20th Feb. Wow! I'm in a Cement Lorry with the Met Police! 14.35 miles, 1.08 Ave, 18.3 max, in 1hr 19.
If you haven't sat in a lorry-drivers' seat you are missing out! The first thing I noticed on my way up was
the door - it's enormous!
Two hands
needed to heave myself into the cabin, I climbed in sat at the wheel.
Bizarrely I found myself rising - the seat automatically does this when
you sit on it! Everything is huge - the
steering wheel is wider than a broadsheet. For some reason the keys had been removed from the ignition!! So with
the jokes over I started to concentrate.
The bobby moved his bicycle in front of the lorry and placed it where I could see it.
This is how far away from the lorry the bicycle was to the lorry.
He then went to the back of the lorry and walked to the
front with his bicycle so I could see how many times he disappeared out of my
vision using the mirrors on the left.
At least three times.
This particular lorry has a third mirror which has been
legislation for lorries since 2007 which picked him up where the other mirrors
didnt, but there were still moments when I couldn't see him.
There one millisecond then he was gone again.
He apparently was just at the front past the passenger door but in order to see him
I had to stand up in the middle of the cab and put my nose against the
windscreen (which is definitely not something lorry driver will be doing as he would be not in control of his vehicle).
And
that's aside from the fact that normally the lorry would be moving at speed and
the driver will be looking in front of him and to the right and rear, not just
on his inside.
If you can see the driver in his mirror the chances are he
can see you. But that's what it is - a chance.
The distance is nearly bigger than an ASL box.
There are blind spots
where they simply cannot see what is immediately next to them. Overtaking on the outside or stay well back,
but never on the left side. If you haven't seen this The Lorry and the Bicycle before, it's really worth
a look.
Another thing I learned is that the Met Police also have a
website for reporting bad driving
A big thanks to The Met Police for their Exchanging Places opportunity.
With my morning flying by so fast and full of information I was nearly late for
lunch so whizzed down to Chiswick via the cycle path. I use those last two words loosely. Hammersmith & Fulham you need help with
your cycling paths.
As for the stretch
along the A4 to the Hogarth Roundabout - that is awful. On the way home I had to cycle on the A4
for about 50 yards which I wouldnt
recommend to anybody - ever.
Lunch with friends was fab and included Heston Blumenthal's much advertised Baked Alaska.
Not quite
as I remember from My Learn to Cook Book but that didn't stop me having three
slices. (ooops!)
There is a bit of bicycle restoration taking place which I thought might be of interest to a couple of peeps.
I bolted back to London for a meeting in SW1 and was finally
home, via the pub, at 11.30. Cycling into
Sloane Square made me shiver with delight - and cold - as I couldnt understand
why I was doing this without at least 50 others. The group rides I take part in are a bit more than five miles (well, a lot actually!) but are the most amazing things I have ever done. I looked up at the moon and smiled.
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