Forum search & shortcuts

Y'all be careful, i...
 

Y'all be careful, it's sheet ice out there. Side roads anyway.

Posts: 9280
Full Member
Topic starter
 
[#12647229]

Again I dont know what we're paying council tax for, they clearly aren't bothering to grit any other than the biggest main roads. And gone it seems is a bloke with a trolley doing lanes and pathways.

Took a wee run to the supermarket and just back. Scary.. On ebike and even with the power on eco (I never use eco) i had to turn the pedals slowly in low gearing or the back end started slipping. Corners 😯

I wonder if you were to come off could you put a claim in against the local council, for failing in their duties to keep the roads clear and safe 😕


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 6:25 pm
 kilo
Posts: 6938
Free Member
 

Spent about forty minutes outside on Friday evening with a deliveroo scooter guy who had slid off outside ours. We’re opposite a park so the road is a lot colder and it was quite slippy. Just heard this almighty bang and then nothing so knew it was a proper off. Fortunately, considering he was wearing jeans and trainers, only a cut on his leg and probably bad bruising. He couldn’t put any weight on his leg so we brought a chair out. No chance of an ambulance so he got a cab to a&e.
Mizzling now and cold so will be a rink tomorrow morning.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 6:32 pm
Posts: 2344
Free Member
 

Your local authority will publish a map/list of all the roads in your county it grits. If you Google for the name of your county and "winter maintenance plan" or similar you will find it. The reality is most councils will never grit minor roads, they haven't got the money to do it.

If there is a yellow grit bin near you throw some grit down on the paths/roads nearby. If it's empty let the council know


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 6:38 pm
Posts: 1526
Full Member
 

Isn’t that just how it works? We can’t grit everything. Just take a bit of care.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 6:40 pm
Posts: 27603
Free Member
 

Your local authority will publish a map/list of all the roads in your county it grits. If you Google for the name of your county and “winter maintenance plan” or similar you will find it. The reality is most councils will never grit minor roads, they haven’t got the money to do it.

This, A roads come first... etc. I work with Local Authority Highways, and some years ago a large County Council showed me that a full overnight grit cost them a cool £1m per night. They will budget on the average British winter, but after that.....


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 6:46 pm
Posts: 2344
Free Member
 

Yes and as winters on average get milder it's harder to justify tying up large amounts of cash in gritters and gritting crews.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 6:52 pm
Posts: 9280
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Isn’t that just how it works? We can’t grit everything. Just take a bit of care.

Well yeah care obviously, but riding at 5mph with the dropper down and both feet for a bit of stability is a bit backwards isnt it. And the council used to grit all the roads, be those main or side and also some guy with a trolley thing and a shovel doing pavements, pathways and just about every other surface that was used by the public.

But councils dont grit these things now because they do little other than have streetlights and a fortnightly refuse collection.

So what exactly are we paying for ?. If this was a private service, they'd have long lost the contract.

I think I might invest in a pair of ice spiker prro's.

.

But its not just the needs of the cycling commuter, many old folk and now forced to be housebound because they cannot venture for for fear of falling.

Can't get out to warmer places, stuck in, no heating, hard to get supplies. A recipe for disaster.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:05 pm
 wbo
Posts: 1774
Free Member
 

I was on a dual carriageway near my house... 3 cars in front hit a ridge of slush and spuninto the centre fence at 40k an hour

On the way home passed my neighvours new i4 parked in the ditch where he parked his 5 series.

Both cases , summer tyres...


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:09 pm
Posts: 13594
Free Member
 

the public.

But councils dont grit these things now because they do little other than have streetlights and a fortnightly refuse collection.

So what exactly are we paying for ?. If this was a private service, they’d have long lost the contract.

Why don't you look it up?

A full breakdown of all their expenditure will be online eg:

[url= https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52556845876_aa21cfeb8d_c.jp g" target="_blank">https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/52556845876_aa21cfeb8d_c.jp g"/> [/img][/url][url= https://flic.kr/p/2o5gze7 ]Cambs County Spend[/url] by [url= https://www.flickr.com/photos/brf/ ]Ben Freeman[/url], on Flickr

https://www.cambridgeshire.gov.uk/council/finance-and-budget/budget-overview


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:17 pm
 kilo
Posts: 6938
Free Member
 

So what exactly are we paying for ?. If this was a private service, they’d have long lost the contract.

You are paying for these services amongst many others

Schools – nursery, primary, secondary and special Pre-school education
Youth, adult and family and community education Student support
Children’s and families’ services – including welfare, fostering and adoption and child protection
Youth centres
Youth justice – secure accommodation and youth offender teams
Highways – non-trunk roads and bridges
Street lighting
Traffic management and road safety
Public transport – discounted travel schemes and local transport co- ordination
Airports, harbours and toll facilities
Services for older people including nursing, home, residential and day care and meals
Services for people with a physical disability, learning disability or mental health need
Asylum seekers
Employment support services
Cemetery, cremation and mortuary services
Community safety – including consumer protection, coastal protection and trading standards
Environmental health – including food safety, pollution and pest control, public toilets
Licensing – including alcohol, public entertainment, taxis Agricultural and fisheries services
Waste collection and disposal, recycling and street cleaning
Building and development control
Planning policy – including conservation and listed buildings Environmental initiatives
Economic and community development


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:17 pm
Posts: 7130
Full Member
 

But councils dont grit these things now because they do little other than have streetlights and a fortnightly refuse collection.

Jesus. It's not like the info is hard to find.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:22 pm
Posts: 18220
Full Member
 

Both cases , [s] summer tyres…[/s] not driving to the conditions

Ftfy


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:33 pm
Posts: 11605
Free Member
 

Your local authority will publish a map/list of all the roads in your county it grits. If you Google for the name of your county and “winter maintenance plan” or similar you will find it. The reality is most councils will never grit minor roads, they haven’t got the money to do it.

In all fairness to Dyna his LA is Glasgow Shitty Council, I nearly lost a Honda Civic to a pothole on one of the back streets up Maryhill once.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:37 pm
Posts: 1288
Free Member
 

I was on a dual carriageway near my house… 3 cars in front hit a ridge of slush and spuninto the centre fence at 40k an hour

On the way home passed my neighvours new i4 parked in the ditch where he parked his 5 series.

Both cases , summer tyres…

Decent quality summer tyres are fine for large parts of the uk provided the tread depth is reasonable, balding/ditch finders not so much. I never switch either of our cars tyres between winter and summer, I just drive a lot slower or choose not to drive at all.
We've had several mild winters where the temps have barely hit 0 °C for an extended period, and folk forget, there'll also be plenty of newer drivers who've never driven through a harsh winter and then there's some who are just a bit dense. Obviously it'll be everyone else's fault....


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:37 pm
Posts: 2335
Free Member
 

Yeh solid ice all day at ours. Had my ice gripper things in my shoes for a walk earlier. No way was I cycling and the car's not moved.

A bit worried about getting my son to the bus, or school tomorrow as we're down a farm track and then country lane before we hit an 'alledgedly' gritted route, didn't look to have any signs of being gritted today though. Might have to get up early enough to kick him out to walk the 2.5miles to the bus!

Due to get down to -5c again tonight and not get above 0c tomorrow.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:38 pm
Posts: 14935
Full Member
 

I went out yesterday with my wheelbarrow and a shovel. Filled it with grit from the box in our cul de sac. Salted the pavements and the road. Shovelled the snow on the pavement outside mine. It was nice to see the neighbours looking on in support. Special mention to the kid next door who decided to kick the pile of snow I'd created back onto the pavement I'd just cleared while his mum laughed and made little attempt to stop him🙄

As expected, the surrounding streets are icy death but thanks to me ours is clear and grippy.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:39 pm
Posts: 6642
Full Member
 

Not sure why you'd attempt to drive down Wilna Scar road when it's covered in ice but.......ooops!

[url= https://i.ibb.co/562WXRg/BA59-B4-EC-6053-4681-8-F46-203088629-FDC.jp g" target="_blank">https://i.ibb.co/562WXRg/BA59-B4-EC-6053-4681-8-F46-203088629-FDC.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= https://i.ibb.co/T49qd5F/1-D45-E143-8-B13-45-F4-AF06-CC79-D0-CD2-B65.jp g" target="_blank">https://i.ibb.co/T49qd5F/1-D45-E143-8-B13-45-F4-AF06-CC79-D0-CD2-B65.jp g"/> [/img][/url]
[url= https://geojsonlint.com/ ]geojson format[/url]


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 7:57 pm
Posts: 24440
Full Member
 

those 4x4s are only designed for school runs!


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 8:14 pm
Posts: 23340
Free Member
 

Just for reference, when were these halycon days when minor roads and lanes were gritted?


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 8:25 pm
Posts: 11648
Free Member
 

I'm on a steep hill and local bus route so it gets gritted. Quite unusual for the snow to settle as it has this evening...but its been raining this afternoon so if they had done the gritting run it would have been a complete waste of money as the rain would wash it straight into the drains.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 8:40 pm
Posts: 4331
Full Member
 

My road is minor enough not to be gritted. Had to knock my running on the head but managed a quick one today when I spotted it had thawed, no doubt it's very icy again by now.

I gritted a section of the (steep) hill by ours yesterday, someone will stack it in there, it's only a matter of time.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 8:42 pm
Posts: 17336
Full Member
 

In the worst cycling tragedy in British history, a car with three bald tyres skidded into a group of Rhyl cyclists killing four. The tyres were not deemed to be the cause and the driver received six points. And a £180 fine.

Just be careful. Riding or driving.

https://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/this-britain/fatal-journey-the-story-of-a-cycling-tragedy-412717.html?amp


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 8:48 pm
Posts: 1659
Full Member
 

Special mention to the kid next door who decided to kick the pile of snow I’d created back onto the pavement I’d just cleared while his mum laughed and made little attempt to stop him

Shit on their doorstep.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:02 pm
Posts: 3877
Free Member
 

As expected, the surrounding streets are icy death but thanks to me ours is clear and grippy.

Until you turn the corner onto the black ice and slip and break your collar bone.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:10 pm
Posts: 16175
Free Member
 

Special mention to the kid next door who decided to kick the pile of snow I’d created back onto the pavement I’d just cleared while his mum laughed and made little attempt to stop him

I don’t get people who clear snow from footpaths. Snow is grippy, when people then clear it, it gets more slippy

A man drove a car through a hedge backwards last night at the junction near us. Surprisingly in the middle of nowhere the roads were icy. I think it had more to do with driver error rather than summer or winter tyres.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:11 pm
Posts: 3877
Free Member
 

I don’t get people who clear snow from footpaths. Snow is grippy, when people then clear it, it gets more slippy

This.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:13 pm
Posts: 23340
Free Member
 

If it keeps snowing and stays sub-zero.

If it snows and then thaws as generally happens here, the snow quickly compacts into ice anyway.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:17 pm
Posts: 2279
Free Member
 

If you don't clear the snow it compacts to ice under traffic or turns to ice if there is freeze thaw cycles.

Laughing at the southern softies struggling with what to do......


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:18 pm
Posts: 3327
 

An interesting podcast that covers a study that suggests that perhaps gritting pavements first and A-roads last might be more cost effective: https://99percentinvisible.org/episode/invisible-women/


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:48 pm
Posts: 6642
Full Member
 

I'd prefer it if they didn't salt roads so I didn't have to spend as much time and energy on keeping rust off my older cars. Compulsory winter/crossclimates tyres.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:53 pm
Posts: 33240
Full Member
 

The reality is most councils will never grit minor roads, they haven’t got the money to do it.

They never have gritted all the minor roads, and I'm on the edge of the Peak District. You know where to take extra care and/or not travel.

And if you really need to ask why council services are getting poorer, you haven't been paying attention for the last 10-12 years!


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 9:58 pm
Posts: 1312
Full Member
 

Boardin bob - you’re going to heaven.

If everyone gritted/cleared the pavement outside their house the pavements would get cleared. Pity our local grit bin is empty 🤷‍♂️


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 10:04 pm
Posts: 33240
Full Member
 

We’ve had several mild winters where the temps have barely hit 0 °C

Can I be the first to point out that winter tyres are intended for temperatures below 7°C


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 10:05 pm
Posts: 5831
Full Member
 

Am happy i swapped my winters on to the car a few weekends back. Has been ideal for the last few days.
Taking the back roads to biking in Friday evening and I only felt the traction control kick in once.
Was def icy as i also tried the brakes and the abs went mental.
Winters are great as long as you remember they give you extra safety capacity and you don't rag it around as if it were warm and dry on summers.

If you want fun though, studded tyres in the middle of Sweden is great


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 10:28 pm
Posts: 3644
Full Member
 

Just for reference, when were these halycon days when minor roads and lanes were gritted?

This. Very much this. I lived in Leeds and in the mid 80s a bus route was put up our road. Which was a pretty much single Lane (not wide enough for central markings anyway) up a decently steep quite long hill.

Dad was a traffic copper and there was quite a lot of to-ing and fro-ing about the road status (and type - underneath it was a quarry access track) and lack of gritting.

Eventually it started being gritted when a bus nearly failed to make the 90 degree right hand bend near the bottom.

Only the "main" roads were gritted back then, that's for sure. There seem to be a lot of people who live in a weird bubble. Perhaps we notice it more because we drive more on minor roads through apparent necessity?


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 10:37 pm
Posts: 1288
Free Member
 

Can I be the first to point out that winter tyres are intended for temperatures below 7°C

Of course you can, they aren't necessary though for most of the uk. I'd also hazard a guess that the type of people who buy/use winter tyres are more likely to drive sensibly in poor conditions. Whereas the average driver begrudges paying for tyres so buys cheap shit Landsail/Evergreens, the chances of them buying a set of winter tyres/wheels? less than zero. These are also the folk you're more likely to find upside down in a ditch after being surprised at how slippy it is and how it's all the councils fault.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 11:31 pm
Posts: 838
Free Member
 

Discovered 2 kids, their dad and a middle aged lady all in seperate heaps amongst their scattered bikes on the commute last week. Sheet ice all over the quiet road on a designated cycle route. Pointed out the grit bin to the dad, he opened it to find it full of rubbish.

Went onto the council website to tell them it should be gritted, and it's already marked on their map. Nowhere else to complain so gave up.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 11:36 pm
Posts: 14935
Full Member
 

I don’t get people who clear snow from footpaths. Snow is grippy, when people then clear it, it gets more slippy

Temps got up to 3 Deg. Snow started to melt, then it was forecast to drop back to -3.

Freeze thaw stuff is where it gets lethal and it's forecast to be sub zero here for the foreseeable.

Clear the snow before it melts then salt down on the pavement. Zero ice.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 11:43 pm
Posts: 13356
Free Member
 

I’ve got some photos of March 1979, I’ll have to scan them & fanny around putting them on som image site though, so you’ll have to imagine the snow scenes.
They didn’t grit the side roads then either so get a grip. (See what I did there)?


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 11:56 pm
Posts: 3073
Free Member
 

our road is like an ice skating rink, light snow compacted over 3-4 days with ave temperatures below zero. No point using the grit the council dumped every half mile along our lane in the summer, as we need it to last through the whole winter..

My elderly neighbour in her Citroen manages without fuss, the average Amazon driver.. not so much.


 
Posted : 11/12/2022 11:56 pm
Posts: 28593
Free Member
 

Not sure why you’d attempt to drive down Wilna Scar road when it’s covered in ice but…….ooops!

Not sure I could stay upright walking down that bit.


 
Posted : 12/12/2022 12:09 am
Posts: 9280
Full Member
Topic starter
 

Had my ice gripper things in my shoes for a walk earlier. No way was I cycling and the car’s not moved.

Might be an idea to get something like that to wear on the bike. Had a sketchy corner today , too much brake(Damn shimano, no modulation...) rear skidded out and the foot down just made things more frightening 😆 no purchase at all,

At least a bit of foot support is going to do a lot to keep you upright.

Skating down the hill was fun though, a real knife edge. Low on dropper both feet out like outriggers skating along just trying to keep that bike on the straight.


 
Posted : 12/12/2022 12:09 am
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

I don’t get people who clear snow from footpaths. Snow is grippy, when people then clear it, it gets more slippy

Sweden has some experience with snow in winter:

many Swedish cities, including Stockholm, prioritize snow clearance very differently. They now clear walkways and bike paths first, especially those near bus stops and primary schools. Next, they clear local roads, and then, finally, highways.

Three times as many people are injured while walking in icy conditions in Sweden than while driving. And the cost of those injuries far exceeds the cost of snow clearance.

https://usa.streetsblog.org/2018/01/24/why-sweden-clears-walkways-before-roads/


 
Posted : 12/12/2022 1:28 am
Posts: 15692
Free Member
 

In Denmark, which also has a lot of experience of snow in winter, it is a legal requirement to clear the snow from the pavement in front of your property. Well apparently it is in Copenhagen:

https://international.kk.dk/live/housing/settling-into-your-new-home/clearing-snow-on-your-property

As a property owner, you are required to keep the pavement outside your property free of snow so that pedestrians can walk safely.

As a property owner, it is important for you to clear snow so that you will not be liable for damages in the event of an accident.


 
Posted : 12/12/2022 1:43 am
Posts: 16531
Full Member
 

My oh had a minor "crash" on way home last night (Sunday, mid evening). She either clipped a curb/ hit a pot hole or something but the car started flashing up warning lights and the handling went "odd".

AA couldn't get to her, nor myself. The AA and I also tried to get her a taxi the last 3 miles to her home but no dice.

We aren't out in the sticks either but in a pretty urban area of Kent.

In the end a range rover that was passing picked her up and dropped her off. They are part of a local FB Range Rover/ Landy group apparently, just going out and helping stranded motorists.

There are some properly lovely people around.👍


 
Posted : 12/12/2022 4:27 am
Page 1 / 2