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free sociable cycle ride Sat March 11th


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We have just 1 ride for Mar 11th, starting from Canada Water. There will be lots of places on this ride. Nevertheless please register on Eventbrite so we can limit numbers, link: < https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/canada-water-to-north-greenwicho2-loop-tickets-573233776657 > If you cannot make it, please cancel so that someone else can take the place. Even at the last minute it is worth cancelling (How to cancel )


Ride Info. Canada Water to North Greenwich Loop


Start/finish at Canada Water, 10am meet up, finish 12.30 to 1pm. Can also join ride at Cutty Sark, next to Foot Tunnel; be there by 10.20. Bruce Leading.


We are going to ride the route from 11 Feb in reverse. Outward leg will use the new segregated lanes along the A200/A206. So not very scenic, but a good route to learn.


Return will use the Thames path, so lots of see round the N Greenwich peninsula to the O2 and through Greenwich and Deptford. Coffee stop probably at the O2 on return leg.


This ride is nearly all off road or on segregated lanes. Also no hills. Makes it a good ride even for relatively inexperienced cyclists. Route map at



These rides are part of the Healthy Riders group, organised by Bruce Lynn on behalf of Southwark Cyclists https://southwarkcyclists.org.uk/. Like everything else we do, our activities are all free. We co-operate with other London Cycling Campaign groups like Greenwich Cyclists. The LCC details are here: https://lcc.org.uk/.

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    • People should abide by the rules obviously and should have lights and reflectors (which make them perfectly visible, especially in a well lit urban area). Anything they choose to do over and above that is up to them. There is advisory guidance (as posted above). But it's just that, advisory. People should use their own judgement and I strongly oppose the idea that if one doesn't agree with their choice, then they 'get what the deserve' (which is effectively what Penguin is suggesting). The highway code also suggest that pedestrians should: Which one might consider sensible advice, but very few people abide by it, and I certainly don't criticise them where they don't (I for one have never worn a luminous sash when walking 🤣).
    • But there's a case for advisory guidance at least, surely? It's a safety issue, and surely just common sense? What do other countries do? And are there any statistics for accidents involving cyclists which compare those in daylight and those in dusk or at night, with and without street lighting?
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