Me when I remember it's a four-day work week:
🔞😜 Solo para mayores de edad (y ganadores de etapa en #LaVuelta23)
🔞😜 Drink responsibly - only for adults (and Vuelta stage winners!)
🍾 @seppkuss#CriaCuervos👀 @OutOfCyclingpic.twitter.com/tJRFId0g6Q
— La Vuelta (@lavuelta) August 31, 2023
⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️
⛰️⛰️ 𝑃𝑖𝑐𝑜 𝑑𝑒𝑙 𝐵𝑢𝑖𝑡𝑟𝑒 ⛰️⛰️⛰️
⛰️⛰️ 𝑂𝑏𝑠𝑒𝑟𝑣𝑎𝑡𝑜𝑟𝑖𝑜 𝐴𝑠𝑡𝑟𝑜𝑓𝑖́𝑠𝑖𝑐𝑜 ⛰️
⛰️⛰️ 𝐽𝑎𝑣𝑎𝑙𝑎𝑚𝑏𝑟𝑒 ⛰️⛰️⛰️
⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️⛰️
🏆 🇺🇸 @seppkuss - @JumboVismaRoad
#LaVuelta23pic.twitter.com/IELMEzFf6p— La Vuelta (@lavuelta) August 31, 2023
A day in the mountains with a summit finish. Jumbo Visma chasing down a Grand Tour triple with two stars Jonas Vingegaard and Primož Roglič. And Remco Evenepoel fighting to defend his red jersey. What do you think might have happened next?
Well of course, enter the American domestique who you could depend on if your life was ever in doubt, Sepp Kuss.
High-fiving spectators, pumping his fists and looking like he was chilling on flats, while finishing almost 3 minutes ahead of his two teammates and an insane 3:24 ahead of red jersey Evenepoel.
What a rider, chapeau Kuss!
🚀 ¡¡QUÉ ETAPA!! 🥵 Revive el ÚLTIMO KM de lo sucedido en la subida a Pico del Buitre.
🔥 WHAT A STAGE! Battles up and down the road ... relive the final KM on the Pico del Buitre.#LaVuelta23#CarrefourconLaVuelta23@carrefourESpic.twitter.com/tYAX988f82
— La Vuelta (@lavuelta) August 31, 2023
Having spoken out against ambitions of winning a Grand Tour, Kuss finds himself second in the general classification, eight seconds behind the brilliant and gifted 20-year-old French rider Lenny Martinez from Groupama FDJ. (I swear they keep getting younger!)
For all we know, if Kuss didn't slow down before the finish line and high-five spectators before even crossing it, he might even be in the red jersey!
— Cycling out of context (@OutOfCycling) August 31, 2023
When asked after the race if he's thinking about the GC already, Kuss was modest and humble as always. "No, no. For me to win a stage is incredible. I don't know now, one day at a time. First I have to enjoy this I guess," he said.
But what does Jumbo Visma do now? Launch a three-pronged attack? Or unleash Kuss, who has helped the team so much, riding selflessly for Roglič's Giro victory and Vingegaard's Tour de France win? The question is, will Kuss be able to stay up to pace with the rest on the time trials, and if he does, do Roglič and Vingegaard ride for him as he rode for them?
Is there a sight scarier than seeing these two go full gas together?
And what about Evenepoel, who has made more headlines than he would have hoped for in the first week? He said after the race: "I was feeling okay, just couldn't speed up when Jonas went. I had to hold my own pace and in the end it was 20 seconds slower than them. I wasn't going all-out, it was a controlled effort. But on some days you can't go all-out, it was just one of those days, wasn't feeling my legs.
"I just needed to find my own rhythm, settle myself a bit. Good thing is I could speed up in the final stages. If this was a bad day, then it's okay. Let's hope this was one of the worst days of the race."
If that's a bad day for Evenepoel, I hope no one sees me at my worst...
"Ah yes, why do you think the councils build cycling lanes? So most people can cycle on them? Doh! No, it's so some people can park their vehicles on them!"
A couple of weeks ago, Jeremy Vine was in the spotlight (I mean, when is he not, it's almost a weekly ritual to mention him here) for filming a lorry bin driver heading into the opposite direction on a cycle lane.
Now, under another tweet posted by a cyclist from Sutton in London, he has urged Veolia, the French company which provides services to public authorities, such as refuse collection, to stop its drivers from using the cycle lanes.
In the original tweet, the bin collectors can be seen sitting inside the parked truck, likely on their break as suggested by the original poster. It's nice when Sutton Council actually installs some cycling infrastructure, but it's a shame that their waste contractor VeoliaUK then parks their refuse trucks in it so their drivers can take a break," read the tweet.
Please @VeoliaUK stop this. Someone will be badly hurt.
— Jeremy Vine (@theJeremyVine) August 31, 2023
Veolia loves bike lanes! had similar issues in Croydon
— SanjayLalwani 🌍🚴 (@i_SanjayLalwani) August 30, 2023
A Kent cyclist has once again raised the alarm about bikejackings in the area, sharing video footage of two moped-riding attackers forcing him off the road in a frightening incident on a busy road in broad daylight.
"Bro, bro, get off the bike bro," one of the attackers shouted. "Get off the bike, get off the bike now. Get off the bike. I got a shank [knife], bro. Get off the bike, bro... Give me the f****** bike now."
> Shocking footage shows cyclist threatened by moped-riding thieves in latest bikejacking attempt
Brighton and Hove's Labour Council doesn't have the best reputation amongst cyclists — having been called "actively against active travel" and accused by a former Green councillor today that they will do "nothing" to deliver on the previous council's active travel promises.
However, it has admitted to road.cc that it "hearts" cycling too, when we contacted them about the vandalism story from this morning, with the "no" covered and turned into a "heart" to spell out "love cycling" on the Brighton seafront.
Council leader Bella Sankey told road.cc: “Brighton & Hove City Council ‘hearts’ cycling too. But we believe it’s important to have separated routes for pedestrians, cyclists and motorists to ensure everyone’s safety.
"Cycling is not permitted on any pavements unless it is specifically signposted that cyclists can share it with pedestrians – and this stretch of pavement is no exception.
"There is however a very wide cycle lane in Madeira Drive as an alternative to this stretch of pavement.
"It was created by the council specifically to encourage active travel, and we’d encourage our cyclists to use this route in the interests of everyone’s safety."
We didn't receive any updates about the cycle lane on Marine Parade though, for which the previous Green council had secured £1.2 million from the Active Travel fund. Well at least, they at least didn't write "pedestrians, cyclists, and road users" this time. Small wins, I know, maybe too small.
"No cycling"? Nah, "love cycling". Or, at least that's what the signs in Brighton are saying now after reports of vandalism on the city's seafront.
Now that's a change of pace when it comes to cycle-lane vandalism stories. The signs, on the upper promenade adjacent to Marine Parade in Brighton appearing around every 100 metres, are there to indicate that cyclists shouldn't be on the pavement. But the majority of them, along from Old Steine to Brighton Marina, have been vandalised, with the "No" plastered into a heart symbol, reports The Argus.
Cycling is banned on the upper promenade pavement and bike riders are encouraged to use the road or walk with their cycle on the pavement, as other signs also suggest. They can also use the cycle lane which is parallel to the pavement down on Madeira Drive.
Incidentally, Brighton and Hove's former Green council succeeded in securing a £1.2 million funding for a cycle lane on Marine Parade, next to the pavement, from the Marina to the Palace Pier in May. However, the May elections saw Labour come into power, which has since been described as being "actively against active travel" and accused of "wilfully destroying cycling infrastructure".
Jamie Lloyd, former Green Councillor and lead for Active Travel, told road.cc: "It was the previous Green council that won the 1.2 million for the improved cycle lane and now the anti-active travel Labour Council are in full control they will almost certainly not do anything to deliver on that."
The scheme would provide a continuous two-way cycle facility on the southern side of the A259, as well as improvements to pedestrian crossings and new crossings along the route.
It would also include cycle parking, provision of a BTN Bikeshare hub and bus network improvements between the Palace Pier roundabout and Lower Rock Gardens.
The Green council had said the cycle lane was needed in addition to the Madeira Drive lane because it can only be accessed at either end — from the Palace Pier roundabout at its west end or Dukes Mound and the Marina to the east.
Steve Davis, who was the co-chair of the council’s Environment, Transport and Sustainability Committee under the Greens, had said: "Marine Parade is one of the strategic routes prioritised in the Local Cycling and Walking Infrastructure Plan that councillors approved earlier this year and so being able to deliver on this so quickly will be great for taking that long term vision forward."
There have been no updates on the cycle lane since then. road.cc has contacted the council, but maybe some cheeky vandalism will finally spur action?
A senior Conservative member has defended his council's strategy on road safety after an increase in the number of cyclist deaths in Norfolk county, including three cyclists within the space of just one week.
Two cyclists were killed while cycling on a rural A-road in Norfolk on Sunday evening. A man in his 40s was arrested on suspicion of causing death by careless driving and has since been released on bail until November.
Both cyclists, men in their 30s, died at the scene as a result of their injuries, leaving police to appeal for information from anyone who "may have witnessed the collision or either vehicle prior to the collision and are particularly keen to speak to any motorists who may have relevant dashcam footage".
> Locals demand safety action after two cyclists killed in collision on "treacherous" road
Earlier this week, an "inspiring" swimming coach in her 60s also lost her life after a collision with a car driver.
Councillor Graham Plant said: "We are constantly working to improve highway safety."
Mr Plant, the Norfolk County Council cabinet member for highways, infrastructure and transport, said the local authority was in the final stages of implementing a £66m Transforming Cities project and was recently awarded £3m in active travel funding - both schemes funded by the government.
"We're sorry to hear about the death of anyone on our roads," he added.
Liam Calvert, Norwich Green Party councillor and a cyclist himself, however said that segregated cycle ways and blanket 20mph speed limits in the city were needed to improve safety.
"It's not taken seriously enough," said Mr Calvert, speaking to the BBC.
"Highways could be spending an awful lot more money making cycling safe, because this has enormous benefits for the city as a whole; every person who is on their bike is one fewer person in their cars."
In June, we reported that a right-wing coalition had come under fire for its plans to immediately scrap cycle lanes and low emission zones in some Spanish cities, a move that critics said was inspired only by "political revenge and technical ignorance" and which will knock Spain "back to the 20th century".
However, despite all the backlash and pleas of common sense raised by the police and former ministers as well as climate and transport experts, the recently elected local government in the Alicante region of south-east Spain, a coalition between the conservative People’s party (PP) and the far-right Vox, has followed through on its election manifesto by adopting a populist, pro-car policy.
And the actual ramifications to reverse Spain's green agenda by the party have already begun. Last week, it got rid of the cycle lane in the Avenida Juan Carlos I by spending €38,000 (£32,500) of public money and it has now started work on removing a second cycle lane in Calle José María Buck.
However, cyclists from the Valencian region were not backing down without first putting up a fight. A group of cyclists blocked part of the José María Buck route during a protest against the removal works on Monday.
Claudio Guilabert, the mobility councillor from the new right-wing coalition, told a news conference that the work on the Avenida Juan Carlos I was being carried out because parents at the Jesuit school Santa María-Jesuitinas complained they were obliged to double-park outside the school as, like many in Spanish cities, the cycle lane was separated from the road by a line of parked cars.
The council claimed the José María Buck bike lane is unsafe for cyclists and pedestrians and has led to 10 minor accidents over 18 months.
However, the police said that car parking next to the cycle lane "represented a potential danger to cyclists due to doors being opened by parked cars", according to Costa Blanca.
The former mobility councillor Esther Díez, described the plan to create a system in which cyclists would share road space with cars and motorcycles as "barbaric", claiming the new government was driven by "fanaticism".
Protestors led by Esther Díez, said the work "had not been signposted" and that "no alternative" route had been offered as required under Elche laws. But despite the attempts, the council failed to budge, as the work to dismantle the cycle lane continued on another section of the road.
The cyclists then left peacefully with Díez stating that there is "no objective criterium as to why cycle lanes are being dismantled in Elche".
> Research paper concludes that networking Seville’s cycle lanes helped improved cycle safety
Eliminating cycle routes has been discovered by political parties as a popular and vote-drawing policy, starting with the Madrid mayor José Luis Martínez-Almeida in 2019.
In Valladolid, at the new mayor’s first meeting in charge, he gave the instruction to repeal a LTN law, which he claimed made the city “stuck and chaotic”.
In Gijón, a coastal city in north-western Spain, new mayor Carmen Moriyón announced that one of her first acts will be for cars to once again travel through the city “without any type of environmental label”, while restructuring the city’s road policies by dismantling the cycle network.
“From now on, vehicles will have absolute freedom of movement and parking on the streets and roads of Gijón,” Mariyón said.
Meanwhile in Elche, the far-right council has flagged up Calle Mariano Soler Olmos as the next cycle-lane reversal target. But since it was paid for by a European Union grant, the cycle way’s removal would necessitate sending a refund to Brussels.
The former councillor Díez described these "backward" steps by the new local conservative regimes as “frustrating as it is worrying”, coming as they do at a crucial time for active travel and the fight against climate change.
“We are going back to the 20th century when we should be accelerating the transformations,” she says.
Frustrating and worrying times, for sure.
Sorry to get your hopes up, but no it's not the SL9 you thought about.
Instead, it's latest phase of Transport for London's (TfL) new express service bus network to better connect outer London, renamed and rebranded as route SL9.
Well, if that was something, that would have caused just a tiny bit of a frenzy at the road.cc towers...
The Specialized SL9 dropping already. It’s not what you think it is… https://t.co/2Xp0JFYiz9
— Rory McCarron (@CyclingLawLDN) August 31, 2023
> 8 things you didn't know about the new Specialized Tarmac SL8
In yet another sign of the challenging times for the bike industry, the Bicycle Association's latest report(link is external) on the state of the UK cycle industry suggests that bike sales have slumped once again, months on from the national trade association reporting they had fallen to a 20-year low in 2022.
> UK bike sales fall even further after dropping to lowest level in 20 years
The future of post-race interviews in Grand Tours 😁#LaVuelta23pic.twitter.com/q5DjHonSm7
— Soudal Quick-Step Pro Cycling Team (@soudalquickstep) August 30, 2023
How I wish that the sun was shining like this here in the UK too...
Now that's a strong team from Ineos who will be racing in their home race starting from Manchester this Sunday.
We’re coming home! 🏠
Introducing your INEOS Grenadiers for the @TourofBritain🇬🇧🙌 pic.twitter.com/JGfKjyxUm9— INEOS Grenadiers (@INEOSGrenadiers) August 31, 2023
Pidcock, Rowe, Rogriguez, Sheffield, Turner and Swift! Your live blog host can't wait to see them going up and down Caerphilly hill for the finale!
Maybe dreams do come true!
When your cycling hero signs your artwork 🤗✍️
Enric Mas took the time to sign this young fan's drawing of his favourite riders before Stage 5 of La Vuelta 👏
📸 Cor Vos
__________________
🇪🇸 #Lavuelta23pic.twitter.com/4ysDkLv2sF— Velon CC (@VelonCC) August 30, 2023
Movistar's biggest GC threat, riding his home race and just 11 seconds behind "can't-catch-a-break" Remco Evenepoel in second position, made a young fan's day when he popped over and signed his drawing of his favourite riders. Thankfully, Mas can be seen in the fabulous drawing, standing next to Juan Ayuso and Roglič. Now that would have been awkward if he wasn't in the drawing...