As motorcyclists, we’ve all had a few close calls in traffic. They
serve as a reminder to our occasional lapse in vigilance and impart a
lasting cognitive reminder from which we can avoid such circumstances in
the future. Some of these contextual positions in traffic we know to
avoid through education, trial and error,
or discernment. Others are harder to spot in the daily fracas of our
commute. Yet, more positions we perceive but fail to internalize,
instead encountering the same issue over and over but not spotting the
common connections. Here are seven places a motorcyclist should avoid in
traffic.
Blind Spots
Let’s start with the obvious. We already have to contend with
automotive drivers perceiving an absence of cars instead of the presence
of motorcyclists. The effect seems to be compounded in a car’s blind
spot. We are virtually invisible. If you find yourself in the blind spot
of a car or large truck, move quickly and safely out of it. The B
pillars, passenger seats, and the
passengers themselves remove a lot of a driver’s peripheral vision, so
assume you are not seen until you are entirely past the car. Also, avoid
the common mistake of changing lanes into another car’s blind spot when
you make your move.
The Center Of The Lane While Stopped
Disregard our lane-splitting brethren for the
moment. What do we do when we are in one of the most vulnerable and
statistically alarming situations a motorcyclist can face? We’re stopped
with none of the traditional advantages we can employ and the
possibility of being suddenly mashed between two much larger vehicles.
We can mitigate this by staying to the
outside lane and pointing our direction of travel in between cars
instead of directly into cars. The theory is if one is rear ended, they
will at least be suddenly forced in between the cars to pinball around
rather than completely smashed between them.
Passing Without Due Caution On Country Roads
This is true on any road where you have poor sight lines on points of
ingress/egress farther up the road. Be cognizant of the distance
required to overtake and safely move back into your lane position. Avoid
passing or speeding up as a slow vehicle in front of you brakes to make
a right turn. Don’t assume that just because a vehicle in front of you
is braking that it is a good time to pass. That is a common mistake many
motorcyclists make and it can have heavy consequences.
Being The First Across The Intersection
This one may come across as overly cautious, but where I live, drivers do not possess a great deal
of circumspection. No matter how much you might enjoy that surge of
first gear as the light turns green, consider holding back a little at
the front of the line. Take an extra second to confirm that everyone who
should be stopping is stopping. If you miss that first indication,
having cars on one or both sides could provide protection against
someone blowing through an intersection.
Bad Lane Positioning
There are a few different preferences on this so I will simply
justify mine. When I commuted with a road bicycle, I found that my
proximity to cars in the bike lane was inversely proportional to how
close and how fast they passed me. The same seems to hold true for
motorcycling, where people are more likely to give you a wider berth as
they pass if you are closer to the side of the lane. An additional
benefit (presumably) is keeping you away from the center of the lane
where oils and fluids tend to drop from other vehicles, thus avoiding a
decrease in tire traction. In other words, stay close to the line on multiple-lane, one direction roads or highways.
Where Cars Tend To Make Blind Turns
I already mentioned cars making blind turns on country roads, but it
happens far too often elsewhere as well. Double safety check and quickly
enter turning lanes, as drivers wanting to make a turn opposite you are
often looking everywhere but where they need to be. The diagram
(above/below) shows what happened to me a few times before I learned to
avoid it. Often cars will back up in one
lane for a turn leaving the other lane clear. Someone trying to make a
left turn (the van) can’t see well past the line of cars. Since it’s
hard enough to see a car, a motorcyclist will go unnoticed and the
driver guns it to make it to the other side. I had some of my worst near
misses from this exact scenario.