|
Back to Index
We-re
the world-s worst drivers, ok
Nevanji
Madanhire
December 23, 2012
http://www.thestandard.co.zw/2012/12/23/were-the-worlds-worst-drivers-ok/
Zimbabweans
are the world-s worst drivers, okay! I know you don-t
agree but let-s talk about this on January 2.
I know on that
day you will be lying flat on your back in some hospital bed with
all your limps bound in the plaster of Paris and your head, all
in bandages, round like a football, your eyes peeping tentatively
at me through slits.
As is always
the case in holiday accidents, it-s only the loved ones who
die while the culprit remains, most of the time with minor injuries
or fractured limbs but otherwise very alive!
Last year someone
said, "I was overtaking a gonyet [haulage truck] and then
the road turned!" It was the road that turned, eh? Now he
lives with the burden of the guilt of having literally murdered
all his loved ones.
In Zimbabwe,
bad driving begins right from the beginning; one buys a secondhand
vehicle and then goes to buy a driver-s licence from corrupt
licensing officials.
Zimbabweans
hate failing the driving test so will fork out any amount to avoid
it.
But the truth
of the matter is, they hurry for driving tests before they have
had the hang of it. If you fail once, that-s fine. Twice,
that-s still fine.
Thrice, that
again is still fine so long you are going back to your instructor
to go over it again, all of it.
Word of caution,
there should never be a shortcut to obtaining a driver-s licence.
Know the Highway Code backwards. If you have learnt your lessons
well, there is no way anyone can ask for bribe; the guys at the
VID only ask for your money when they are sure you are in a hurry
to obtain a licence and you have money you don-t know what
to do with. Never pay for a licence.
Don-t
drive under the influence, stupid. This has been said before. Don-t
give us the crap about being a better driver when you have had a
few. Truth is: it isn-t true; alcohol will slow your reaction
time in tricky situations.
Not only that,
when you drive with a bottle between your thighs, you-re multi-tasking.
Your legs are
meant only to help you walk, remember when we were created god didn-t
have cars in mind. By using them to drive, you have assigned them
a totally new task which they may master over a long period of practice.
But, for them
to do that and work as a vice to hold your beer too? That-s
a completely new extra task you are assigning to them. Just when
they are getting used to clutching in, applying the brakes and accelerating,
you are asking them to hold your beer. It-s simply not fair
to them and the children you are carrying!
Talking of multi-tasking;
speaking on your phone while driving is another example of impractical
multi-tasking. Some even go to the extent of composing text messages
and sending them while driving! Women are the worst culprits in
this, I don-t care if you accuse me of sexism.
Truth is women
talk on the phone all the time while driving. Men do too, but they
are briefer and to the point. Men-s greatest fault when driving,
particularly in the cities, is girl-watching, or is it leg gazing?
They will gaze at women in certain types of outfits, especially
miniskirts and let their imaginations drift with them! Just look
at their car bumpers to see what I mean.
The worst Zimbabwean
drivers are those who live outside the country, particularly in
South Africa.
That-s
very interesting because the South African Highway Code is tighter
on rules than ours and when these drivers are down there, they drive
very well. Not when they come over during the festive season with
their Gangster Paradise (GP) registered vehicles. They become monsters
on the roads, as if trying to imply that every local driver is a
dunce.
They screech
their wheels and blow their horns as if every car is in their way.
They see only
the car immediately in front of them; so in a traffic jam they are
always swearing at the poor driver in front as if he could lift
his vehicle and let them pass. But see them in January as they trek
back down South, crestfallen and broke, their cars almost falling
apart, the result of the persistent acts of road rage they engaged
in.
Please care
for the pedestrians and the cyclists? The fact that you are travelling
in a chunk of metal automatically puts these poor individuals in
a vulnerable position. Please consider them when driving by approaching
pedestrian crossings and cycling tracks soberly.
Avoid threatening
them with bursts of speed and the sound of your horn.
There is no
reason to be vindictive; the pedestrians and cyclists know the full
power of your vehicle. They also have the same rights on the roads
as you do; courteous drivers know where and when pedestrians have
the right of way.
Don-t
speed, please. Have you noticed the motorist you overtake who is
driving consistently at say 70km/h will arrive at the same destination
as you almost at the same time? Have you wondered why?
Your bursts
of speed are not sustainable; you can only travel at such speeds
for only small distances, usually only 5km and then you are slowed
down or stopped altogether either by other traffic, farm animals
or other obstacles on the roads. Our roads are not superhighways;
they are notoriously slow! But if you abide by their dictates, you
will avoid the frustrations that come with driving on them.
Overtake only
when you absolutely can-t avoid it and do it carefully because
there just might be an unseen obstacle in the way or the road might
have a bend. Traffic signals are not always visible, if they exist
at all. Road markings too, drivers should ensure they look out for
them.
And, do you
know your vehicle?
Below are the
basics you must know about your car before you take to the road
[courtesy of Automotive India]:
- Space your
car needs on the road;
- How steering
response changes with speed;
- How much
of your car is ahead and behind you;
- In gear-response
of your car (In the city you need just the 1st and 2nd but for
highway you need to know of the 3rd, 4th and 5th too);
- How your
car behaves under normal braking;
- How your
car behaves under hard braking and it-s braking distance;
and
- The ground
clearance of the car.
In the New Year,
don-t live with guilt of having killed your family. Enjoy.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
TOP
|