I have held
the driving licence for 10 years, I have used a car on a daily basis for five
years on; the two last years were the period of more intense business travels,
taken also by car, my own old Megane or company cars, meaning over the last two
years I covered around 35,000 kilometres behind the wheel; on top of another
35,000 kilometres driven over previous eight years.
Driving
instructors argue a typical driver has an accident during their first equator’s
length (roughly 40,000 kilometres) of driving. Over that time I had one minor traffic collision, oddly enough not impacting my insurance track record,
besides since October 2012 my track record behind the wheel has been
impeccable, except for scratching right-rear wing in five weeks ago. I rubbed
against a lamp post while parking parallel.
I varnished
the eye-popping aftermaths of my haste and inattention, yet the scrape slightly
dented my self-confidence, which after all should do more harm than good.
Lesson learnt – I should be more cautious. Nevertheless, I did not change my
mind and did not find driving on Polish roads dangerous, until last seven days,
when I nearly had three serious accidents, none I would have been guilty of,
yet they could have ended up with serious injuries.
Last Sunday
on ul. Słowackiego (Warszawa Żoliborz), I changed lanes from right to middle
and noticed an iffy driver in Honda City on left lane. I somehow foresaw he was
an unpredictable motorist and braced for his manoeuvre of changing lanes from
left to middle nearly ending in hitting the side of my car. Having cars on both
sides, but no vehicle behind me, I pushed the brake to the floor and avoided
the collision. Fortunately my passengers kept a cool head and did not scream (I
still remember the attack of panic of my three female colleagues in November
2015, when somewhere between Płońsk and Sierpc our car was hit by an ice slab
flying off the roof of a truck ahead of us (no damage to the vehicle to my
surprise)).
On
Wednesday as I drove up ul. Puławska, I nearly fell victim to kinked lanes and
foolish driver on the intersection with Baletowa. He followed the swinging
lanes before the intersection but behind it he drove straight ahead, cutting in
on me, moving properly up the right lane. I swerved into the lane for buses marked
out before intersection with ul. Pelikanów, thus avoiding bumping into
meathead-driven Mazda 6.
The most
scary narrow escape struck me the next day. I was on the slip road from Dolinka
Służewiecka (westbound lanes) into ul. Puławska (southbound lanes). I spotted a
ZTM bus running at the lane west of the viaduct carrying the traffic from ul.
Puławska into Dolinka Służewiecka, but glimpsing to the left I failed to notice
its driver was speeding (70 kmph) while I did at around 45 kmph. Where the slip
road and the right-most lane of ul. Puławska met, he immediately began changing
lanes into mine, not minding I was there and. to make it worse, not minding
there was a cyclist (cyclists should be prohibited from riding such roads and
she should have safety cycled down the pavement on the other side of ul.
Puławska!) on the same (mine) lane. The presence of the cyclist (still wonder
whether she realised what was going on, since she seemed to be totally unaware
how dangerous the situation was) left me fewer room to move rightwards, while
an idiot in BMW just behind my rear bumper left little room for abrupt braking.
I slowed down gently, trying to keep minimum 20 centimetres from the bus side
and the cyclist and managed. Only with hindsight I realised what near miss it
was.
It occurred
to me it would have been safer to travel by bus. The next day while driving
towards Park and Ride Metro Ursynów I drove 75 kmph and kept a steady distance from a
331 bus. Indeed, both bus driver and I were speeding, however the difference in
magnitude of our sins that I would stop my car (including time to reaction and
stopping distance) within 50 metres and fastened belts would protect me, while
the bus driver would probably stop after more than 100 metres and many
passengers would be injured. In retrospect, I regret not having reported that
incident to ZTM.
Speed and
alcohol rank among the most frequent accident causes in Poland, yet the list
should be supplemented with other sins of drivers, seldom mentioned…
Firstly,
not looking around. Wing mirrors and rear view mirror help the driver control
situation around them. If you know what is going on around, you immediately
know whether you can swerve (this facilitates controlling the blind spot as
well) or suddenly brake. Looking around involves also watching out for
vehicles, cyclists, pedestrians or animals that might trespass onto the road.
Secondly,
not foreseeing. As one gains experience behind the wheel, more situations
become predictable and consequently, accidents avoided.
Thirdly,
pushing one’s luck. Sounds ridiculously, but several drivers count they will
make it (finish overtaking by forcing other drivers to brake or swerve,
violating the right of way by assessing another driver will skim on their
brakes to avoid a collision etc.). Even in 99% instances it works, the
remaining 1% results in increased number or casualties and fatalities on Polish
roads.
Fourthly,
not keeping proper distance. The reasons why rear-endings are so common are not
just speed or lapses of concentration. The dire effects of the above would not
lead to so many incidences of bumping into rear of a car ahead, had the proper
distance been kept.
Fifthly,
tiredness. Fatigued, drowsy drivers can display similar reactions as
intoxicated drivers. I should also tack on over-using mobile phones when behind
the wheel as fumbling with them also worsen drivers’ concentration.
Sixthly,
technical condition of vehicles on Polish roads. I do not want to gripe about
the average age of vehicles on Polish roads, declining, yet still above eleven
years. I have a 13-year-old car and I take care of it to ensure travelling by
it is safe. Poles drive what they afford to but the owner or user is always to
blame. Nearly brand-new (aged less than 3Y) vehicles from corporate fleets, if
they are not looked after properly (believe me or not, 3Y post-lease cars are
frequently rickety bangers), are in far worse technical condition that my car.
And #7,
cyclists and pedestrians ignorant of perils in traffic or even traffic rules.
Starry-eyed traffic participants not realising if they have right of way, for
the sake of their own safety they should not exercise it at all cost and that
fault of a car driver is not an excuse. What I hold most against cyclists is:
(1) riding on fast-traffic roads (speed limits at or above 70 kmph), (2) choosing to
take a road, where there is a decent cycling path running parallel to the road,
(3) not sticking to the right thus hindering overtaking. What I hold most
against pedestrians is that they (1) can stand (or hang around) next to a
pedestrian crossing with no intention to cross a street, (2) cross streets
where they are not allowed to without even looking whether a vehicle is going
to smash them into pulp.
I have
mulled over installing a dashboard camera in my next car, not for the purpose
Russians put them up (to prove they are not guilty of an accident) but to keep
record of on-going horror on the Polish roads. So far, I keep up with Polskie Drogi channel on YouTube and hold it dear. Watching the compilations of
accidents helps me learn from others’ mistakes, adds to my experience and
enhances my predictive skills. The scenes by Polskie Drogi often prove many
accidents could have been averted, had somebody thought beforehand or foreseen
other traffic participants’ crass stupidity.
Dangers on
the road must not be shrugged off, yet this is the risk one should manage.
Driving cautiously does not guarantee you will return safe and sound from every
journey, yet minimises the chances of having an accident.
A good post - cause and effect. The bus is the safest form of road transport on account of its mass; the idiot in the BMW slams into the back, and it is the BMW that suffers. That earth's circumference idea is based on the time taken to get complacent. "I've done 40,000km - I'm a safe driver, I can allow myself to switch off Total Situational Awareness mode and..."
ReplyDeleteIn the UK, driving instructors teach MSM - Mirror Signal Manoeuvre - and Anticipate, Anticipate, Anticipate. Here too? Somehow doubt it :-)
Who's getting who wrong here?
ReplyDeleteA bus is statistically safer than a car (compare number of casualties and fatalities of accidents involving buses and passnger cars), but on account of its mass bus has much longer stopping distance, therefore your claim holds true as long as a bus driver has their head screwed in. Plus lack of belts to fasten (impracticable in city buses) mean in case of abrupt braking passenger are likely to suffer injuries.
The idiot in BMW would have its Burak Ma Wózek crashed, but remember rear-ending is very dangerous for neck of rear-ended vehicle's passengers. Besides in my story there was a cyclist who could have been hit by my rear-ended car. Circumstances were far more complex...
Hang on, the theory I referred to stated that within 40,000 a driver has their first accident, so gets a bucket of cold water spilt on their heads and this may prevent them from growing too complacent.
What I remember from my driving course taken in 2006 is that instructors teach how to pass the driving exam, because this is what they are paid for. I remember also hints on how actual driving differs from habits developed to pass the exam. Besides, what can you learn during 30 hours of driving lessons? The driving licence is just a document entitling you to continue learning to drive on your own (though with hindsight I appreciate my father did not let me drive anywhere alone for the first two years of occasional driving).