• Home
  • Articles
    • Animal Articles
      • Andalucian Horses
      • Animals Have No Rights
      • Animals in Spain
      • Iberian Lynx
      • The Donkey Sanctuary – a great family day out.
    • Arts and Culture
      • Flamenco
      • Lesser Known Granada Museums
      • Spanish Folk Music
      • Spanish wars of Goya and Picasso
      • The Guggenheim Museum of Bilbao
      • The Prado Museum — Madrid
      • Theatre, opera and ballet
      • Valencia’s City of Arts and Science
    • Education and Language
      • Spanish School is Good For Your Kids!
      • Spanish Spoken - Worldwide
      • Which school to choose
    • Financial and Legal
      • Banking on Organised Crime
      • Brief outline of Spanish taxation
      • Can your afford to retire to Spain
      • Crime in Spain
      • Mortgages in Spain
      • Purchasing “Off Plan”
      • Setting up a business in Spain
    • Food and Drink
      • Chupa Chups
      • Gazpacho - the flavour of Andalucia
      • It wouldn’t be the Mediterranean without it
      • Jamón, Queso y Chorizo – a history of Andalucia´s most famous delicacies.
      • Rioja, Spanish Beaujolais?
      • Saffron - worth its weight in gold
      • Somontano, forgotten wine of Spain
      • The Cuisine Of The Costa Tropical
      • The End of Cork?
      • The Renaissance in Spanish cooking
    • General Information
      • Flutter Fever
      • National Anthem
      • Spanish Flag
      • Spanish Police
      • The CAP
    • Health and Beauty
      • Health Benefits
      • Healthy Oil
      • Spanish Fashion
      • Sun Care
      • Vestiges of a Darker Age
    • History
      • Goodbye Red Duchess
      • History of Sugar
      • Kings and Queens
      • Pirates of the Caribbean
    • Home and Garden
      • Painting & Decorating
      • Renewable Energy
    • Leisure
      • Fun Things to Do and Places to Go
      • Music
    • Myths and Legends
      • Atlantis
      • Black Legend
      • Knights of the Fish
      • Lovers of Teruel
      • Rimas y Leyendas
      • The Bird of Truth
      • The Fairy Tale Lion
      • The Water of Life
    • Property
      • Fractional Ownership
      • Property Hot Spot
    • Relocation
      • How to Move
      • How to relocate & stay in Spain
      • Moving the Kids to Spain
      • Why the Costa Tropical?
    • Technology
      • Broadband Internet
      • Spanish TV
    • Traditions and Customs
      • A Kiss is just a Kiss
      • Gypsies
      • Towers Alive
    • Transport
      • Granada Airport
      • Public Transport
      • Spanish Drivers
      • Spanish Rail Network
        • Spain’s Trains on Speed
      • Spanish Roads
      • The Art Of Parking in Spain
  • Contact
  • Magazine
    • Advertising Rate Card
    • Magazine Downloads
  • Towns and Cities
    • Albondon
    • Albunol
    • Almunecar
    • Cadiar
    • Calahonda/Carchuna
    • Castell de Ferro
    • Durcal
    • Granada
    • Itrabo
    • La Herradura
    • La Rabita
    • Lanjarron
    • Lecrin
    • Los Guajares
    • Molvizar
    • Motril
    • Orgiva
    • Padul
    • Salobrena
    • Sevilla
    • Velez de Benaudalla
  • Property Search
  • Business Directory
  • Restaurant Reviews
  • Car Sales

Driving you round the bend.

Like all Latins, a Spaniard’s personality often changes the moment he gets behind the wheel of a car, when even normally tolerant and patient people turn into suicidal maniacs. Many Spaniards are frustrated racing drivers and they rush around at breakneck speed in their haste to reach their destination. To many male Spaniards, driving is like a bullfight and an opportunity to demonstrate their machismo to their wives and girlfriends. Foreign-registered cars (observing speed limits) are like red rags to a bull to some Spaniards, who must overtake them immediately, irrespective of their speed, the speed limit, road markings, adverse weather conditions or oncoming traffic.
English flagDutch flagFrench flagGerman flagItalian flagPortuguese flagSpanish flag
By N2H

Recent Posts

    • 153 killed after Spanish holiday jet crashes during takeoff
    • One worker dies in fall from Granada to a roof
    • The ‘real’ Spain is poised to weather the property downturn
    • A painful past uncovered
    • Chase me, Chase Me
  • Spanish Drivers

    Among the many motoring ‘idiosyncrasies’ you will encounter are a total lack of lane discipline (lane markings are treated as optional), overtaking with reckless abandon on blind bends, failure to use mirrors or indicators (especially when exiting from a motorway or dual-carriageway), driving through red lights and the wrong way up one-way streets, and parking anywhere it’s illegal. Many drivers routinely park too close to other cars and bang their doors up against them, damaging the paintwork. In Spain, nearly every car has a dent in it.

    When driving in Spain, you should regard all drivers as totally unpredictable and drive defensively (although it should be noted, that not all Spanish drivers are mad or incompetent). When driving on narrow country roads, stay on your own side of the road at all times unless you can see a long distance ahead (if you don’t, you can bet your life that around the next blind corner will be a large truck with poor brakes and/or steering). Note that some Spanish drivers are confused by roundabouts (as are many other Europeans) and they don’t always give way to traffic already on roundabouts when entering them (previously traffic on a roundabout had to give way to traffic entering it).

    When driving at night, watch out for bicycles, motorcycles, donkeys, and horses and carts without lights. Maniacs on ear-splitting motorcycles and mopeds are a menace to everyone in towns. Motorists should also keep a wary eye out for pedestrians, particularly older people, who often walk across the road without looking.

    Although they aren’t among Europe’s worst tailgaters, some Spanish drivers sit a few metres (centimetres) from your bumper trying to push you along irrespective of traffic density, road and weather conditions, or the speed limit. Always try to leave a large gap between your vehicle and the one in front. This isn’t just to give you more time to stop should the vehicles in front decide to come together, but also to give the inevitable tailgater behind you more time to stop.

    The most civilised drivers (relatively speaking) are to be found in the north of Spain (e.g. Catalonia), where most drivers follow at least some of the rules and even stop at red lights. In contrast to most car drivers, Spanish truck drivers are competent and courteous, and most use their right indicators to tell you when it’s safe to overtake and their left indicators to warn you that there’s an oncoming vehicle. Motorists also use their hazard warning lights when forced to slow rapidly, e.g. for an accident or road works.

    Driving in cities can be absolutely chaotic and is to be avoided if at all possible. Inexperienced drivers should take extra care, as the accident rate for foreigners is quite high, particularly in Spanish cities. The Germans and the French have the most accidents, being speed-crazy like the Spanish (the sensible British drive more defensively).

    Don’t be too discouraged by the road hogs and tailgaters on Spanish roads; driving in Spain can be a pleasant experience, particularly when you’re using rural roads, which are relatively traffic-free most of the time.


    Share this information around the World:
    • Digg
    • del.icio.us
    • Facebook
    • Google
    • Propeller
    • StumbleUpon
    • Technorati
    • YahooMyWeb

    Site Links

    • About Us
    • Advertising Rates
    • Articles about the Costa Tropical and Spain
    • Business Directory
    • Costa Tropical News
    • General Notes and Information
    • Local Business News
    • Property News
    • Property Sales & Rentals
    • Spanish News
    • Towns and Cities of the Costa Tropical
    © 2008 Costa Tropical News - Design by Bad Attitude Design
    Log in | Register | 37 queries. 1.456 seconds.