Skip to main content

VIDEO: Pasta-packing drivers should beware of lean-bean cyclists

Know your limits, especially if that inconsiderate cyclist has got you so enraged that you have jumped out of your car to chase him down the block. You want to teach him a lesson but, like the man in this video, you may end up learning one yourself. You’re too fat. Recognise the chances are slim that you - a car driver who, according to a new study, will be overweight – will catch that svelte bicycle rider. It could end in tragedy with you hitting face-first that urban-grade asphalt, feeling the aggre
August 19, 2016 Read time: 3 mins
Know your limits, especially if that inconsiderate cyclist has got you so enraged that you have jumped out of your car to chase him down the block.

You want to teach him a lesson but, like the man in this video, you may end up learning one yourself. You’re too fat.

Recognise the chances are slim that you - a car driver who, according to a new study, will be overweight – will catch that svelte bicycle rider. It could end in tragedy with you hitting face-first that urban-grade asphalt, feeling the aggregate relieve your face of several centimetres of skin.

However, you could hit bitumen on a different type of road - one to Damascus. Take heed of an ongoing academic study, aptly named PASTA - Physical Activity through Sustainable Transport Approaches. It concludes car drivers are fatter than cyclists by at least 4kg.

The European Union-funded PASTA project – “led by an international group of experts”, including the World Health Organisation – is being done by BOKU, the acronym for the University of Natural Resources and Life Sciences in Vienna, Austria. The work focuses on how different forms of transport relate to levels of physical activity and, consequently, people's health.  

PASTA researchers have so far monitored 11,000 volunteers in seven European cities and asked how they move around the city, which mode of transport they use and how much time they spend travelling.

The project also asked volunteers to record their height, weight and to provide information about their attitudes towards walking and bicycling and whether they had experienced any accidents recently. Analysis of the data showed that people who drove cars were, on average, 4kg heavier than those who cycled.

Those four 4kg would be like an anchor around your waist if you were to run after a cyclist.

"Being more active can make you healthier, save you money and improve your life,” said Dr Adrian Davis, a UK transport and health expert and member of PASTA's advisory board. “Instead of going to the gym, think about cycling to work."

Help is at hand, too. PASTA is looking for more volunteers to take part in its research to help understand the relationship between transport and health. Give them a call if you live in these seven European cities: Antwerp, Barcelona, London, Orebro, Rome, Vienna and Zurich.

Related Content

  • VIDEO: Brazilian cyclists caught on camera drafting a truck
    January 18, 2016
    Just how dangerous is it for a cyclist to draft a fast moving vehicle? Probably very dangerous but that means only some cyclists will attempt it, as these videos shows. At the start of this video from Brazil, the cyclist on the right appears to attach his Go Pro camera to the rear of the truck that they are drafting. It is not until about 3:55 seconds into the video that the speed picks up and reaches reportedly 124kph. Near the end of the video, the one cyclist left appears to take back the camera off t
  • Telematics technology can identify risky drivers
    June 16, 2015
    A new study shows that the risk level of a driver’s likelihood of a crash can be determined accurately. An independent study carried out by driver behaviour specialist CAS for Risk Technology shows that data collected by automotive telematics devices can accurately predict the likelihood of a motorist having a crash. CAS carried out its research with 1,291 drivers who were insured by a leading UK firm and had telematics devices installed in their vehicles. The study examined how driver behaviour affects the
  • Almost gone: Canada’s old Port Mann Bridge deconstructed
    August 14, 2015
    Three years ago a welder’s cut halved Canada’s old Port Mann Bridge. David Arminas reports from the banks of the Fraser River. By the time this issue of World Highways reaches you, one of Canada’s iconic steel arch bridges will be a shadow of its former self. It’s been a three-year demolition job since the first cut across the deck of the old Port Mann Bridge just outside the city of Vancouver on Canada’s Pacific coast. A new 10-lane 2.2km Port Mann Bridge opened in 2012 (see box). It runs parallel to the o
  • India’s road to safety
    September 5, 2012
    India's growth rate is the envy of the world, and its infrastructure is rapidly improving, but its road safety record is the world's worst. Patrick Smith reports on a conference aimed at finding answers to the problems Ambling through the gardens and marble magnificence that is the Taj Mahal or gazing down on the city of Jaipur from the hilltop Jaigarh Fort is far removed from the world outside.