Safety & Etiquette on the Road

Group Road Rides

Cycling offers many benefits, from physical and mental health to social fun when riding with a group. However, when riding with another cyclist or with a group there are some “best practices” guidelines that should be followed to ensure the safety of yourself as well as your fellow riders. Following are some etiquette rules to keep in mind:

Be Predictable

This may be the most important rule (even for solo riding) and it involves every aspect of riding from changing positions in the group to following the traffic rules. You might say that all the other rules support this one. Smooth predictable riding isnā€™t just a matter of styleā€¦ here the word survival comes to mind! If unpredictability is the only predictable part of your riding style, you are a hazard to yourself and everyone else who has the misfortune to ride with you.

Have you ever been on a ride where the group stops at an intersection and people scatter all over the lane? Some going through on the wrong side of the road and others turning left from the right side? Some running the stop sign and others doing it right? Itā€™s confusing and irritating to drivers of vehicles as they approach a situation where cyclists are going in all different directions or just blowing through stop signs!

Part of being predictable is riding within the rules of the road as a vehicle. Groups should maintain integrity when approaching intersections. That means staying in the correct lane, stopping together, and starting together as traffic allows. It goes without saying that if we demand the right to ride on the road, then we must be willing to ride responsiblyā€¦ especially as a group.

Donā€™t Overlap Wheels

This habit will get you in real trouble. This is a good way to test your ability to do cartwheels if you donā€™t adhere to this rule. Some people do it from lack of concentration, others may just not know any better, but sooner or later theyā€™ll crash. There is no recovery from a front wheel deflection. All it takes is for the person in front to move sideways a few inchesā€¦ if someone is overlapping his wheel, that someone will go down along with practically everyone who is behind him. Many times the person in front can recover, but not the people behind.

Be Steady

This includes speed and line. If the person behind you fails to adhere to #2, you will contribute to a crash if you wallow around all over the road. When everyone is working for the group, maintain a steady speed as you go to the front. Ever notice how easy it is to ride behind some folks? If you take note of their riding style youā€™ll probably notice they donā€™t yo-yo around in the pack. They are rock steady. When they take the lead, they donā€™t accelerate. If they are strong enough to accelerate the group, they do it after the previous pull has rejoined the rear of the group and then only gradually so as to not string out the pack. When they are leading, they ride a straight line and their speed will be constant with the conditions. What a joy to ride with someone like this. Sometimes steady doesnā€™t just mean speed. It means steady pressure on the pedalsā€¦ uphill or downhill, headwind or tailwind. When you are following someone like this, life is good! When they are following, they donā€™t make sudden moves or they know how to control their spacing by using their body position instead of using the brakes. Sudden braking will set off general alarms from everyone in the rear and make you very unpopular. If you do use the brakes, feather the front brake only and keep pedaling against the resistance. This allows you to moderate your speed without disturbing trailing riders.

Announce Hazards

When you are in the lead, you are responsible for the safety of everyone behind you. You will become very unpopular very quickly if people behind you keep bouncing off of potholes, running over rocks, or reacting to unsafe traffic situations that you fail to point out. You need to be very vocal when approaching intersections, slowing, stopping, or turning and all actions should be smooth and deliberate. Sudden, unannounced actions will throw terror into any peloton. Riders in the pack should relay these warnings to the rear. When you are following, announce oncoming traffic from the rearā€¦ in this case others should relay this info toward the front.

Signal

Signaling lets everyone (vehicles and riders) know your intentionsā€¦ remember #1? This makes you predictable. Also, itā€™s a good idea to make eye contact with oncoming traffic at intersections. One note here, use your right arm straight out to signal a right turn. Itā€™s uncool to stick out your left bent arm to signal a right turn; more importantly, itā€™s impracticable and ineffective. In a big group combine this with a loud vocal warning of your intentions.

Donā€™t Fixate

If you are staring at something (i.e., the wheel in front of you), eventually youā€™ll hit it! When you walk in a crowd, you donā€™t stare at the back of the person in front of youā€¦so you shouldnā€™t ride like that either. Learn to be comfortable looking around or through the riders ahead of you. This will allow you to see things that are developing in front of the group. With a little practice you will be able to ā€œsenseā€ how far you are off the wheel in front of you.

Stay Off Aero Bars

This shouldnā€™t require much discussion. They are much too unstable to be used in a group ride. Plus, you donā€™t need to be on aero bars if you are in a pack as you will receive more aerodynamic effect from the other riders anyway. Maybeā€¦ one exceptionā€¦ when you are at the front pulling you can get away with it, but never, never, never when you are within the group or following a wheel. I know there are some people, usually triathletes, who are more comfortable on the bars. But, sooner or later, steering with your elbows in a group will add new meaning to the term ā€œlunch on the road.ā€ Plus, it really tics off those behind you when you go down in a pack! Use aero bars for what they are meant forā€¦ solo fast riding.

Donā€™t Leave Stragglers

If you get separated at intersections, as a matter of courtesy, the lead group should soft pedal until the rest have rejoined. Another note here is that if you are the one who will be caught by the light, donā€™t run the red light to maintain contact. If they donā€™t wait for you to catch up, you may not want to be riding with them anyway. Also as a courtesy to those who may not be able to stay with the group, the pack should wait at certain points along the route to regroup. Especially, at turn points and if the stragglers donā€™t know the route. Now obviously this is not applicable during a race but weā€™re not talking about a raceā€¦No one should be left alone on a group ride. If you donā€™t adhere to this rule, your ā€œgroupā€ will get smaller each week until youā€™re riding solo.

Know Your Limitations

If youā€™re not strong enough or too tired to take a turn at the front, stay near the back and let the stronger cyclists pull in front of you instead of making them go to the back of the line. Unless they are a completeā€¦ well you knowā€¦ they will appreciate that more than having to get past you to get back to the front. Plus, it strokes the animalā€™s ego as you admit that he/she is the stronger rider. Another point here, donā€™t pull at the front faster and longer than you have energy to get back in at the rear (Remember, your ā€œpullā€ isnā€™t over until you do). Iā€™ve seen this scenario many times, it comes ā€œbiker wannabeā€™sā€ time to take his/her pull and the pace is getting up there. The thoughts running through his/her mind is, ā€œI need to show these guys that I can pull 2 mph faster than everyone else has been pulling.ā€ They go to the front and hammer. Legs begin to burn after a monumental pullā€¦ now itā€™s time to pull over and let some ā€œlesserā€ rider take a turn. Well, the ā€œlesserā€ biker is all refreshed after tagging on a wheel and is ready to punch it up another notch. Itā€™s bye-bye to the first rider as he/she gets blown off the backā€¦toast! Testosterone and ego is a volatile mix (even for you females) and it can get you dropped in a heartbeat.

Change Positions Correctly

A common beginner faux pas is to stop pedaling just before pulling off the front. This creates an accordion effect toward the rear. Keep a steady pressure on the pedals until you have cleared the front. After pulling off, soft pedal and let the group pull through. As the last couple riders are passing through, begin to apply more pressure to smoothly take your position at the rear. If you donā€™t time it correctly, youā€™ll create a gap and have to sprint to get back on. A technique used to reenter the line is to move your bike sideways first then your body. Try it. It will feel awkward at first, but it is the safest way to move within a group. Itā€™s just a small subtle move not an exaggerated one. If you lean your body first and misjudge the speed or the person in front of you slows down, youā€™ll touch wheels and be leaning the wrong wayā€¦ bad situation! If you move the bike first, you will have a chance to pull it back.

Climbing

Ever been behind someone when they stood up going up hill and all of a sudden you were all over them? If you need to stand, shift up a gear to compensate for the slower cadence and stand up smoothly keeping a steady pressure on the pedals. This will keep you from moving backward relative to the rider behind you. Apply the opposite technique when changing to a sitting position. Downshift and keep a steady pressure on the pedals to avoid abrupt changes in speed. It takes a little practice, but your riding buddies will be glad you spent the time learning how to do it right.

Descending

The leader must overcome a much greater wind resistance as the speed increases. If you are leading, keep pedaling. If you donā€™t, everyone behind you will eat your lunch. Riders to the rear will accelerate faster downhill as drafting becomes more effective at the higher speeds. If you are following, back off a couple of bike lengths to compensate for the greater affects of drafting. If you are closing on the rider in front, sit up and let the wind slow you or use light braking to maintain spacing, but in both cases you should keep pedaling against the resistance. Keeping your legs moving not only makes it easier to keep the spacing, but also helps the legs get rid of the acid build up from the previous climb.

Relax

This one is really important. It will allow you to be smooth and responsive. You can bet that if you see someone who is riding a straight line and is very steady, he/she is relaxed on the bike. It not only saves energy, but it makes bike handling much more effective. Anytime you are riding in close proximity of other riders thereā€™s always the chance that you may come into contact. If you have tense arms and get bumped from the side, the shock will go directly to the front wheel and you will swerve, possibly lose control, and possibly cause a massive pile up. If you are relaxed, itā€™s much easier to absorb the bump without losing control. A good exercise is to go to a grassy field (which is softer than pavement if you fall) with a friend and ride slowly side by side. Relax your arms and lightly bump each other using your relaxed elbows to absorb the (light) impact. You will become familiar with how to safely recover from that type of contact. It may save you some road rash someday.

All levels of riders are valuable members of a group ride when they practice good, safe riding techniques.