Author Topic: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!  (Read 2020 times)

0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic.

shaun

  • Guest
Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« on: October 28, 2009, 10:17:29 pm »
Now this is a close call!!! :icon_cheesygrin:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBF_L5UwBIc

Offline JimB

  • Registered User
  • ***
  • Posts: 802
  • Reputation: 0
    • http://www.jandyenterprises.com
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #1 on: October 29, 2009, 08:09:57 pm »
Looks normal for Xi'an.
Maxx's 24 hour rule, learn it, live it.

Offline Chong

  • Registered User
  • ***
  • Posts: 771
  • Reputation: 8
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #2 on: October 30, 2009, 03:06:00 am »
Here's an article from the Toronto Star on "Cycling In Guangzhou" ...

http://www.thestar.com/travel/asiapacific/article/718036--cycling-in-chinese-city-is-anything-but-leisurely

GUANGZHOU, China – A friend sent me a YouTube link to a video called "Insane Cycling – New York City." I clicked on it, hoping to glean a few tips for my own cycling on the anarchic streets of China.

I came away feeling like someone who expects to see "Mad Max'' and is shown "Sesame Street" instead. New York seemed like a wonderful place to ride. Pedestrians used the crosswalks. Buses lumbered along like gentle whales. Taxis used their turn signals. The streets looked so clean. No one honked.

If that's insanity, what can be said of cycling in Guangzhou, the muggy, traffic-clogged city once known as Canton? It's my constant dilemma – hit the road or stick to the treadmill at the gym?

Cycling always wins. Not only is it more fun being outdoors but it's a way of taking China's pulse.

When the economy began stumbling last year, some of the earliest signs of trouble in this industrial southern city were on the roads. On my early morning rides, I noticed far fewer migrant workers pedaling to work in their yellow hard hats with shovels and toolboxes strapped to their rusty, squeaky black bikes. Many had been laid off and returned to the countryside.

Although officials were denying reports of a wave of factory closures, I was finishing my rides much faster because I didn't have to weave through the pedaling multitudes. Assembly lines were shutting down and millions of migrant workers were going back to the countryside.

Those throngs are an iconic image for China, but it's becoming outdated. Led by a swelling middle class, people in Guangzhou and other cities are ditching bikes for clean, new subway trains.

And cars.

Two years ago, Guangzhou proudly announced that the number of cars on its roads had reached 1 million. The metropolis of 10 million people has several auto factories, and aspires to be China's Detroit. Last year, 180,000 new vehicles hit the city's roads, the government said. That's nearly 500 a day.

Cyclists feel themselves being pushed aside. A bike lane near my home is marked with a thick white line, a sign and a bike symbol painted on the pavement. But the line has been chopped up for parking spaces. It's now a bike lane only when motorists aren't using it.

Anyway, lanes may as well not exist – drivers seem to think their cars are protected by a force field. And it's not just drivers who are a menace, but pedestrians and even other cyclists. I recently slammed into a migrant worker who blindly pedaled into an intersection. Neither of us was seriously injured, but I badly bruised my hip and wrist as I hit the road and bounced for a few feet.

While leisure bikes are catching on among Chinese yuppies and college students, few take to the busy streets. Those who do wear helmets, as do I, but we're a tiny subculture. The commuting laborers don't wear helmets.

Many of the people behind the wheels of the shiny new cars just got their licenses, and their driving sometimes reminds me of my own in high school.

Some drivers are courteous to cyclists, perhaps remembering that they were among them not long ago. But others, especially the nouveaux riches in their Audis and BMWs, show an obvious contempt. They cut off cyclists and deny them the right of way. A honk is usually not a warning to be alert, but a "get out of my way'' threat.

I encountered an extreme example during a training ride with a friend. It was 6:30 a.m. and we were hammering down an empty three-lane thoroughfare at 40 kph when a black Volkswagen Passat behind us opened up with its horn. As it raced beside us we exchanged obscenities until the driver – a beefy man in the kind of crew cut that's popular with police, military and the mob – swerved in front and nearly knocked us down.

Few people seem annoyed by Guangzhou's cacophony of car horns. Sometimes drivers seem to be beeping just as a way of saying hello to the weird spandex-clad foreigner.

Once, while I was barreling through a tunnel, a cement truck rumbled up on my back wheel and the driver started honking. The sound echoing off the tunnel's walls was deafening.

Then I saw the driver and another guy in the cab laughing and yelling "Jia you!" It means "Add fuel!" – a Chinese sports cheer.

Being tailgated is especially unnerving because roads are so poor. If your skinny racing tires hit a brick or pothole, you can quickly find yourself under a car.

Guangzhou is hosting next year's Asia Games, and a construction frenzy keeps the roads under a constant cover of dirt, gravel and debris. Water trucks cruise the streets before rush hour each morning, spraying water to control the dust. But they have no sweeping mechanism, so they leave a slippery layer of gritty mud that clogs expensive bike parts and can bring a cyclist down.

Each new pothole must be marked on the cyclist's mental map. Recently after a hard rain, I thought I was speeding through a harmless puddle but it was a hole. It cracked my custom-made bike frame and broke the wheel.

Speed bumps are another hazard. The Chinese authorities love them. Their purpose seems designed not to slow speeders but to punish them. Rarely are they signposted, and they are usually unpainted and hard to see. Near my home, officials have opted for the cheap option – a thick pipe across the road, anchored by roughly cut spikes of rebar that can slice open a bike tire.

Perhaps the most hazardous obstacles are created by the midnight mystery dumpers. Their trucks bring construction waste – cement chunks, broken bricks, scraps of dry wall, splintered plywood – to unlit stretches of road and dump the loads where they can easily bring down any unwary biker.

Now that's what I'd call Insane Cycling.

brett

  • Guest
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #3 on: October 30, 2009, 06:14:31 am »
I had a 15th floor hotel room in China. Watching people cross the road was much more entertaining than watching the TV :icon_cheesygrin:.

Arnold

  • Guest
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #4 on: October 30, 2009, 08:29:59 am »
Quote from: 'brett' pid='21401' dateline='1256897671'

I had a 15th floor hotel room in China. Watching people cross the road was much more entertaining than watching the TV :icon_cheesygrin:.


Brett , that sound just like myself . As my Wife was getting ready in the morning , I found ... that watching Traffic from way above was quite interesting . Despite of it all , it seemed to be moving pretty well and may I say ... even smooth .

Vince G

  • Guest
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #5 on: October 30, 2009, 10:16:19 am »
Quote from: 'Chong' pid='21387' dateline='1256886360'

New York seemed like a wonderful place to ride. Pedestrians used the crosswalks. Buses lumbered along like gentle whales. Taxis used their turn signals. The streets looked so clean. No one honked.


Contrary to movies, NYC is this way. Cars will cut you off to get into a lane. But "honking" in NYC for no reason gets you a ticket. They passed this law back in the 70's to cut the noise level.

Offline maxx

  • Registered User
  • ***
  • Posts: 2,363
  • Reputation: 13
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #6 on: October 30, 2009, 06:18:50 pm »
Armatures I take a cheap pair of binoculars with me.Just so I can stand at the hotel window.And watch the traffic.With the binoculars you can see the look of Horror on the pedestrians face right before they get almost ran over.

Offline Willy The Londoner

  • Beyond The Dream in China
  • Board Moderator
  • Registered User
  • ****
  • Posts: 4,004
  • Reputation: 36
  • Hair today - gone tomorrow!!
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #7 on: October 30, 2009, 11:15:29 pm »
Never mind the traffic what is the Chinese words for - 'Open this damn window before I smash it.'

Yesterday went to the main supermarket in the city centre.  Have to go there as I am going cold turkey on Viagra and I now have a new addiction - Orion Pies -and this is the only place that I can buy them.

Any way loaded down with shopping I hailed the first cab in the rank.   My girl gets in and I am holding onto the open door handing in the other bags.   Then the pain comes on fast.   At first I could not understand what it was then I realised that the taxi driver has closed the electric windows and had trapped my third finger tip in it.  No matter how hard I tried I could not free my finger.  There were dozens of people nearby who were now learning a lot of English words they may not have heard before and it was only when I started punching the window with my free hand that my lady was able to get the driver to lower the window.   And the local where all looking at the mad English man.

All the way home the taxi driver was laughing - my mistake of the day was taking a taxi with a female driver who had obviously been unsuccessful in her search for a foreigner husband!!!!!!

I can tell you that if it was normal to give tips in China then I would not have given her one yuan.

I now have one very dark finger nail and today I could not face travelling by taxi so I took the second most dangerous method of transport available and that was a motorised rickshaw.  But at least it did not have windows and by closing ones eyes you did not have to look when it failed to stop at any traffic light and negotiated oncoming traffic head on.

Willy
Willy The Lpndoner

Now in my 12th year living here,

Offline RobertBfrom aust

  • Sujuan [Yo ] is my tai tai
  • Registered User
  • ***
  • Posts: 1,029
  • Reputation: 11
  • Robert and Sujuan [Yo ] at home .
    • bopads.info
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #8 on: October 30, 2009, 11:26:02 pm »
Willy , you were lucky that it was only your finger jammed in the window , other appendages would have really had you yowling , regards Robert .
Now it is early to bed and late to rise .
My QQ is   1994376895
For electronics and books etc , check out , www.bopads.info

Offline Willy The Londoner

  • Beyond The Dream in China
  • Board Moderator
  • Registered User
  • ****
  • Posts: 4,004
  • Reputation: 36
  • Hair today - gone tomorrow!!
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #9 on: October 31, 2009, 03:23:36 am »
Quote from: 'RobertBfrom aust' pid='21450' dateline='1256959562'

Willy , you were lucky that it was only your finger jammed in the window , other appendages would have really had you yowling , regards Robert .


It was certainly as well that I had given up the Viagra. :icon_cheesygrin::icon_cheesygrin:

Willy
Willy The Lpndoner

Now in my 12th year living here,

shaun

  • Guest
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #10 on: October 31, 2009, 06:24:27 am »
So it is true then that the enhancement side effect of the viagra, disappears; so to speak.

Shaun

Offline Rhonald

  • Ziyan Zhou (Yan)
  • Moderators
  • Registered User
  • ****
  • Posts: 1,550
  • Reputation: 11
RE: Watch that traffic in China boys!!!
« Reply #11 on: October 31, 2009, 07:26:20 pm »
Quote from: 'shaun' pid='21457' dateline='1256984667'

So it is true then that the enhancement side effect of the viagra, disappears; so to speak.

Shaun


After too many shakes the enhancment does disappear
Life....It's all about finding the Chicks and Balances