bunsen_h: (Default)
Earlier this afternoon, I was heading westwards along my street (Norice), and was slowing to a stop behind the student driver waiting at the red light to make a left turn onto Woodroffe.  The SUV well behind me honked.  I glanced backward, then returned my attention to the important matter of signaling my turn and coming to a safe stop, centred behind the student driver.

The SUV pulled up close behind me.  Then edged fowards, partly in my lane and just to my right, so the woman could open her window and tell me that I wasn't supposed to ride across the road.  "You're supposed to walk your bike across."

I gave her a "what planet are you from" look.  "I'm a vehicle, and I have as much right to be on the road as you do."

She became more insistent.  "But you aren't supposed to ride across the road.  I'm sure of it.  I don't want you to get in trouble."

A "what colours are the moons around your planet?" look.  "Read your Driver's Handbook.  I'm a vehicle, and I have as much right to be on the road as you or any other vehicle."

"But I don't think..."

Then the light changed, the car ahead went through, and I followed it.  Carefully switched into the bike lane on Woodroffe when I was through the intersection.  I was worried that the idiot was going to pass me on my right and then cut me off, but she stayed behind me through the intersection and stayed in the regular lane.

Good grief -- if she's expecting that cyclists won't ever try to bike across roads, she's going to hit somebody.  Of the two of us, I know which one shouldn't be on the road.  How can people be so ignorant?
bunsen_h: (Default)
After helping to push several cars stuck in the T-intersection beside my house:
  • If your car is stuck in deep dry-powder snow on an icy patch, spinning your wheels at high speed doesn't help.
  • If people gather to help push your car out of the snow, any able-bodied person in the car apart from the driver should get out and help to push.  If they're not able to help push, they should at least get out of the car.  Their weight in the car doesn't help.
I'd made the mistake of leaving my snowblower outside and slightly exposed to the snow.  Snow had got into the rotor and partly melted, then re-froze, making the rotor badly unbalanced.  When I tried to run the thing, it vibrated violently and made a terrible noise.  I had to bring it inside and let the ice melt out of it, then put it back out on the porch to get cold before I ran it again to avoid getting more snow/slush/ice in it.  I managed to clear my driveway, but noticed that it had accumulated more frozen slush and ice inside the rotor.  Apparently the heat from the motor was enough to cause some melting, and that water then sprayed over the rotor and re-froze.  The snowblower is now sitting back in my entranceway, on a boot mat to collect the water.  Better that than having to mop up the water, as I did the first time today.  Live and learn.

May 2025

S M T W T F S
    123
45678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
25 262728293031

Syndicate

RSS Atom

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jul. 2nd, 2025 03:30 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios