I rode East Main and the Lake Loop Sunday afternoon, and because the weather was nice there were of course, unsurprisingly, a mess of people out on the trails, both riders and walkers, the vast majority of which seemed to be completely oblivious to any kind of trail etiquette. IMO, as the place becomes more successful, which I'm a fan of and have been rooting for them ever since they opened, there's going to be more and more conflicts between trail users and most of them could, again IMO, be easily avoided and headed off now with a little signage. Many of the hardcore trail runners already know that if they run opposite direction of travel they can see bikers coming much earlier than they can hear them coming up from behind them, and have taken the trouble to learn how to navigate the trails in reverse, but the more casual walkers A) have no idea of this, and B) wouldn't know how to do it if they had thought of it since the trails are only marked in one direction. I'd suggested this on the USNWC's fb page last year, then to someone in person who asked that I send an email (which I did) and never saw anything in response. Lake Norman is signed this way, sending walkers one direction and bikers the other, and works quite well. I came here from Southern California, and even thirteen years ago when I moved there was a good bit of trail conflict there for a number of reasons, not least of which being just a much greater population meaning more people in general on the trails, but also big was that all the trails are bi-directional, so you pretty much always can end up running up behind a hiker who can't hear you over their earbuds until the last second and they end up startled and angry at you as a result (not to mention the possibility of horses). A bell was invaluable there, and I've started using one again just because USNWC can approach L.A. type trail densities on nice days, but we have the advantage in that ~90% of our trails are one-way so we could easily get hikers and bikers headed opposite one another. One other thing that could be mostly solved with signage is the trail etiquette problem. I don't think that most new riders even realize that there is such a thing, so signs reminding or introducing them to the common courtesy rules of the trail might go a long way to keeping riders from completely blocking the trail when they stop for a rest (or at least stop them from yelling "chill out dude!" when you politely ask them not to as you try to get through), might stop dog walkers with fully extended flexi leads, might help prevent skidding up the trail with rear only braking, etc. Is there a way that we can make this happen before things get even worse there? It was really nice Sunday, but this is awfully early in the season to have me thinking that I should have ridden somewhere else.
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