well, my advice would involve a hammer, a rusty nail and a blunt chisel; but I'm not sure it would be (entirely) legal. |
#4
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Chris Wheeler wrote:
What is it with taxi drivers? I was cycling to work this morning on the left side of a long, road-like car park, and a taxi (Skyline, Milton Keynes) was coming the other way, on the other side of the "road". All of a sudden he's veering all the way over to my side, grinning at me, forcing me right up against the parked cars. I'm not used to this sort of behaviour, so I panicked, yanked my right foot out of my pedal and slammed on my brakes because I was coming up to a junction (another car was going across the junction in front of me, he had right of way). Does anybody has any advice (not involving breaking the law) on how to deal with such vindictive drivers? Take his registration and taxi license number. If there are any witnesses, stop and ask for their contact details. Take a deep breath, chill out for a moment, and burn off the adrenaline with some hefty (but safe) sprinting. That always helps calm me down. Write to the police and the local taxi licensing authority with details. If there are no witnesses, a prosecution is unlikely; but when I had some local chav slap me across the back from an overtaking car, the police went round to both the driver's home and workplace to talk to him; he denied knowledge of the incident and "forgot" who his passenger was that day, but the police told me that he was embarrassed as hell. The taxi licensing authorities may also take a dim view of repeated reported transgressions by drivers. Next time there's a nice cycling day, get out for a brisk ride and enjoy yourself. R. |
#5
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Chris Wheeler wrote: What is it with taxi drivers? What a swine, Chris. I've had that or similar happen to me, my sympathy for your feelings. Get his number? I'd report the incident to police and the taxi company. |
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Thanks for your replies. If it happens again, I will certainly try to
get the registration number. I've been cut up by cars numerous times (I'm sure I'm not the only one). A disproportionate number of times it has been by taxi drivers. Most of the time though I think they're underestimating my speed, or they're just incredibly unobservant. This time the bloke deliberately tried to force me off my bike. I was too surprised and angry to think straight. The reason I specified "not involving breaking the law" is that everything I thought of afterwards is probably illegal. I wonder if there's such a thing as steel toe capped spuds... -Chris |
#7
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Chris Wheeler wrote:
Does anybody has any advice (not involving breaking the law) on how to deal with such vindictive drivers? Rule number 1 is to survive. He's probably only trying to scare you, not actually kill you, so your best bet is to do more or less what you did. Slow down or stop and get over to the side but leave yourself a few more inches in case he misjudges it. In particular he may have forgotten about his wing mirror so watch out for that. His goal is simply to enliven an otherwise empty existence by rattling you, so don't allow yourself to become rattled, or least to show that you're rattled. It's not personal against you; it's simply that you're vulnerable and he's a complete ****-head. The power under his right foot is the only significant thing about him. If you take it personally it can affect you for days, so don't let it. It's just one of those things that cyclists, and pedestrians sometimes, have to cope with. Obviously if you can get enough details, which is difficult in an emergency, you can try and take it further, both with the taxi company and the police. Try to get details from any witnesses if you possibly can. It's not really a taxi driver problem BTW. Just as not all cyclists run red lights or ride on the pavement, not all taxi drivers are nasty, vindictive idiots. -- Dave... |
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Chris Wheeler wrote:
I've been cut up by cars numerous times (I'm sure I'm not the only one). I can assure you you're not. The reason I specified "not involving breaking the law" is that everything I thought of afterwards is probably illegal. I wonder if there's such a thing as steel toe capped spuds... The legal route would be more satisfying if you could make it work. If the driver is prosecuted he will at the very least have several weeks of anxiety to cope with, and may even begin to think that using his taxi to intimidate vulnerable road users may not be such a good idea after all. The fantasies about what you'd like to do are part of the psychological baggage of the incident. Why should you let this moron affect you like this? He forgot all about it after 2 minutes. You're a cyclist; you coped well with an emergency that was not of your making; there's nothing further you can do this time; let it go. -- Dave... -- Dave... |
#9
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Response to dkahn400:
It's not really a taxi driver problem BTW. Just as not all cyclists run red lights or ride on the pavement, not all taxi drivers are nasty, vindictive idiots. Occasional colleague and Thoroughly Nice Bloke Martin, when he's not being an occasional colleague, is a taxi driver in Cambridge. We'd worked together quite a lot before he told me that, and he added - knowing well that I'm a cyclist - that he couldn't stand cyclists. I told him that if *I* was a cabbie in Cambridge I'd probably end up not standing cyclists, or at least a large subsection of same. Not that that's any excuse, mind, in the present context. -- Mark, UK. "CYCLIST WEDS - - News? Faith then I can't see it. Why, pray, should cyclists not wed? Is there something in the exercise of the craft, some secret vow, some occult commitment that makes the founding of a family, the cultivation of the sweet domestic arts, the cherishing of womankind (aplurally) incompatible with cyclism? Are we to infer, forsooth, that there was never any Mrs Sturmey Archer?" |
#10
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"Chris Wheeler" wrote in message Does anybody has any advice (not involving breaking the law) on how to deal with such vindictive drivers? Gun, petrol, matches, but seek legal clarification from your CAB on this one ;-) |
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