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29th June 25, 06:47 AM
#1
Visitors to the uk be warned
I really don't want to discourage anyone from visiting the UK and Scotland in particular, but we have had rather too many accidents with collisions of vehicles being driven by visitors who were driving on the WRONG side of the road.
WE IN THE UK DRIVE ON THE LEFT SIDE OF THE ROAD.
ALSO
Only the other week, we had an American pedestrian killed instantly when he stepped out onto the road directly in front of oncoming traffic. He looked the wrong way before stepping out onto the road, giving the driver of the on coming vehicle NO chance of avoiding him.
SO.
PEDESTRIANS NEED TO LOOK RIGHT then, LEFT and, I repeat, RIGHT AGAIN. BEFORE stepping off the pavement(verge).
Take care.
Last edited by Jock Scot; 29th June 25 at 07:01 AM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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29th June 25, 01:18 PM
#2
 Originally Posted by Jock Scot
I really don't want to discourage anyone from visiting the UK and Scotland in particular, but we have had rather too many accidents with collisions of vehicles being driven by visitors who were driving on the WRONG side of the road.
WE IN THE UK DRIVE ON THE LEFT SIDE OF THE ROAD.
ALSO
Only the other week, we had an American pedestrian killed instantly when he stepped out onto the road directly in front of oncoming traffic. He looked the wrong way before stepping out onto the road, giving the driver of the on coming vehicle NO chance of avoiding him.
SO.
PEDESTRIANS NEED TO LOOK RIGHT then, LEFT and, I repeat, RIGHT AGAIN. BEFORE stepping off the pavement(verge).
Take care.
Driving on the left is not the whole issue but having to simultaneously navigate roundabout after roundabout on a complex road system that was laid down starting 2,800 years ago is dangerous.
They have all sorts of good transit all over the UK. Use it and sightsee, instead.
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29th June 25, 05:44 PM
#3
I refuse to drive anywhere where the sides of the road are flipped from what I've grown up with. It's too engrained in my mind. Trying to switch is dangerous. I'll stick to public transportation or taxis.
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29th June 25, 07:08 PM
#4
Decades ago, my job required me to make a few trips to the UK. After several visits I decided to rent a car.
Unlike America, it was possible to get a rental with a manual transmission. Surprisingly for me, shifting with the wrong hand was more unnatural than driving on the wrong side of the road !!
I'm planning to rent a car when I visit Scotland in a couple of years though. There are too many organized tours to count, but none I've found include the Isle of Islay on the itinerary.
After seeing how far it is out of the way, I understand why
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30th June 25, 01:53 AM
#5
 Originally Posted by User
I refuse to drive anywhere where the sides of the road are flipped from what I've grown up with. It's too engrained in my mind. Trying to switch is dangerous. I'll stick to public transportation or taxis.
Exactly so! I think you have put your finger bang on the problem and have the perfect solution, although probably not as convenient. 
Last edited by Jock Scot; 30th June 25 at 04:14 AM.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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My wife and I have driven from Truro to Inverness and Portsmouth to Borreraig without any issues except, as you say, shifting gears with the left hand.
As pedestrians we stay alert and look to the right when stepping off a kerb.
It only takes one moment of forgetfulness to get killed! Which I almost did in front of a Tesco in Glasgow.
Working for so many years at Disneyland in California we get used to seeing the way foreign tourists drive, taking wrong turns, sitting mystified at an intersection (apparently not knowing that green means go) etc.
For our last trip my wife and I didn't hire a car and took public transport, which is far better in Britain than in the US.
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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 Originally Posted by Canadian Vet
Driving on the left is not the whole issue but having to simultaneously navigate roundabout after roundabout on a complex road system that was laid down starting 2,800 years ago is dangerous.
They have all sorts of good transit all over the UK. Use it and sightsee, instead.
the road to the west of Ringwood is just one roundabout after another - we use the Wessex way which is to the south of it and often slower, but the roundabouts are manic even for a local.
I have just got the MoT test done on my campervan - 21.5ft long 6.5ft wide and 7ft tall not counting the chimney, with 6 wheels - people carriers with dark tinted windows reverse out of the way for me.
I travelled East to get the test done and there are not only roundabouts but joined together roundabouts going that way - I think that this must have been some sort of experimental area for novel traffic management - it was the first place in England to have traffic lights, I am told
Anne the Pleater
I presume to dictate to no man what he shall eat or drink or wherewithal he shall be clothed."
-- The Hon. Stuart Ruaidri Erskine, The Kilt & How to Wear It, 1901.
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Canadian Vet's comments inspired me to put together this
Proud Mountaineer from the Highlands of West Virginia; son of the Revolution and Civil War; first Europeans on the Guyandotte
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I have the reverse problem! When driving on the Continent, I have now decided to retire from driving over there. My poor old brain and reactions are just not up to the rigours of driving on the Right. I have not visited the USA, but you all can rest assured that Jock will not be driving there, should I venture out over the pond!
I have experienced on three occasions when I have had encountered a vehicle coming at me on the wrong side of the road in the UK. It is certainly an alarming experience and not ever forgotten!
Take care.
" Rules are for the guidance of wise men and the adherence of idle minds and minor tyrants". Field Marshal Lord Slim.
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2nd July 25, 01:41 PM
#10
The only place I have been where I had to drive on the left was the USVI. It wasn't a problem. However, the cars are American, so the steering wheel is on the left.
Tulach Ard
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