Swap city streets for mountain roads,
impatient drivers for curious animals and dull tarmac for some of the most rideable scenery on the planet.
Not exact matches
As I am sitting here writing this contribution at 8:50 in the morning, I can already hear signs of the relentless fighting that has been going on
for over ten days around Rachel's Tomb in Bethlehem: Soldiers shooting tear gas canisters, military jets are flying over the area, ambulances rushing to the scene and hundreds of
impatient drivers waiting to cross the area honking without let - up.
Its idle - stop feature shut down the engine at stop lights, saving some gas in the city, and restarted quickly enough
for all but the most
impatient drivers.
The issue is that the
drivers of trucks, SUVs and cars sometimes get
impatient and attempt to pass without giving sufficient room
for the cyclists that they are passing.
In an opinion piece
for the Winnipeg Free Press, columnist Gwynne Dyer summarized the core of the pro-driverless argument when she stated that «the widespread use of self - driving vehicles almost certainly will bring down the death rates sharply everywhere, because even if computers can be as stupid as human
drivers, they can not be as
impatient or angry or drunk.»
It ain't as easy as it looks, and your trainer ain't around to read the map, answer questions, or spot you when you back into that tight dock while other
impatient drivers wait
for you to get out of their way.
Unless you're a type - A personality and tend to get outlandishly
impatient just waiting
for the coffee to brew each morning, you may want to consider eschewing expensive
driver training
for your teen and instead enlist yourself to teach Junior how to drive.