My state has a four foot rule, where drivers have to give bicyclists four feet of space when passing, and only pass when they can do so safely. Of course, many don't! And as I was out riding this past weekend, there were some crazy drivers who almost drove into oncoming traffic because they couldn't stand waiting on a bicycle. Cyclists are permitted to ride on the shoulder, if it exists, but we don't have to. And in many cases, I prefer to ride in the road rather than on a sketchy shoulder.
How about you? Do you find motorists give you plenty of room when passing or do we need to do a better job of spreading the word?
Location: Northern Florida, USA
If there is no marked bike lane then, in Florida, you have the right by law to use the entire lane; cars must provide 3 feet clearance. In the city I rarely get that much clearance and often just 6". I think MA changed from 3' to 4' clearance.
I think riding on the road is sometimes safer than riding on the trails around here - the walkers don't pay attention to what's going on around them and often have their headphones on so they don't hear you approach. Then they're frightened when you pass, even if you're careful and polite!
I think the speed limit on our trails is 15mph, but there are a few folks that I know that keep trying to get the KOMs on the trail, and they put a lot of others at risk because they only care about their KOM, not about the safety of others. So I don't ride the trails too much anymore, I mostly stick to the roads and track racing.
I live in a Mennonite area, where there are a lot of people who use bikes as their main method of transportation (and horse and buggies too), so on the rural roads, people are pretty patient. It's more towards the city that people are impatient with cyclists.
In my state, cyclists have the right-of-way at all times and are to be treated as pedestrians. They may use the entire bike lane.
But sadly, motorists can be incredibly homebrew and entitled when it comes to how they treat cyclists on the road.
Nice to always see the cautions ones, but it's about 50/50 still for how many entitled incautious people there are, that will pass you incredibly close and in unfavorable conditions.
I've had my fairshare of reckless drivers. I am not gonna blame them entirely, sometimes I am at fault too with pedestrians and when taking shortcuts but this is the first time I've heard of this rule. Worth sharing and speaking about with others
@Amanda_W
Here, in Latvia, we don't have such a specific rule/law, but once in a while, we have media campaigns (from our Road Safety Audit department) running and being targeted towards car drivers - about keeping 1.5 m distance when overtaking cyclists; which is 5 feet. "One road for all", "Closer NO!", "Break vices, don't break bones" - some of the motos.
Overall the situation on the roads here is OK, but there are some bad, impatient drivers as well. Those who are not cyclists themselves.
Merida Scultura 5000 (2015)
Merida Big Nine 400 (2019)
Location: Northern Florida, USA
On my prior northern excursion I found that my State modified their law from 3' to 4'. Overall the drivers were outstanding. Only time there was an issue occurred with cars approaching in both directions which coincided in meeting me at the same time. The car approaching from behind is supposed to slow down until they can pass while maintaining the 4 ft buffer around the bike. That is not happening enough so some closer calls on the old country roads that have 12" or less of paved shoulder to "escape" on. Thankfully, many roads I cycled on in my early years have been paved/repaved and widened. The road by my house started as dirt, then gravel with tar, and now super highway pavement. Nice and smooth for comfortable riding, but now traffic has sped up given the better road conditions so it is no safer than before except for the passing buffer which did not exist in any form when growing up.