As someone who commuted by bike in a major city for four years, I learned everything about urban cycling through daily trial and error. It’s a completely different world than recreational weekend riding. Everything moves faster, closer, and angrier.


Route Selection Matters Most
The shortest route isn’t always the safest or even the fastest. I add an extra ten minutes to my commute specifically to use streets with proper bike lanes and lower speed limits.
Probably should have led with this: learn which roads are actually bikeable versus just technically legal. Some arterials become absolute suicide during rush hour, regardless of what the bike lane paint suggests.
Rush Hour Differences
Morning rush brings caffeinated, focused drivers. Still dangerous, but predictable at least. People have somewhere to be and they’re paying attention.
Evening rush is worse. Tired, stressed, checking phones, thinking about dinner rather than traffic. More erratic decision-making. I’m significantly more cautious heading home than heading out.
Infrastructure Quality Varies Wildly
Painted bike lanes beat nothing. Protected lanes with physical barriers provide actual safety. Know the difference and trust them differently.
That’s what makes infrastructure deceptive: painted lanes disappear at intersections – exactly where you need protection most. Don’t assume the paint protects you from right-turning cars.
Weather Considerations
Rain makes everything slippery. Metal grates, painted road markings, manhole covers – all become ice rinks when wet.
Visibility drops for everyone in rain. More lights, slower speeds, wider safety margins around other vehicles.
Night Riding Requirements
Front light and rear light are the bare minimum. I run multiples of each. Reflective clothing or tape on the bike frame adds another layer.
You cannot be too visible at night. What feels like overkill is actually appropriate.
Managing Your Mental State
Stay calm when drivers do stupid things. Getting angry affects your judgment and handling. They already forgot about you three seconds after the incident – you’ll be fuming about it the rest of the day.
Not worth the distraction. Get home safe, vent about it later.