ReaImDown
Well-known member
A guy totaled his car... Rear-ended a bus... If these morons can't see a ****ing bus... What're the odds they'll see you... Ride safe!
- Randy
- Randy
A guy totaled his car... Rear-ended a bus... If these morons can't see a ****ing bus... What're the odds they'll see you...
Well, you know, it's hard to text and drive at the same time!
Well, you know, it's hard to text and drive at the same time!
I was riding today in the right lane of Hwy 6 coming up on a slower left-lane hogger. I couldn't tell you how far back I saw the car stopped ahead in his lane waiting to make a left, but will cautiously say upwards of a km back. I started easing up and giving myself some distance. He saw the car with only enough time to violently swerve into the right lane, MY LANE, clearing the car by a couple of feet at about 100 km/h. I thought I was gonna have a front row seat to that one.
I would have followed him and talked to him once he got out of the vehicle.I was riding today in the right lane of Hwy 6 coming up on a slower left-lane hogger. I couldn't tell you how far back I saw the car stopped ahead in his lane waiting to make a left, but will cautiously say upwards of a km back. I started easing up and giving myself some distance. He saw the car with only enough time to violently swerve into the right lane, MY LANE, clearing the car by a couple of feet at about 100 km/h. I thought I was gonna have a front row seat to that one.
I would have followed him and talked to him once he got out of the vehicle.
This is probably going to get me in trouble again but and i wil be called a biggot but. Here it is...
We have way too many third world people that never grew up with cars coming here and driving.
There is something to be said about growing up as a kid and going everwhere with a car with your mom or dad. You learn things they dont or cant teach you in driving school. Call it street ettiquete call it what you will.
Call it just being used to a motorized vehicle, being used to traffic to weather, the list goes on and on
Getting your licence and the degree of training you should go thru should be relative to your background, meaning how much time you spent in a motorized vehicle or a traffic environment.
If i am from northern ontario my whole life and lived in a farm and never stepped in a car in my life or if i am from sri lanka and only seen a car once or twice a year in my village then i should not be able to come to super busy city like toronto then
pass a licence test because i learned how to used the break and gas pedal and how to parallel park...
This is probably going to get me in trouble again but and i wil be called a biggot but. Here it is...
We have way too many third world people that never grew up with cars coming here and driving.
There is something to be said about growing up as a kid and going everwhere with a car with your mom or dad. You learn things they dont or cant teach you in driving school. Call it street ettiquete call it what you will.
Call it just being used to a motorized vehicle, being used to traffic to weather, the list goes on and on
Getting your licence and the degree of training you should go thru should be relative to your background, meaning how much time you spent in a motorized vehicle or a traffic environment.
If i am from northern ontario my whole life and lived in a farm and never stepped in a car in my life or if i am from sri lanka and only seen a car once or twice a year in my village then i should not be able to come to super busy city like toronto then
pass a licence test because i learned how to used the break and gas pedal and how to parallel park...
That video, reinforces cbccanada's point, and I'm not talking about the fool on the bike.What are you talking about? It's so easy!
[video=youtube;RJT4PA7zqRA]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RJT4PA7zqRA[/video]
It's a compounded issue. Urban sprawl and bad public transport forces immigrants to get a car. So the province makes driving accessible to the lowest common denominator, our system graduates people with basic skills instead of a higher standard, we get grid lock and accidents, high insurance rates, etc. Everybody wins AND loses. There's no real solution to the problem in my mind.
This is probably going to get me in trouble again but and i wil be called a biggot but. Here it is...
We have way too many third world people that never grew up with cars coming here and driving.
There is something to be said about growing up as a kid and going everwhere with a car with your mom or dad. You learn things they dont or cant teach you in driving school. Call it street ettiquete call it what you will.
Call it just being used to a motorized vehicle, being used to traffic to weather, the list goes on and on
Getting your licence and the degree of training you should go thru should be relative to your background, meaning how much time you spent in a motorized vehicle or a traffic environment.
If i am from northern ontario my whole life and lived in a farm and never stepped in a car in my life or if i am from sri lanka and only seen a car once or twice a year in my village then i should not be able to come to super busy city like toronto then
pass a licence test because i learned how to used the break and gas pedal and how to parallel park...
Brian, in defense of the Trecel, the driver likely couldn't see 3 or 4 vehicles up. You're in a truck, you can look OVER everybody. The Trecel is FOLLOWING a truck, which means it's limited to your brake lights. I drive a lifted Jeep, so I'm conscience of this. I try to stay to the right of my line whereas most small vehicle drivers stay to the left of the lane. This allows them to see at least one vehicle in front of me.
This is probably going to get me in trouble again but and i wil be called a biggot but. Here it is...
We have way too many third world people that never grew up with cars coming here and driving.
There is something to be said about growing up as a kid and going everwhere with a car with your mom or dad. You learn things they dont or cant teach you in driving school. Call it street ettiquete call it what you will.
Call it just being used to a motorized vehicle, being used to traffic to weather, the list goes on and on
Getting your licence and the degree of training you should go thru should be relative to your background, meaning how much time you spent in a motorized vehicle or a traffic environment.
If i am from northern ontario my whole life and lived in a farm and never stepped in a car in my life or if i am from sri lanka and only seen a car once or twice a year in my village then i should not be able to come to super busy city like toronto then
pass a licence test because i learned how to used the break and gas pedal and how to parallel park...
Realistically, until the next light (ask them to roll down the window) or I lost interest.... but ultimately I realize that with most people out there, the effect of my chat wouldn't last until they got home.Really? How long would you have followed him for? I've got my own ride to have and my experience is that it would have had little, if any, effect. Although when I did pass, both the driver and passenger were looking straight ahead, somewhat stone faced.
Fair enough, I assumed a 1/2 tonne or larger pickup... I've learned to look over, through or around a vehicle when highway driving.In my case, the truck in question was a 1984 Toyota two-wheel-drive pickup - not appreciably different in height from a car. Even if the driver behind had been simply paying attention to MY brake lights, he ought to have been okay.