Edmund Kean
Registered user
Nicely done U turn at the end especially with all that adrenaline flowing - easy drop in the circumstances. Well done.
Autogs - I fear you have miss-quoted me old bean. Or perhaps I made my point in a poor way). I didn't mean to suggest for one minute that the IAM or any other advanced rider programme have got it wrong. In fact my personal opinion is that they are a hugely valuable tools for improving riding standards and road safety.
However, IMHO applying their wisdom retrospectively in this instance doesn't change a thing. A muppet driving very poorly caused a relatively minor accident. It very easily could have been a fatality. Everything else is just what ifs and maybes.
A fellow biker had a close call and I'm grateful that's all it was.
Much love
Jonesy x
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
no problem,in the cold light of day the op is alive which is good,a week down the line when he feels a bit more normal i still feel that he and actually every one riding should ask themselves what could I have done to improve my chances of getting home alive.dont want to chastise the op at all but its dangerous out there we all need to do all we can to look after ourselves
no problem,in the cold light of day the op is alive which is good,a week down the line when he feels a bit more normal i still feel that he and actually every one riding should ask themselves what could I have done to improve my chances of getting home alive.dont want to chastise the op at all but its dangerous out there we all need to do all we can to look after ourselves

A few months ago, I posted a video of a German trying to kill me in Italy.
You were riding in the correct position on the road.
I tend to ride close to the centre of the road if there are no other vehicles about, or in the centre of there are no road markings (and no other vehicles).
I was criticised for such positioning in comments on this site.
I am not suggesting for a moment that my positioning is superior, it is just the way I tend to ride. By pure fluke, if you had been on the road where I normally position myself you would have escaped with just a change of underwear.
I only raise the comment because of the criticism made of me for riding where I do on the road, not because I believe it is better to do so.
Myke
Guys, I knew there would be some comments with regards to my speed, riding position etc etc when I put this up, and constructive criticism is always welcome btw.
Autogs has some very valid points and I have pm'd him to say the same. If I had been going a little slower, I wouldn't have been on the same stretch of road and would not have seen the car. As to position....I too ride in a similar position to Myke Rocks as the roads in Northern Ireland require it most of the time for seeing over hedges and looking out for tractors...or more commonly, avoiding manure and muck the tractors leave behind!!
On a left hander, I'll cross the white line to the ride and side of the road to see further round the bend and on a right hander, move to the left hand side of my own lane. On this occasion, i saw the two cars approaching at speed, one of which subsequently overtook the first car after they passed me (on video), and I decided to move away from the white line as I reckon they were doing the same speed as me and wanted to avoid ANY potential contact.
That road is the fast, back road to Coleraine with some nice bends but some long, clear straight sections, so on the straights, I sit between the centre of my lane, and the white line in the middle of the road....keeps clear of any oil droplets and detritus that cars and lorries leave behind in the middle of the lane....so not sure what else I could've done at that precise moment....
Anyway, alive and well and trying to forget the idiocy of 4 people in a car and not one of them noticed that junction!!!!


I'm still at a loss to see how the car driver failed to see the junction.
It's big enough, wide enough and with direction signs.
- and I'd have ridden towards the middle of the road too...
Looking at the still picture, you were in the middle of the lane. There doesn't look to be much more room to your right.
Your speed saved your life. Fact. If you were going a bit slower, you'd have hit the car. Some could argue that if you were going a bit faster you'd have avoided the accident all together.![]()

No, not fact......... bollocks
At the junction - you have to ignore the speeds which both are doing to create the confluence. It's as lacking in validity to say - that if he had taken the time to clean his visor, or squeeze the last drop of petrol into the tank, at the last stop - then the confluence would not have occurred.
Al
Oh believe me the car driver would have seen the junction if there was an HGV in the place of the bike...
But being in the right doesn't save your life.......... Junction ahead, slow down . Always assume the other vehicle hasn't seen you.