I struggle myself with what to say when I see something is not safe.
But why bite your tongue if someone's helmet fits improperly? One the
one hand you may get a ' mind your own business' look.   On the other
hand you may be able to prevent someone from getting a head injury if
you can help them wear their helmet safely.

________________________________

From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Robbie Webber
Sent: Thursday, July 24, 2008 5:42 PM
To: Frank Hassler
Cc: bikies danenet
Subject: Re: [Bikies] 6 y/o girl on bike vs hit-and-run driver


On Thu, Jul 24, 2008 at 5:15 PM, Frank Hassler <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:



        On Jul 24, 2008, at 12:36 PM, Robbie Webber wrote:

                She struck the pavement with enough force to knock off
her
                bicycle helmet.


        Almost every kid I see on a bike has their helmet on wrong.  
        


Yes, I noticed that as well. Your helmet should NOT be knocked off when
you get hit or crash in any way. Smashed, maybe, but not "knocked off."

Large numbers of adults seem to have their helmet on wrong, too. I have
to bite my tongue, so I don't get a "mind your own business" look from
the person.

Of course, I see plenty of bicyclists with not enough air in their
tires, their seat too low, pedaling inefficiently, no oil on the chain
(I hear lots of dry chains in the spring), bike is too big (common for
small women), wrong gear, etc. I could help many of these people be more
comfortable or safe on their bikes. But these are never the people that
show up at my bike classes. 

I'm sure everyone on this list has their bike tuned up, fit, and wears
their helmets correctly. How about if we each help one neighbor, work
colleague or family member? Or if you aren't sure if your helmet or bike
is fit correctly - ask a more experienced cyclist or friend!

Robbie

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