In Greenwood, claims often turn on details that disappear fast: lighting changes, temporary signage from detours, and witness memories that fade after a busy week of work and school schedules. The sooner you preserve key information, the stronger your position is when fault is disputed.
If you can do so safely, gather:
- Photos of the roadway condition (lane position, debris, potholes, curb cuts, skid marks)
- Images of traffic control (signals, stop signs, turn-lane markings, temporary construction signage)
- Pictures of vehicle damage and your bicycle damage (including handlebars, brakes, wheels)
- Contact information for any witnesses who saw the approach/turn or the moment of impact
- A short written timeline while your memory is fresh (what you saw, what you heard, where you were riding)
Why this matters: insurers commonly look for inconsistencies in timing, visibility, and positioning—especially in turn-related crashes and roadway-obstruction cases.


