Alfa Romeo/Alfa Romeo Digest Archive

[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]

Re: Alfa Museo and Driving in Italia



One thing I noted on my last trip, which, in my mind sort of sums up the difference between driving in America and driving in Italy and the differences in the driving cultures of the two countries occurred on a two lane connecting road between two sections of Autostrade in Sicily. In America, if you want to pass somebody on a two-lane tarmac road, you make certain that there is nobody coming from the other direction before you pull out into oncoming traffic. If there is, and even if they are fairly distant, they will start flipping their lights and hitting their horn. Their eyes will get big with fear, but they will keep on coming at you. When you tuck back in front of the car you were passing, the driver in the car coming at you will flash passed you with his horn blaring and likely he'll flip you the bird.

In Italy, under the same circumstances, the oncoming driver will simply move to his right as far as the road will allow him to, and you do the same -getting as close to the car you are passing as is prudent (the car you are passing moves to his right as well). If you don't have enough time to pass before the oncoming car reaches you, no matter, because you and the oncoming car and the car you are passing have combined to make a temporary three-lane road out of a two lane. It works, i saw it time and time again, and after noting how it was done, did it myself (but the car I had was so fast (Alfa 147 GTA) that I was always able to make short work out of passing so I never actually had to pass three abreast on a two-lane highway).

George Graves
'86 GTV-6 3.0S


On Friday, July 4, 2003, at 10:02 AM, alfa-digest wrote:



Date: Fri, 04 Jul 2003 09:11:26 -0400
From: "Andrew Schwartz" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Alfa Museo and Driving in Italia

Having passed driving tests in both Europe and the U.S. - I have to agree
that the required driving standard in the US is woefully bad. The minimum
test length in Britain is 45 minutes, here my Mass license look me 5
minutes.

When I lived in Rome, I learnt the secret of Italian city driving - you have
to focus on the cars IN FRONT OF YOU. Everyone does this and disregards the
cars behing them - it is their responsbility to watch you. That's why what
looks like chaos can actually work. Try that in an American city and you'll
be in an accident in 10 seconds - different rules of engagement.

While their city driving is fun and skillful, and 'when in Rome do as the
Romans do', but if you are driving on the Autostrada in Italy - don't
always follow the Italian lead especially in bad visibility or fog.
Italians will continue to do 150 kph regardless of the fact they can't see
in front of their nose. I've seen some very nasty accidents that have
happened because of this. An Italian girlfriend explained it originates
from the Italian male sense of indestructiveness (witness Valentino Rossi).

I never made it to the Alfa Museo - but sounds like I'll definitely have to
plan a trip when I'm next in Milano.

Andrew Swartz
'67 Duetto
Brookline, MA


Date: Thu, 3 Jul 2003 13:19:58 -0700
From: George Graves <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Alfa Museo and Driving in Italia

Overall, I have to agree with you about driving in Italia. Offhand, I'd say
that from my experiences, the average woman driver in Italy is far more
competent behind the wheel than are 95% of American male drivers. Our
Sears-Roebuck method of licensing drivers coupled with TOO MANY laws and a
general paranoia with regard to traffic cops, makes Americans really timid
behind the wheel in my humble opinion
--
to be removed from alfa, see /bin/digest-subs.cgi
or email "unsubscribe alfa" to [email protected]


Home | Archive | Main Index | Thread Index