The Random Turn – The Book of Ninja Styles

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Viewing 15 posts - 1 through 15 (of 38 total)
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  • #931955
    Terpfan
    Participant

    I was chatting with my girlfriend who occassionally jogs on parts of the MVT about bikes passing her. She runs with her headphones in, but is generally cognizant of surroundings and wears bright colored running gear. Anyway, she told me she normally can’t hear people saying ‘on your left’ but has no problem hearnig the bells. I think that’s a pitch/intonation situation. For what it’s worth, I started only using my bell for runners and realized I was getting a much better acknowledgement rate than saying on your left.

    #931956
    txgoonie
    Participant

    +1 for the bell vs. verbal warning. I was riding on the MVT on the part near the airport right next to GW Parkway. Called my pass to another cyclist and he yelled at me to give a warning. (I’m not sure what his problem was as I had waited till we both had passed a runner to perform the pass more safely instead of zooming past, I gave him a wide berth and nobody was coming in the opposing direction. ?? *Sigh* Anyway…) Like I said, I did give the warning (as I always do) but with the rush-hour traffic going by, he didn’t hear me.

    It does bear mentioning that the other cyclist was a Biker Ninja! It wasn’t quite dark yet, however I had my rear blinkie, reflective belt and headlamp on (low). The other cyclist didn’t have any safety gear on at all! When you’re on the trail with dense traffic blinding you, it can get a little dicey seeing stuff in front on you. I’ve definitely had to swerve suddenly b/c I can’t distinguish a dark figure in front of me from a shadow.

    #931957
    Dirt
    Participant

    I’m really lucky to have pretty good hearing. I’m able to hear the shuffling of feet given off by the runner up to the 1958 “Miss Pay Your Personal Property Tax” pageant from a good distance. I’ve also gotten used to her stopping and making herself as wide as possible when she figures out that a bike is approaching. She hasn’t yelled at me in a while. I’m beginning to think she doesn’t love me anymore. I thought today was gonna be a good day for her to comment, since I hadn’t seen her in a while.

    All joking aside… She and her dog walking friend are a regular part of my commutes these days. It is cool that they’re out and being active… even if they seem to actively seek out opportunities to cause problems with cyclists.

    Ride where they’re not!

    Pete

    #931958
    americancyclo
    Participant

    @pfunkallstar 10128 wrote:

    As we approached the split on the wooden deck

    I had a daylight jogger pull that on me on the way home yesterday at the bridge over spout run.
    Most joggers pick visual cues as their turnaround point. My spidey sense always starts tingling at the beginning or end of a bridge, cross roads, or sign posts.

    #931959
    paulg
    Participant

    I heard the term ‘Crazy Ivan’ used to describe the Ninja U turn and it’s always stuck with me. Seems appropriate. (Not sure what a Crazy Ivan is? watch the Hunt for Red October with Sean Connery doing his Scottish/Russian accent or just go to Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baffles_%28submarine%29 it’s a good cold war flick)

    #931961
    baiskeli
    Participant

    Not quite a ninja story, but I once encountered two joggers, both with headphones, at night, running in the bike lane on Fairfax Drive.

    Love the term “Crazy Ivan!” It’s why I always give pass warnings. I see it in non-jogging pedestrians too, and even cyclists.

    #931963
    pfunkallstar
    Participant

    @baiskeli 10139 wrote:

    Not quite a ninja story, but I once encountered two joggers, both with headphones, at night, running in the bike lane on Fairfax Drive.

    Love the term “Crazy Ivan!” It’s why I always give pass warnings. I see it in non-jogging pedestrians too, and even cyclists.

    Oh man Crazy Ivan is going into my Encyclopedia-biketanica stat. I’ve tried the bell thing but have gotten a so-so response from it. Usually my baritone barking is more effective. Also my thumbs were ruined by Space Invaders. On a serious note I had my shoulder go out again on the ride home yesterday and had to one-arm it all the way home -lame.

    #931964
    Dirt
    Participant

    @paulg 10136 wrote:

    I heard the term ‘Crazy Ivan’ used to describe the Ninja U turn and it’s always stuck with me. Seems appropriate. (Not sure what a Crazy Ivan is? watch the Hunt for Red October with Sean Connery doing his Scottish/Russian accent or just go to Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Baffles_%28submarine%29 it’s a good cold war flick)

    Hahahahahaha I love it. I always go to starboard at the bottom of the hour.

    #931973
    PrintError
    Participant

    Tuesday evening was a new one. 6:30pm, nice and dark. Thanks to my headlight, I spot a ninja jogging on the center line with a well-lit oncoming jogger. Being safety conscious (and wearing my Trail Patrol vest), I YELL “ON YOUR RIGHT!!!!!” (since he’s on the center line with a whole empty lane to his right) and slow my approach down to about 20mph.

    As predicted, he IMMEDIATELY swerves hard right, directly into my path. In the same breath, almost as if one sentence, I belt out, “OR ON YOUR LEFT, MAKE UP YOUR MIND!!!”

    Sometimes I wish I could reach out and smack someone at speed…

    This morning: 6 joggers and 1 cyclist. ALL SEVEN WEARING ALL BLACK. I made a comment to each one, not that any of them will listen.
    Me: Hi-vis everything, lots of reflective strips, dual SuperFlashes on the tail, LED headlight on full strobe. You can see me!

    #931981
    mstone
    Participant

    I agree that verbal warnings are counterproductive. Regardless of what the caller thinks, most of the time the recipient can’t really understand what’s being said and needs a perceptible period of time to figure it out. The bike bell is pretty unambiguous. The verbal caller also needs to decide whether to call from a distance (actually allowing some reaction time for the pedestrian, but increasing the probability they won’t be able to understand) or wait until the last minute (so they’ll definitely hear, but what’s the point–they can’t react that fast anyway). You can ding the bell far enough away to see what they’re going to do before you get there. If you’re with a bunch of regular cyclists, go ahead and shout. For a mixed use trail, find a nice bell.

    #931990
    MCL1981
    Participant

    @paulg 10136 wrote:

    I heard the term ‘Crazy Ivan’ used to describe the Ninja U turn and it’s always stuck with me. Seems appropriate.

    My favorite move…
    We must give this jogger a wide berth.

    #932001
    Justin Antos
    Participant

    @pfunkallstar 10128 wrote:

    and then she does the classic Ninja “no signal, this is the imaginary end of my run, turn around.”

    Ha ha! I laughed out loud at this one. Have experienced it a few times, thankfully never too close.

    #932003
    WillStewart
    Participant

    This is one reason I’ve used blink mode with a low (80 lumen) light, as it tends to draw more attention coming up behind ninjas. That and it’s mounted on the front of my recumbent, so I can’t just reach up and change it at speed. With my new helmet light added to the mix, I plan to move my head around to ensure the lighting changes are noticed, instead of just a gradual change a fixed light often has.

    #932004
    Dirt
    Participant

    Americancyclo and I were riding home last night, JRA-style, and a runner pulled a Crazy Ivan in front of us. There was plenty of room for us to miss her. She almost looked before she leaped. :D

    #932009
    pfunkallstar
    Participant

    I was drafting a guy who was hauling this morning (I normally take Fridays easy but why not pick up a Cat 6er if you can), when a freaking truck crested over the hill right before the Rosslyn downhill. I almost needed some Depends after that.

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