Not in my daughter's case.
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Was in Turkey for the Wales game last year, stayed in Istanbul. Now the driving situation there is a sight to behold. I don’t know if they were shit drivers for nearly crashing into each other or brilliant drivers for the split second avoidance of hitting each other. :hehe:
I’d have undertaken them as we’ll & do regularly. I understood that driving in the middle lane for more than 1/2 mile (with left lane empty) was now illegal.
Since 4 lane motorways have evolved, the joggers now sit in lane 3.
Should the middle lane actually be called overtaking lane 1 and the right hand lane overtaking lane 2 to reflect what they actually are?
I regularly undertake the middle lane hoggers, , the most disappointing thing to me is most of them are in dream world , oblivious to their surroundings and other vehicles .
I think going past slower moving cars then indicating to pull carefully in front of them is safe and sensible
I also think on a Sunday when the boys on the Hondas and Truimphs are in a convey slowing down in that left lane and letting them all pass safely by waving them on is the way to go
You can't do much about idiots on the road and I am amazed some people have passed their test but in general keeping your distance and awareness of your speed is the best option
Theres a hospital near me and the amount of staff that drive out of there looking at their phones amazes me, its not just kids like people will have you believe, a lot of them are old enough to know better. What is so important it cant wait the 30 minute journey home?
Sound horns at 50 paces?
:hehe:
Re: London driving and roundabouts -
There is a story, maybe an urban myth, that many years ago, police were called to investigate why a car was parked on the middle of the Hyde Park Corner roundabout (the one with the Wellington Arch)
Cops drove up, got out and approached the car to find a "little old lady" in the driver's seat, crying.
"I can't get off!" she sobbed. She had been going round and round, got caught in the inner lane and no-one would leave a gap for her to exit.
Re: indicating when changing lanes on a motorway -
If it wasn't for this, I may have been involved in a nasty smash.
I was driving along theM4, just before the M4/M5 split, in lane 1.
I wanted to continue on the M4 to glorious Wales, so indicated and pulled into lane 2.
Ahead, I could see several cars indicating the same, but also a few indicating to go from 2 to 1.
I thought I'd get past in case there was trouble, so indicated and pulled into lane 3.
When i finished that move, I looked ahead again and saw a van going over the hard shoulder onto the bank, another car swerving right and left as iif trying, i=unsuccessfully, to keep control - it then spun around to face the wrong way.
I drove past (not smugly!), pulled over and called the plod.
A month later I had a stroke and got medically DQ for life - clean licence and 13 years NCB up the swannee :cry: