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The Oaks Single track



 
 
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  #1  
Old December 29th 07, 10:44 AM posted to aus.bicycle
Ken & Stace
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Posts: 4
Default The Oaks Single track

I had a head on with another mountain bike today on the Oaks singletrack.

I was heading toward Glenbrook and a group of riders were coming up from
Glenbrook.
There was no time react and the lead rider and I hit front wheel to front
wheel.

I got a black eye and some grazing. He had to limp home with a very stuffed
front wheel.

There seems to be more and more traffic on the single track heading west
these days. Is it possible that the days of going hard down it are over?

Ken


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  #2  
Old December 29th 07, 10:12 PM posted to aus.bicycle
kanangara[_16_]
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Default The Oaks Single track


Hope you offered to pay for his wheel

Parbs


--
kanangara

  #3  
Old December 29th 07, 10:23 PM posted to aus.bicycle
Ken & Stace
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Default The Oaks Single track

Why pray tell?????

"kanangara" wrote in
message ...

Hope you offered to pay for his wheel

Parbs


--
kanangara



  #4  
Old December 30th 07, 12:29 AM posted to aus.bicycle
DJ
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Posts: 25
Default The Oaks Single track


"Ken & Stace" wrote in message
...
I had a head on with another mountain bike today on the Oaks singletrack.

I was heading toward Glenbrook and a group of riders were coming up from
Glenbrook.
There was no time react and the lead rider and I hit front wheel to front
wheel.

I got a black eye and some grazing. He had to limp home with a very
stuffed front wheel.

There seems to be more and more traffic on the single track heading west
these days. Is it possible that the days of going hard down it are over?

Ken

Maybe because it's the holiday period and for no other reason that people
are out and about enjoying this good weather before it clags in again...
They say it's going to be a wet summer on average right through till mid
march so you gotta make the best of it...sorry to hear about the accident
though....hope you heal quickly.

DJ


  #5  
Old December 30th 07, 07:47 AM posted to aus.bicycle
JohnJohn
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Default The Oaks Single track

On Sat, 29 Dec 2007 22:23:14 +0000, Ken & Stace wrote:

Parbs wrote:


Hope you offered to pay for his wheel


Why pray tell?


I'm sure you're not going to like this, but what Rob's probably implying
is that you were riding too fast to take evasive action (as you pretty
much admitted - "There was no time react") and therefore bear most of the
responsibility for the crash.

It's very easy to think of the Oaks as one-way, but it's not and
therefore standard trail etiquette applies: don't go so fast that you
can't take evasive action in the event of something unexpected.

Of course it'd help if all the old detours hadn't been straight-lined.
They used to force people to slow down.
  #6  
Old December 30th 07, 08:16 AM posted to aus.bicycle
Ken & Stace
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Posts: 4
Default The Oaks Single track


In that case, (according to your logic) he also didnt have time to take
evasive action and was not riding for the conditions. Therefore it was a
50/50 responsiblilty.
I will pay for his wheel if he pays my medical expenses.
Sound fair?

I also will add that we rode back to the Glenbrook gate together and were
quite amicable when we said goodbye.

But thank you for your opinion, you have answered my question. It does
appear that the days of doing a flying run down (or up for that matter) the
Oaks singletrack are in the past.

Cheers

Ken

"JohnJohn" wrote in message
u...
On Sat, 29 Dec 2007 22:23:14 +0000, Ken & Stace wrote:

Parbs wrote:


Hope you offered to pay for his wheel


Why pray tell?


I'm sure you're not going to like this, but what Rob's probably implying
is that you were riding too fast to take evasive action (as you pretty
much admitted - "There was no time react") and therefore bear most of the
responsibility for the crash.

It's very easy to think of the Oaks as one-way, but it's not and
therefore standard trail etiquette applies: don't go so fast that you
can't take evasive action in the event of something unexpected.

Of course it'd help if all the old detours hadn't been straight-lined.
They used to force people to slow down.



  #7  
Old December 30th 07, 09:55 AM posted to aus.bicycle
JohnJohn
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Posts: 12
Default The Oaks Single track

On Sun, 30 Dec 2007 08:16:25 +0000, Ken & Stace wrote:

In that case, (according to your logic) he also didn't have time to take
evasive action and was not riding for the conditions. Therefore it was a
50/50 responsibility.


As the faster-moving bike you bear the majority of the duty of care,
since you're putting other trail users in a situation where they can't
take evasive action however slowly they ride. I find it hard to believe
this isn't obvious.

I also will add that we rode back to the Glenbrook gate together and
were quite amicable when we said goodbye.


That's good. I'm sure there's no federal case here, and I've had one or
two similar bingles that resulted in nothing worse than bruises to body
and pride. But you came across as trying to disclaim responsibility for a
crash which you largely caused. Told you you wouldn't like having that
pointed out, but you did ask.

It does
appear that the days of doing a flying run down (or up for that matter)
the Oaks singletrack are in the past.


It's never been completely safe to ride down the Oaks singletrack as if
it were a one-way trail because, simply, it isn't. It's been a few years
since I last rode up it, but it's not a very unusual or new thing to do.
I remember one weekend a few years ago when trackwork meant it was the
only way to get up and loads of people were doing so.

The trails are busy; we all have to be careful.
  #8  
Old December 30th 07, 10:16 AM posted to aus.bicycle
TimC
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Posts: 1,361
Default The Oaks Single track

On 2007-12-30, JohnJohn (aka Bruce)
was almost, but not quite, entirely unlike tea:
On Sun, 30 Dec 2007 08:16:25 +0000, Ken & Stace wrote:

In that case, (according to your logic) he also didn't have time to take
evasive action and was not riding for the conditions. Therefore it was a
50/50 responsibility.


As the faster-moving bike you bear the majority of the duty of care,


(assuming he's the faster moving, which is a good chance)

since you're putting other trail users in a situation where they can't
take evasive action however slowly they ride. I find it hard to believe
this isn't obvious.


If he needs examples, think of a car suddenly appearing on the wrong
side of the road around a blind corner, doing 95km/h. If the bike
rider is doing 5km/h on their correct side of the road, they're still
going too fast to avoid the impending head on collision with the car
doing the wrong thing. Hence it's quite evidently not the bike
rider's fault.

--
TimC
It was... weird. Death was smaller than I imagined

I have nothing to say, I just can't resist quoting this out of context.
-- Steve VanDevenver replying to Satya on ASR
  #9  
Old December 30th 07, 10:31 AM posted to aus.bicycle
kanangara[_17_]
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Posts: 1
Default The Oaks Single track


JohnJohn Wrote: [color=blue]
On Sun, 30 Dec 2007 08:16:25 +0000, Ken & Stace wrote:

In that case, (according to your logic) he also didn't have time to

take
evasive action and was not riding for the conditions. Therefore it

was a
50/50 responsibility.


As the faster-moving bike you bear the majority of the duty of care,
since you're putting other trail users in a situation where they can't
take evasive action however slowly they ride. I find it hard to
believe
this isn't obvious.


And it could of just as easily been a small child, an old couple out
walking, a wombat or a large kangaroo.

Fly down the Oaks single track by all means but at a speed only at
which you can avoid hitting other track users.

Parbs


--
kanangara

 




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