This. Which reminds me of local tragic “accident” -
On a private road recently near sunset, a family was taking a walk. They saw their brother returing from an errand in his truck. They waved at him and assumed he would go around them in the road. What they did not know was that the sun angle created glare and the brother did not see his family in the road and hit them all and killed his sister.
Well, I stopped when I reached the center turning lane (where there was no one). I didn’t just blithely set out assuming I wouldn’t have to stop walking at all. If I waited until I couldn’t see anyone coming from either direction, I would’ve been there all day.
It’s not about not seeing any cars, it’s about not putting yourself in a place where they have to hit the brakes in order not to hit you.
But perhaps I misunderstood the geometry. Was the car on a collision course with you, or would the car have passed in front of you but stopped to allow you to go first?
Had the car not stopped, he would not have walked in front of it. I do this manuever all the time. I hope drivers will stop, but I don’t trust a one of them.
After nearly getting hit by two cyclists (and god knows how many cars), this is my standard practice.
Years ago I was trying to cross a 4 lane road. I crossed the first two lanes easily and was standing on the median. The guy in the (left traveling) outside lane was kind enough to stop and wave me through. Nice, except the cars in the inside lane were not only not stopping, but in some cases accelerating. Damn the crosswalk and flashing yellow light.
The guy who stopped for me started to get pissed that I wasn’t crossing in front of him.
The car on the right was some distance away, coming from the right. Nothing was coming from the left. I walked out to the center of the crosswalk, where it meets the center turning lane, then stopped walking. The car stopped, so I went ahead.