Tuesday, October 23, 2012

How Italy has changed my driving habits - Part 1

We have always found driving in Italy to be somewhat stressful.  I can recall late nights returning from day trips and the atmosphere in the car being somewhat strained and well, not a high point of our marriage relationship....

Getting lost is never fun and when you ask locals they always seem to say "Sempre dritto" [straight ahead] and point you down the road whether they understand what you are asking or not, or know the answer!

So, this trip the agreement to hire a car in Sicily was on the basis of some strict rules:

1.  We would use Google Maps on our iPhones or iPads to reduce the likelihood of getting lost (note the wording here.... REDUCE LIKELIHOOD)

2.  We have a dear friend in Milan whose mantra to us was "Con calma, tranquilli, senza stress!!" [calm, peaceful and with no stress].  This was going to be our mantra while driving in Sicily, where in Palermo in particular, the traffic is renowned for the inducement of red line stress levels.

Driving in Naples in Roman times!
Driving in Naples as it used to be!
I have covered our initial experience of driving in Naples in a video and this experience, whilst I was not driving in that video clip, it was part of what changed my own driving habits hopefully forever.  Our driver that day was our host and one of our suppliers.  He mentioned to us that he commuted for an hour each way to his place of work from his home in a small village in rural Italy.  He said he enjoyed it and found it relaxing, to listen to music, or just think.  He drove through the total chaos of Neapolitan traffic so relaxed WE were nervous.  But his calmness in the chaos was remarkable and I could tell he had discovered something.  My thoughts when I heard this was that so often I am stressing out about people cutting me off, or slow drivers or finding the best way to get to my destination or the traffic jam or what ever.....  He exuded a calmness that was very appealing.

So, objective number two was doubly re-inforced by the time we picked up our rental car in Palermo, Sicily.

Objective number one was tested immediately.  We confidently and assertively declined the offer of a GPS from the rental car company, putting all our faith in Apple to guide us through Sicily.  With two iPhones and two iPads, that should do it.

We entered our destination into the Apple device, a remote part of rural Sicily, and wonderfully, Google Maps found it.  All good so far.

Then we clicked on 'Directions from our Current Location' and wonderfully a blue line appeared on the map and off we go.

Ancient Portal, down town Palermo, Sicily
Traffic pouring through an ancient
portal in down town Palermo
First problem - the thick blue line of Recommended Route #1 blanked out the street names on the map.

Second problem - the blue dot that indicates your current location has some lag from real time.  This takes a bit of getting used to when you are driving down a one way, multi lane road with myriads of little side streets - one of which you need to take... Decisions need to be taken with split second timing..

So, the initial result was two loops around one way streets before we managed to get out of central Palermo.    Not too bad.... it felt as if we had got off lightly.

The next lesson was the next day when we set off to find Monreale. All was fine until the recommended route took us to a point in the back blocks where the road was closed. Blocked off.  Take another route.  Hang on a minute, we have just driven for half an hour, are in the middle of nowhere and the road is closed!!!  What to do? Turn back or take the detour that the road signs indicated?  Surely it must just go around the piece of the road that has washed away and we will be back on the road??  We took the recommended detour.  MISTAKE!!!  We ended up winding through incredibly narrow back roads and taking literally hours to get to our destination.  Objective #2 was getting sorely tested by the time we arrived!  When we mentioned this later to one of our lovely agriturismo hosts, he calmly said, "oh yes, that road's always closed, you never go that way"!!.  No-one had mentioned this common local knowledge to Google.  Obviously.

That was the first part of my Italian driving education - more to come!




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