BobtheBuilder wrote: ↑Fri Jul 19, 2024 8:28 am
Thoglette wrote: ↑Thu Jul 18, 2024 8:23 pm
brumby33 wrote: ↑Thu Jul 18, 2024 4:17 pm
I see many around here who don't wear them but my way of thinking is if you ain't got a brain, you don't need a helmet.
Yet, strangely, the streets of Holland are not awash with blood, nor are the medical systems clogged with brain injuries. Despite a third of all transport being on bicycle, with not a helmet in sight.
Now, if you're going racing, training or mountain biking, or long distance touring, helmets are an "off course" addition. Because the risks are much higher.
The idea that simple cycling is so dangerous that helmets are essential for day-to-day cycling is, frankly, a fallacy that arose out of certain surgeons noting that bicycles had the same number of wheels as motorcycles, and that mandatory helmet laws for motorcycle riding significantly reduced head injuries in motorcycle accidents.
Indeed. The outsized risk assessment that has been associated with cycling in the Australian public's mind is pretty deeply entrenched. There's always that one story ... But it's never the one about the guy who fell out of bed, banged his head and died.
Maybe he should've taken the V pill...stop him from rolling out of bed
But really...a person has more chance of slipping in the shower and cracking his head on the tiled floor....you can't cover every risk in life.
Things have changed a lot since the 70's, the population had exploded, a lot more motor vehicles to contend with, a lot more anger and rage on the road with media stirring people up in general, I think anything that will help to protect you in any fall on a moving vehicle like a bike, the risk of collision is a lot higher. May not be as relevant up in the NT but the population in the bigger Cities on the Eastside is tenfold.
I grew up in an area called Kotara in the City of Newcastle, I often used to ride my bike to school, to the Garden City (Westfield before it became that) where I worked back in 1976 and helmets were rarely known about, no problems, I was in my early teens so any stack i had, I was pretty much strong and agile enough to avoid hitting my head, however, 6 years ago when living in the same area as I grew up, the amount of traffic was horrific and the risk of getting hit has a lot greater so no, i would not attempt it without some head protection. It's a much different world from which we grew up in and if it means taking precautions without giving up cycling whatsoever, then it's worth it. Whether or not the law gets rescinded, I'd still choose to wear a stack hat.
What about the M7 motorway bikepath, the chances of getting caught and fined are slim but the chances of having a crash, especially with a lot of fast racing cyclists on the path around bends are realistic. 2 heads or more clashing would not be pretty.
brumby33