Quote:
Originally Posted by jayeh
The turnpike, and the NY/NJ/CT area reminds me of driving in Ontario, although driving in Toronto is much closer to Chicago traffic. Montreal reminds me more of NY.
Totally true, driving in rural texas people gladly pull on to the shoulder and allow me to pass and give a friendly wave. In Ontario people pull to the absolute centre of the road (on a 2 lane highway) and purposefully block your view of oncoming traffic. People also LOVE to speed to the end of a passing area then pull in front of everyone and slow down to below the speed limit because they feel the need to be the pace car for everyone. In hundreds of miles of 2 lane highway driving in the US I've only had to pass about 4 or 5 cars. Everyone just follows along at a proper distance at the speed limit. Its so beautiful it nearly brings me to tears!
The more reasonable the speed limits, the better the drivers. Lowering the limits seems to cause people to drive faster, then the people who already want to go a bit higher end up going way faster.
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I agree with you, driving in Montreal is like driving in New York and driving in Chicago is like driving in Toronto. I like driving in New York and in Montreal and don't like driving in Toronto nor in Chicago.
I HAVE to ask....where in a rural Texas did you find any roads with a shoulder

In California most roads have shoulders...some not paved BUT THEY ARE THERE. This was one of the first things I had to get used to in Texas. The only rural road I can think of in Texas that has a shoulder in any places is Hwy 75 South of Huntsville. I agree that rural Texas drivers are extremely polite...and in Louisiana as well.
Re your waxing poetic about US drivers.....spend time driving in Miami, LA, San Francisco, or (on a day when the crazies are out) Houston and I don't think you'll have that same perfect single file enthusiasm

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