It's not nice to be run off the road. You have my sympathy, genuinely.
But where I have been run off the path was in each case off-road. On paths originally meant for feet, not wheels. Mountain bikers don't easily mix with anyone in such places.
It's interesting and I don't want to jump down the road of what is legal and what isn't nor the purpose of a path or not but I'd encourage some reflection on what the bolded part means. (And I think you missed "some"
)
There are a lot of vehicle drivers who assume (wrongly) that I have no right to be on the(ir) road. I'd be surprised if there aren't some people on bikes who think that way too. People are people.
Perhaps the trick is not to think about who has a right, or not, who has a priority, or not, but instead to figure out the best way for each of us to do what we want to do in the best way for us and others.
If I'm struggling to sleep, every noise is a problem, every noise raises my heartbeat and takes me further from sleep. Another night I'd sleep through a riot. Why? Why is my brain processing the same things differently on different nights?
"We" may be a majority, but a majority of that majority are guests and visitors.
It is only fair to attempt to understand local customs and habits, no?
I also wonder if we may be the "majority" at certain times of the day or year?
So why do some mountain bikers assume they should have the right of way when they are 'invading' paths that were neither desghed nor meant for them?
Going back to the careful use of language, "invading" is pretty strong, wouldn't you agree?
Unfortunately, there are many styles of bike (and bike riding) and many of the offroad routes in Spain are perfectly suitable for them. In fact, there are competitions on some of those very trails. The World Cup in CX biking is currently taking place in the south.
The fact is, to the best of my knowledge (and I've travelled quite a bit in Spain on my bike) there are very, very few prohibitions for bikes.
Now, none of my points are addressing the negative behaviour of some people on bikes, but it would help if some people who decry bikes on the same paths as them try to understand that the bike has as much right to be there as they themselves do. They may not like that fact, but it's a fact.
In regards to addressing the poor behaviour of some people on bikes, it would be helpful to understand that there are at least two types of people on bikes (and possibly more);
The first, are the actual bicigrinos, those doing the Pilgrimage towards Santiago. Just like their pedestrian brethren, some are more interested in the "holiday & tourism" side while others take a different view.
Fora, like this one, can be a useful way to communicate with them. Not lecture them. Not berate them. Not insult them. Communicate with them.
I am on record here as being very much in favour of a type of code of conduct for bicigrinos. (One for some foot pilgrims wouldn't go amiss either
). Just to cover some things that may be new, even for experienced people on bikes. A discouragement of groups riding together perhaps, (in my experience groups of people often exhibit the worst forms of behaviour in public - nothing to do with riding a bike), or a suggestion for a maximum speed, a minimum passing distance, suggestions to ride later as simple, unexpanded examples. A standard way to warn of an advancing bike. (And a standard way for walkers to respond!). Not everyone would be aware of it, not everyone would follow it, but it would be a start.
As an aside, people from different cultures have different reactions to bicyle bells. For some it's a friendly introduction and for others it's a declaration of war. I've met one man who has trained his dog to react (and not in a good way!) to bicycle bells. Communication between people on bikes and those not can be difficult.
Yet I managed to overcome a snarling dog and have an interesting chat.
The second group are locals. I don't think many read these fora so there is little hope for any of us reaching them from here.
To be quite honest, I can think of very few countries in the world where foreigners demanding that locals moderate how they behave, or where they relax to satisfy the visitors will go down very well.
It speaks a little of entitlement, another word often used against people on bikes.
I have had one negative interaction on the road in Spain when a VW campervan pulled out in front of me. I know the driver (foreign to Spain) saw me because he gave me the finger as he did it. On a heavily loaded bike on a quiet road he nearly caused me a nasty fall.
Why did he do this? I have no idea. But I'm pretty sure that low level, anti cyclist language played its part.
You may not like it but I have just as much right to be in most of the same places as you on my bike.
Please refrain from suggesting that I don't and that I'm "invading" if we happen to meet.
Thank you.