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I'd love to get my hands on this documentary once it's released; I've a feeling it will resonate just as true as that paragraph for my city.
We have a Return of Summer for awhile,the Weather People say it will last about 10 Days.So I was not wasting it and going on Spins on my Bike out by Clontarf to Howth on the off Road Coastal Cycleway every Day. So this Sunday I decided to go to Dun Leary/ Dunlaoghaire and Dalky on the other Side of the Bay as a Change. Loads of People Cycling now in Dublin and Yesterday was no Exception,with the Sun Shining I imagined I was on the Cote D'Azure it was so Nice. I seen two of those Dublin Vélib Bikes in Dun Leary at the Pavillons Shopping Centre they look Great very much like the ones in Paris.
Dublin City Council is putting in a New Cycle Way Next Year from Rathmines Road along the Grand Canal then over the New Sam Beckett Bridge to meet up with the Cycle Path at Fairview Park and it will be a Dedicated Cycle way of 7 K. It sounds great ,hopefully the start of Something that will grow in Years to come. But I would have preferred a more Direct Route through the City Centre instead of a Circuitous one like this. They were Congratulating themselves Yesterday when Announcing it and also moaning about spending 10 Million on it. But when it comes to Cars then they can spend 100s of Millions on M Ways and not get upset. Cycling and putting in Traffic Free Zones always get put on the long Finger as they are Afraid of Putting Car Drivers and Business Peoples Nose out of Joint by Depriving them of Parking and Driving Space.
This story is my intent is only to relay some of the wisdom I have gained In my 39 years of life (with at least 36 of those years spent riding). I've crashed my bike enough (with and without a helmet) to know that I am much better off having helmet on when I crash.
This point came crashing (literally) down on me about three weeks ago. I rode to town with my daughter in tow on the chariot trailer to drop her off at 'kind art club'. Unhooking the trailer I left it at the art farm. I live rurally in the mountains of western canada and can leave it unlocked there for days. Now, without the trailer, I tend to get a little excited and ride faster. I can ride that cool single track that presents itself on the side of the road on the way home. Adrenaline getting the better of me, I sprint to the first section. I’m still in 'road' mode with thumbs not wrapped fully around the bars so, when I hit a big rut, my handlebars are jarred instantly 90degrees to the left. My right hand is thrown off the bar and up to shoulder level.
I have that matrix moment where time stands still, I look up at my right hand, down at the turned handlebars and realize that today is a good day to be wearing a helmet. Rushing back to the now, I hit the ground hard landing on my right shoulder and rolling onto the side of my head behind my left ear. My legs come crashing hard down as I finish this high g force rolling stop from about 25-30 km/h.
I lie there for a few moments looking up at the trees. I can wiggle the toes, hands okay, head hurts, but okay...
The helmet rolled a little bit as I impacted, and that back part of my head feels slightly numb at first. I take off the helmet and it has cracked in the back. It’s done its job. The impact that it absorbed is huge...the engineer in me will create a spreadsheet to estimate this later.
That’s my story, and no, I don’t work for Giro or Bell helmets. I’m just a guy that knows his riding style and the environment that I’m in. Whether it’s sprinting for a street light in the city and my chain breaks or taking a little jump by the elementary school, riding bikes is for me – at least sometimes – has always been about finding that edge. I know myself enough to know that I should be wearing a helmet because that edge presents itself in the most unexpected places.
craig.
I ride off road motorcycles too. I believe that the additional weight of a motorcycle helmet has also caused me to hit my head more than I would without one. Having said that, I would never ride a motorcycle without a helmet.
I always try to avoid wearing them and have only used them very occasionally in the past on Touring around the Countryside. I absolutely Hate them,they seem to Insulate you from the Real World Deadening your Sensations. I actually think they are very Dangerous to use.
Motorcycle use is a different thing than Cycling it is more High Speed and Dangerous especially when Turning. I would Advocate there use for Car Drivers they are always Crashing and Killing themselves especially in Ireland. Loads of cases of Cars Driving into Walls on Straight Roads in the Early Hours in the City and Countryside and no other Vehicles involved. Inspite of having Airbags it does not seem to be able to Protect them from being Killed.
Personally, when I was bike racing in the 90's I had two friends die after hitting their heads during a crash. One was wearing an old style leather hairnet that were common in the 70's amongst bike racers. He was at the junior world championships in England on a veledrome just warming up when he fell, hit his head was in a coma for a week before he died at age 17. The friend hit a car that turned left in front of him, hit it at 70 km/hr went through the windshield - He also was in a coma for weeks, although it is questionable whether a helmet would have helped him.
To say that bikes don't go fast enough to warrant a helmet is relative. I regularly hit 70 km/h on steep hills where I live. And in my racing days we would get up to 105 km/h on mountain descents.
As I said in my original post, I'm not trying to convince anyone to wear a helmet who doesn't want to, but many slow cycling blogs tend to ridicule helmets as unnecessary, but my riding style even when I'm in slow mode dictates that a helmet is always a wise option for me.
Your points (regarding how you cycle) make my and others' point exactly. Urban/normal/everyday cycling doesn't need helmets. The whole point is that the push for helmets has proven to make cycling less safe. Cities and countries regulating its use are covering up for their failures to implement the necessary means to enable a safe environment.
Dublin Bikes is a huge step forward for us, and seems to be a real success so far. A friend of mine works in a bike shop and he's seeing a huge increase in "normal" people buying commuter bikes. Great!