Parrot of Doom wrote:
Quite easily. If you were cycling past a vehicle turning right, and somebody drove up behind you, on a busy road, and ducked in almost knocking you off, how would you deal with that?
Get in the middle of the gap? Been there, done that. No effect. Car just takes greater risks.
Cycle backwards?
Mount the kerb?
Stop suddenly?
Asking somebody in that position to 'break the chain' is ridiculous. Its like saying being rear-ended is always preventable.
Are you being deliberately obtuse, or can you genuinely not see the issue here.
The cyclist in your above example would break the chain by not placing themselves into a situation where they were likely to find themself vying with a car for the same bit of space. Whats a 30 second wait compared to life as a vegetable?
Your list of options above are all last second, last ditch efforts once its all started going wrong, the chain could easily have been broken at a far earlier stage with sufficient observation and anticipation. Cyclists, like bikers, cannot afford to let events on the road 'happen to them', they have to work a little harder to become masters of their own destiny, and not put themselves at locations in space and time where accidents are more likely to occur, since they are likely to come off worse.
So what could our subject cyclist have done in this instance? Been aware of a car in close proximity to him, and anticipated that they would both be heading for the same gap, and dropped back, slowed down, given himself more time to build situational awareness. Whatever the law says, a car has right of way to a survivor, by virtue of the fact that it's big hard and heavy and can ruin your day. What else to do to make the chain less able to build? Use lights day and night, wear high-viz clothing whenever riding, and wear a helmet (which may not break the chain before the accident, but may well break it before death!). These are all things that are second nature to bikers, and once you've kissed that metal cage and departed from the saddle, the tarmac makes no distinction between what sort of vehicle you've just fallen off!
If you cycle regularly, and you genuinely cannot see what the cyclist in this, or pretty much any, accident could have done to increase his chances of dying of old age, then I think a very good idea would be to take some motorcycle training (if you can afford it) even if you never plan to ride one again, and even advanced training, to learn what skilled, safe riders go through to ensure they stay that way. Time, hassle, money you're thinking, why should I have to go out of my way to compensate for the shortcomings of others you might ask, well at the end of the day, it all comes down to what value you put on your life.