[chainwhip;1990425]The idea I got is to describe also cyclists' area of influence as rubber dinghies interacting with the motorists' rubber dinghies. (BTW I'm completely serious now.)
Both can be inflated or deflated according to the situation etc.
That is an excellent idea that would illustrate the dynamic nature of that concept. We are working on animations of road positioning as a resource that CTUK will be offering from our new website soon to be launched. (So catch your screenshots now of the current one for your museum of cycle training Mr Cwhip). I will discuss your idea with our marketing gal and designer guy
But a pithy one-liner or a one-thousand-pager powerpoint isn't going to have much effect. What I would like to see is mr Skylark rolling up his sleeves and saying: "Enough talk gentleman, let's take it outside". Take it to the streets.
Indeed so true, which is why there isn't much need for pithy one liners in a real training situation as riding it teaches it.