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Near Miss
#1
Had probably my closest call ever on a bike today and it was my fault.

They always say you're likeliest to have an accident close to home or work in a location you're very familiar with. A neighborhood lady I'd grown up with was killed by a train at a grade crossing she'd driven over thousands of times before.

Well, for me it was a busy intersection where I turn left every morning heading in to work and most of the time coming back to the office from lunch. I've probably turned left there at least 8,625 times in the last 23 years.

About 10 years ago in Kentucky, the state highway department started installing so-called [url=https://transportation.ky.gov/TrafficOperations/Pages/Flashing-Yellow-Lights.aspx]"flashing yellow" left turn signals. I think in general they're a good idea and I think in general they shorten delays, save fuel, and are potentially safer.

But today I almost turned left into the path of an oncoming car, while the light was signaling a flashing yellow left turn arrow.

Initially I thought my brain mistook the flashing yellow arrow for a solid green arrow (which may also be part of the causality). But now I think it was because at that intersection, when the yellow left arrow starts flashing, two things occur almost 100% of the time:

[li]When the light turns from red to flashing yellow, the oncoming traffic that was stopped starts moving. It doesn't take long for all of it to clear the intersection, potentially opening the path for a left turn.[/li] [li]But, the road I am turning left onto is a busy road. At least half of the oncoming traffic will turn right onto that road, rather than proceed straight through the intersection. Since they have a green, they have right-of-way to turn right and I have to wait for them to all make the turn. Since there's only a single turn lane, it always takes longer for the right-turning traffic to clear than it takes for the straight-through traffic to clear. Once the last right-turner makes their turn, I'm free to make my left.
[/li]
But today...there was one very late, lone oncoming car in their left lane, closest to me as I was beginning to make my left...and I didn't see it until the last two seconds. They saw me at the same time I saw them. They braked and I swerved right and stopped. I never did actually violate their right-of-way, but I came close. They ended up slowing to where they almost stopped, but I was well out of the way and stopped by then. The young woman driving understandably threw up her hands at me, then gave a honk. I made a mea culpa gesture and sheepishly completed the turn after she proceeded on through. And after I assured myself the way was clear.

Moral of the story is: be wary of habits! They can be very deadly when the situation changes unexpectedly.

More info...this is what actually happens during the red cycle at this particular light (my annotations in red):

[Image: 50227fdb915677b56c9d2bd9dde81455.jpg]

Here's a diagram of the intersection with my best attempt at reconstructing the events. The numbers correspond to vehicle positions at progressive increments of time.

[Image: 4528508d6131cf56585d772633878ba2.jpg]

Ride safe everyone. Stay alert and keep your guard up.
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#2
Stichill, glad you are in one piece and safe.
No accidents, everyone stay safe
Very nice sketch.
Thumbs Up
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#3
Glad you’re OK, Stichill. Thanks for the interesting analysis.
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#4
Stichill: Glad to read your shared humbling experience tonight. That means you are still with us and the new Caberg lives to see another ride.

That yellow arrow / flashing yellow arrow sounds confusing. Yikes.

Nice graphical postmortem analysis.

Stay safe!
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#5
Thank goodness it turned out well.
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#6
Those are the moments! Good you were lucky and things didn't turn out worse.
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#7
Very glad you quickly solved the issue and thanks for the tip, the expectation follows a pattern it seems.

Here is something i started adopting ; when checking if the road is clear i now look for a totally clear road surface, not the absence of traffic, there is a difference and i found it works more positive in my mind.

Thanks for posting stichThumbs Up
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#8
I am glad that you are ok and honest enough to take the blame , one of my bike buddies run in the back of a car and blamed the car behind him for being too close . Sometime WE are at fault.
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#9
Thanks, everyone. I’ve always tried to approach road strategy seriously. I thought this was a very interesting lesson in the dangers of performing a routine vs. having full situational awareness. It definitely woke me up!

max, that’s an awesome tip! Look for the presence of clear road, not the absence of traffic. I’m going to try that! Thanks!
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#10
non-constructive post: i've always felt that should be called a near-hit, not a near-miss.

seriously though, stay safe stich.
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