Mike,
Help me here.
A runner should find "a route farther away from auto traffic"and further away from 
"country roads" where
the senior set wants to make you "dead right"? And you have preferred to run at night 
with dark clothes
on so that you can be an invisible moving target?
I take it that this plan has worked well for you.
JL

Mike Prizy wrote:

> But why be dead right? If special clothing has to be worn with the intent of being 
>seen by drivers,
> then maybe a route farther away from auto traffic needs to be found. I think bright 
>clothing gives
> some runners a false sense of security.
>
> Having grown up in the South Suburbs of Chicago, I've had numerous run ins with cars 
>and
> pedestrians. While in college, I was surprised at the number of run ins I had on 
>country roads - not
> just with aggressive car loads of teenagers - but from the grandmas and grandpas who 
>wouldn't yell
> or throw anything at us, but seemed set on making me/us dead right.
>
> For the last 20 years, most of my runs have been in the evening and in the dark, 
>particularly in the
> winter months. People ask me if I ware reflective tape or material on my running 
>gear. I tell them
> no, because I don't want to be a visible moving target.
>
> Ed and Dana Parrot wrote:
>
> > > Back in the day, back before running was reinvented in Boulder, there was
> > a war in the
> > > streets as you tried to log your miles. One winter I was asked why my
> > running outfit
> > > was so ugly. The colors of this outfit could not be blamed on my color
> > blindness. I
> > > dyed my long johns a deep pink, my shorts were a green-yellow, the
> > sweatshirt was
> > > orange, and my stocking cap was red. I dressed like this as a form of self
> > defense. In
> > > the previous weeks, I was hit in the shoulder by the large mirrors of a
> > pickup truck
> > > that came up behind me when I ran a short stretch in the same direction as
> > the
> > > traffic. I found myself sprawled on the hood of a car because the driver
> > only looked
> > > to the left as she made a right hand turn.On a Sunday morning, a driver
> > swerved toward
> > > me and my hand hit the door handle, slashing the top of my hand and giving
> > me a scar
> > > that I sport to this day. I vowed that if I was hit again, the driver
> > would have a
> > > difficult time explaining that he didn't see me. I was ugly, but I at
> > least felt safer.
> >
> > Smart move.  I have a neon yellow jacket that has been jokingly referred to
> > as "Exhibit A" (in case it is needed in court to prove that the driver who
> > hit me could indeed see me).
> >
> > - Ed Parrot


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