Many serious bike injuries in suburban areas aren’t caused by one dramatic “mistake.” They’re caused by a chain of events—driver attention lapses, timing issues at intersections, abrupt lane changes, or hazards that appear suddenly.
In Cary, common real-world stress points include:
- Intersection conflicts where turning vehicles and cyclists share sight lines.
- Edge-of-road problems like debris, gravel, or uneven pavement that can force a sudden correction.
- Delivery and service traffic (including trucks and vans) that can create unpredictable lane positioning.
- Construction-adjacent routes where signage, lane shifts, and temporary markings may be unclear.
When insurers see a bicyclist involved, they sometimes try to reduce the case to “the cyclist should have avoided it.” The right legal strategy turns that narrative back into facts: what the other driver or property responsible for the roadway should have done to prevent the crash.


