Forum Discussion
- CavemanCharlieExplorer III
azdryheat wrote:
People are people. When I was a cop we were told a speeding ticket might change someone for a few weeks then they're back to normal. What sometimes bothers me is there is nothing I can now do about such driving. Wished I written more tickets when I had the chance. lol
When I was young all a speeding ticket did was piss me off . You would get that cop with the attitude that when he saw a young person, just starting out, and therefor driving a older car he would pull you over for little things just "To Teach That Kid A Lesson".. All they taught me was to not like cops.
But, In those days they would give you a ticket for a few miles over the limit and it was 55 ever where. Even on the interstate. Now MN has all there speeds for the roads set about right and there is no reason to speed. And, I'm a old man if they see me a going little over the limit by accident they don't care.
I have a few friends with kids though and it seems that the cops still like to pull the young people over and shake them down often. But, none of these kids have ever gotten a ticket so some things have obliviously changed. They used to write us up for any thing. - pbeverlyNomad
Busdriver wrote:
What find amusing, in city & towns people pass you like there hair is on fire, next red light you pull up beside them , or on the interstate people pass you do 20 over the speed limit, about one hour later they pass you again, I have had the same car or truck pass me 2 or 3 times in a day of driving!
I see this a lot as well. My observation is they slow WAY down at times because they are messing with their phones. - ken56ExplorerI try to do the secondary roads as much as possible. Slower yes, less nerve racking absolutely. I have the luxury of owning my own time though, I'm retired and can waste it as I see fit. On our big loop trip to Washington state and then to the Grand Canyon and then along the Gulf coast, 3 months and 9000 miles in all, I found most people to be very courteous actually. Not a single road rage incident or anything near it. Did I see people who are merge deficient? Yes. Cutting in in front of me a bit too close? Yep. Speeding by me at the speed of sound? Yep. My philosophy is I won't wreck you if you don't wreck me and I keep my distance and speed under control. I avoid grouping up. I work at avoiding a collision. That's called defensive driving. I don't care what others do really and what they do certainly doesn't ruin my travels. Travel on and be happy, don't sweat the small stuff.
- 2oldmanExplorer II
DrewE wrote:
I would think technology would be smart enough to turn your headlights on.
Newer cars often have the dashboard lights on anytime the engine is running, and that can make it unfortunately hard to tell that your headlights are not on-
Now, if it could turn off your blinker after 4 miles.ken56 wrote:
I do too, but so do truckers, and get one of those behind you and it's merciless tailgating.
I try to do the secondary roads as much as possible.. - covered_wagonExplorer
Walaby wrote:
I think there are less considerate drivers these days.
But killing your RV experience? Really? I guess if I got in a wreck, then yes. But like the guy who had his rig totaled, it would only kill it long enough to buy a new one.
I drive at the pace I feel comfortable with, and generally in the first lane. Usually not a huge deal that would ruin my experience.
Mike
What prompted me to bring this up is I just got in from a 1300 mile trip, 80% on byways and backroads. Most are very nice, even had a big rig stop to see if I was alright while I made a phone call, but on two occasions people came up behind at a high rate of speed tailgated and when I couldn't pull off they passed in a double yellow zone even though they could not see who was coming. Very alarming!
Another occasion on a double laned passing lane going up a grade they refused to go around even though no one else around....and tailgated me. I kept slowing down to make it better for them to pass, but refused until I got to the campground to turn . It was very weird having a driver refuse to do what was right and good to do. I don't understand what the problem was.
When I got to a very nice town with a Safeway on main street in a 25 zone I sat in amazement in the parking lot and watched trucks and cars go by just speeding like there's no tomorrow. They were all on my rear while I thought I should do the 25 MPH because of all the crosswalks, homes and businesses.
I'm sorry this stuff affects me the way it does.... I won't be giving up RVing anytime soon. - Turtle_n_PeepsExplorerI was taught to never let anybody control your own life.
We also told our kids, you can't control anybody's actions in life, you can only control your reaction to them. Stop reacting to every single thing in life.
Why even RV if it gives you that experience every time you hit the road?
IMHO it's more than likely time to hang up your RV license if other drivers make you so nervous that it give you anxiety attacks on the road. - 2oldmanExplorer II
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
I allow people to complain instead of trying to judge or 'fix' them. That just makes them feel worse.
Why even RV if it gives you that experience every time you hit the road? - covered_wagonExplorer
2oldman wrote:
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
I allow people to complain instead of trying to judge or 'fix' them. That just makes them feel worse.
Why even RV if it gives you that experience every time you hit the road?
Thank you for that.... It doesn't really bug me that much. I do think people should think of others a bit more. I try anyway. - dedmistonModerator
2oldman wrote:
Turtle n Peeps wrote:
I allow people to complain instead of trying to judge or 'fix' them. That just makes them feel worse.
Why even RV if it gives you that experience every time you hit the road?
:B I've seen you judge quite a bit. It happens. :B - DrewEExplorer II
2oldman wrote:
DrewE wrote:
I would think technology would be smart enough to turn your headlights on.
Newer cars often have the dashboard lights on anytime the engine is running, and that can make it unfortunately hard to tell that your headlights are not on-
Automatic headlight technology has existed for many decades, of course, but it's still not at all universal. After all, omitting the ambient light sensor needed for such systems probably saves several cents per car....
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