dcbwhaley wrote:
RobinXe wrote:
Any alcohol impairs judgement, slows reactions and reduces hand/eye coordination. Any.
Are you seriously advocating and admitting drink cycling?
Yes but only up to th e point where it prevents me from controlling the machine. I also plead guilty to a second charge of drink walking.
It is not against the law to be impaired by alcohol when a pedestrian, though, only to be "drunk and disorderly". The law is not the same for pedestrians and pedal cyclists.
And you must be the David Brown of High Peak who wrote the following letter in a recent issue of the CAMRA newspaper
What's Brewing:
David Brown wrote:
MR Wasley's letter (WB Nov) about the ale-quaffing cyclist cannot go unchallenged.
The difference between drinking before cycling and driving are profound. Firstly the law: it is illegal to drive a car after drinking, at most, a couple of pints; but it is only illegal to cycle when "incapable of having proper control of the cycle".
It takes considerably more than a couple of pints for a seasoned drinker to be so incapable. A cyclist is, in effect, subject to the same legal constraints as a pedestrian. And I am sure that not even Mr Wasley would object to the drinking before walking.
Secondly the consequences: a drunk driver is likely to kill or injure many innocent people; a drunken cyclist is unlikely to harm anyone other than himself. Moreover there is a self-limiting effect - a dangerously drunk person is unlikely to be able to balance his bicycle.
Cycling is an excellent means of doing a country pub crawl where the distances are too far to walk and public transport is not convenient. The health benefits are considerable, offsetting to some extent the deleterious effects of the alcohol.
Now I would not argue in favour of a fixed drink-drive limit for cyclists, nor would I dispute that a cyclist may reasonably allow himself a little more latitude with regards to alcohol than a driver. But to suggest that a pedal cycle is an acceptable means of transport for a pub crawl really is grossly irresponsible. Your judgment will be significantly impaired well before you are physically unable to ride the machine, and this may result in accidents involving other vehicles, not just yourself.
There's a letter in reply to this in the January issue that I may post later.