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Wednesday, January 24, 2018

Bicycle Safety

          Make sure your bike matches your size and height. Make sure you can straddle the frame with both feet flat on the ground. Some safety equipment's are a chain guard, reflectors, a bell, and a orange safety flag. "A bicycle is a vehicle, just like an automobile. To ride one safely, you must know not only how to balance, but how to avoid the situations in which injuries often occur" (Handal 270).

More and more often adults are riding bikes while following outdate or incorrect rules of the road. "Bicycles are, in fact, generally subject to the same laws as other vehicles" (Handal 270).

The following tips will help you become a safer bike rider:

  • Wear a helmet. Make sure the helmet fits snug and comfortable for your head shape and size
  • Be predictable, obey traffic signals, road signs and pavement signs
  • Be visible, make sure you are riding where drivers would expect to see you
  • Turn, look, signal. Before you start a turn, turn your head and look behind you, then give the proper turn signal
  • Watch our for intersections. Most bike and car accidents occur at intersections
  • Be prepared to yield the right of way, especially when approaching other bikes or pedestrians
  • Don't ride at night, if you must then make sure to wear reflective clothing
  • Don't pass cars on the right, drivers won't be able to see you clearly
  • Avoid falls. Use a smooth, consistent routine when stopping and starting
          From now on, when I ride my bike I always have a reflective sticker on the back of my bike to warn cars or pedestrians that I am near or approaching. I also wear some type of reflective clothing at night when riding to make it more easily for others to see me.

Have you thought about anything you should change when riding your bike after reading this post? If so, what?

5 comments:

  1. Hi Gina, really nice blog post. It was a really good idea to add the safety tips in this post. I feel biking is such a fun thing to do but without the proper safety and equipment it can maybe lead to a bad injury. Nice job on your post, i felt it was very informational.

    - Hannah Jensen

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    1. I too also believed that riding a bike is super fun without the safety equipment, although that it would also enhance the chance of getting an injury. Thank you for your comment Hannah!

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  2. Make certain to include an open-ended question with your post and also write down how you applied the information that you learned to your bicycle riding.

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  3. I liked this post very much. My dad owns a lot of mountain bikes, plus we also go on bike rides together every few months, so this definitely reminded me of him. It's good that you also put tips to be safer on a bike since it seems like that a lot people forget even some of the most basic things about bike safety.

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    1. Yes, I also agree that someone people forget some of the small things such as wearing reflective clothing or having a light or reflective sticker on. Thanks for your comment!

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