Bicycle
Information and Safety Tips
Whether
you ride a bike, walk, or drive a car, it's important to know how to use
our street system to ensure everyone's safety. More people of all ages
are using their bicycles for Parking Management and recreation than ever
before.
As
a cyclist, you must be aware of your rights and responsibilities under
the law. As a motorist, you should always be aware of these laws and how
to interact with cyclists. Understanding your role in our multimodal street
system and obeying the laws will help make Southern Miss a bicycle-friendly
community.
Safety
Tips for Cycling on Southern Miss' campus.
- Practice Defensive Cycling
Ride defensively and expect the unexpected. Pass with care. Watch for
vehicles turning into your path, and never assume you know what a driver
intends to do.
- Watch for Hazards
Regularly scan the roadway for cars, pedestrians, and unexpected hazards
such as potholes, glass, and roadside trees that limit visibility. Ride
at least two feet from the road edge to avoid debris and allow space
to maneuver.
- Keep Control of Your Bicycle
Keeping both hands on the handlebars allows you to make quick turns
and stops. In rain, allow three times the normal distance to stop.
- Use Common Sense
Do not put your life or the lives of others in danger with careless
riding. It's not worth it. Remember, no matter who is at fault in an
accident, the bicyclist always loses.
- Always Wear a Helmet
A helmet does four things for you: makes you more visible, keeps your
head cooler in the sun, helps gain motorists' respect; and most importantly,
it protects your head.
- Use Lights at Night
Using a white headlight and rear reflector at night always makes the
cyclist more visible. Adding a taillight or amber reflector is also
advisable. For extra visibility, wear light-colored clothes with reflective
tape.
- Obey Traffic Signs, Signals, and Laws
Bicyclists must operate their bicycles like drivers of motor vehicles.
Obeying laws helps you being taken seriously by drivers.
- Lock Your Bike When You're Gone
Lock your bike with a U-shaped lock or a strong cable or hardened chain.
Lock to an immovable object such as a bike rack, putting the lock or
cable through both wheels and frame.
- Use Hand Signals
Hand signals tell motorists and pedestrians what you intend to do. Signal
as a matter of courtesy and protection.
- Ride on the Right with Traffic
Ride with traffic. Motorists aren't looking for bicyclists riding on
the wrong side of the roadway. Bicycling on the wrong side is particularly
dangerous at intersections, roadway curves, and on the crest of hills.
- Turning Left
Bicyclists can make a left turn by
1) Signaling, yielding to traffic, moving into the left lane, then turning
left; or
2) Riding straight across to the far-side crosswalk, then walk your
bike across the road.
- Riding through Intersections
When you're going straight through an intersection, move to the through-lane,
avoiding the right-turn-only lane. Don't ride to the right of a right-turning
motorist.
- Motorist: Pass with Care
Motorists: please provide a reasonable safe distance (five feet) from
bicyclist when passing
.. thank you!
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