Many Plum-area bicycle crashes happen in predictable ways—especially during commute hours when drivers are watching for traffic flow, not bikes.
Common scenarios include:
- Turning collisions near intersections where a car attempts a left or right turn and misjudges a cyclist’s speed or line of travel.
- Door zone crashes when a driver or passenger opens a vehicle door into the bike lane/roadway path.
- Construction-zone conflicts, where lane shifts, signage, and temporary traffic control aren’t clear to motorists or cyclists.
- Rear-end or swerving impacts tied to stop-and-go traffic, sudden braking, or limited sight lines.
After these crashes, insurance companies frequently try to narrow liability by focusing on details like: whether the cyclist was visible, whether the bicycle had lights, or whether the driver “couldn’t avoid” the collision.
Your best protection is a clear, evidence-based account of what happened—paired with medical documentation that ties your injuries to the crash.


