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Drive and listen night
Drive and listen night













drive and listen night
  1. Drive and listen night drivers#
  2. Drive and listen night driver#

Discuss the exits with your navigator, go around again if necessary, and then confidently wing off on the exit of your choice. To replace the stress with giggles, make it standard operating procedure to take a 360-degree, case-out-your-options exploratory circuit. Pay attention to the instructions painted on the pavement as you approach bigger roundabouts they tell you which lane to be in for a destination well before you get to the actual roundabout. These work well if you follow the golden rule: Traffic in roundabouts always has the right-of-way, while entering vehicles yield.įor some drivers, roundabouts are high-pressure traffic circles that require a snap decision about something you don't completely understand: your exit. Not only will you be driving on the left, but you'll be using roundabouts, where traffic continually flows in a circle around a center island.

Drive and listen night driver#

It can help to remember that the driver always stays close to the center line. Your instinct is to put yourself on the left side of your lane, which means you may spend your first day or two constantly drifting off the road to the left.

Drive and listen night drivers#

Many Yankee drivers find the hardest part isn't driving on the left, but steering from the right. Why that side? Originally, it was in order for you to drive defensively…with your "sword hand" on the inside to protect you against unknown oncoming horsemen. Of course, in Britain and Ireland you'll be driving on the left-hand side of the road. In Britain, though, avoid the "L" sign as you've got a second option: a green "P" (probationary driver with license), which you can use on all roads in Britain. Here's a tip: If you want to get a little slack on the roads in Ireland, drop by a gas station or auto shop and buy a red "L" (new driver with licence) sign to put in your car window (but wait till you're outside of Dublin, as Irish "Learners" aren't allowed to drive on the motorways that cluster around the city). But be warned: Every year I get some emails from traveling readers advising me that, for them, trying to drive in Great Britain and Ireland was a nerve-wracking and regrettable mistake. Behind the wheel you're totally free, going where you want, when you want.ĭriving in the British Isles is wonderful - once you remember to stay on the left and after you've mastered the roundabouts. While Great Britain's trains go to most places of tourist interest - and just about everything's reachable by bus in both countries - the bucolic landscape you'll see here is most easily experienced by car.

drive and listen night

Renting a car in Britain and Ireland can be a smart move - especially in Ireland, which lacks an extensive rail network.















Drive and listen night