Author Topic: Driver's Roads  (Read 1599 times)

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Top Gear once went on a search for the best driver's road in the world.  With a map beside him, Clarkson immediately wrote off several countries, including the United States.  Now, I'm no blind patriot, as his assumption stems from a grain of truth:  most US roads are painfully boring.  If you get on a highway anywhere in the mid-west, you can set the cruise control, get one of those Club antitheft devices to lock the steering, and take a nap.  When you wake up, you'll still be on the same road, in the same lane, going in the same direction at the same speed, barring a shortage of fuel.  Anywhere else in the world, you'd have a horrible crash, and people would think you a tremendous idiot for trying something like that.  In the mid-west, people passing you will think, "Hey, that's not a bad idea," because there's no such thing as a curve in the plains and desert.

But the United States, thankfully, isn't just the mid-west.  Not all driving in this land need be boring.  In fact, I scheduled vacation time for today, with the express purpose of driving.  It took a lot of explaining, when I said I'd start and end at my apartment, for it was not the destination that was the highlight of the drive:  It was the 330-mile detour that I took.  The link omits the commute from my apartment to 'A' and from 'K' back to my apartment.  You don't need to know exactly where I live to get the point.  That detour included The Tail of the Dragon (twice), the Cherohala Skyway (twice), State Highway 360 in Tennessee (which apparently isn't significant enough for a Wiki page) and State Highway 28 in North Carolina (which somehow is).  When you've got a drive like that, it doesn't matter if the destination is the fiery depths of hell because you'll arrive with a grin on your face, and no torture will take it away from you.  As driver's roads go, this route has all the elements in place and nailed down.

Back to Top Gear for a moment:  They went trundling all over central and southern Europe, over boring motorways and irritating ferries, through towns and international borders, for three days and found a couple hours worth of exciting driving.  Comparatively, I popped out of my apartment, commuted for a ninety minutes, enjoyed five hours of driving on brilliant, well-maintained, and (except for The Tail of the Dragon) largely abandoned mountain roads, before returning home for the night.  No passports.  No hotel charges.  No faffing about with ferries or wetting one's self over countries imprisoning speeders....  You know what?  Top Gear can have their dozen miles of Alpine noodle, and I'll keep my road.  (And even if I can't keep it, it's not like I lack an alternative or twenty in this area.)

 

Offline Scotty

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Has anyone here driven the Blue Ridge Parkway in Virginia?  That's a beautiful stretch of road.

 

Offline Knight Templar

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I've seen that particular Top Gear. They had something going for them most people didn't. Mazaratis. Ferraris. and Jaguars. Any road will be ****ing amazing in one of those.

That having been said, in any discussion of top driving roads of the USA, you'd have to include Hwy 1 (specifically the California stretch.) I live pretty close to the coast in NorCal, and Hwy 1 has been used many a time by myself to kill time, enjoy a drive, relieve stress. Mind you I roll deep in a 93' Toyota 4Runner, so I don't know how "exciting" it is, but it certainly lacks little in beauty or interaction. You drive along coastal cliffs for days.

I'm convinced the Top Guy gentlemen would love it, particularly if they rolled in their Euroluxury cars.
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Offline CP5670

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A boring road as you describe it is a very good thing. It means no traffic, turns or lights. I wish there were more boring roads around here, instead of things like this that are part of my usual commute. :p

 

Offline Mongoose

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A boring road as you describe it is a very good thing. It means no traffic, turns or lights. I wish there were more boring roads around here, instead of things like this that are part of my usual commute. :p
Dear lord, Jersey's traffic circles. :lol:

My family and I spent two days driving the length of Skyline Drive in Shenandoah National Park in Virginia last summer.  I don't know if it'd qualify as a "great drive" by the Top Gear guy's standards (as nebulous as those are), as the speed limit throughout is 35 MPH, but it was by far the most gorgeous stretch of road I've ever been on.  Over one hundred miles of twisting, turning roadway along the Blue Ridge Mountains, punctuated every mile or so with scenic overlooks where one could pull off to enjoy spectacular views.  There are also a number of hiking trails throughout the park (the Appalachian Trail stretches through its whole length), including a short loop we took that had us clambering up a huge pile of substantial boulders.  Just an amazing experience from start to finish.
« Last Edit: May 22, 2009, 12:44:46 am by Mongoose »

 
A roundabout with traffic lights?  Good lord, only in New Jersey....  I still think it's telling that every road into NJ is open for free use, but there's a toll for anyone attempting to leave.  Only way to prevent a mass-exodus, I presume.  I think I can see where you might consider a fun drive an alien concept, CP, but if you ever get out of that prison camp state, I still recommend the mountains over the plains.

 

Offline ssmit132

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A roundabout with traffic lights?  Good lord, only in New Jersey.... 
There's a roundabout with traffic lights right outside Brisbane Airport, and they're actually on the roundabout itself.

 

Offline Herra Tohtori

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Närränharjuntie is a pretty cool road. As are most other roads built on top of eskers.

Also, Ouninpohjantie...

Let's see how your supercars agree with real roads, shall we? ;7
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Offline CP5670

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A roundabout with traffic lights?  Good lord, only in New Jersey....  I still think it's telling that every road into NJ is open for free use, but there's a toll for anyone attempting to leave.  Only way to prevent a mass-exodus, I presume.  I think I can see where you might consider a fun drive an alien concept, CP, but if you ever get out of that prison camp state, I still recommend the mountains over the plains.

The worst part is that there are two traffic lights for a left turn there. One green light gets you into the circle, and then you essentially have to wait for that light to become red again to complete the turn, all the while dodging other cars entering the same circle lane from 3 other directions. :rolleyes: On the way back, it's possible to take the right turn without any lights (if you can find a gap in the incoming 60mph traffic), but backups on the previous road are so bad after 3:00 that I usually avoid that path altogether and take a longcut on the way home.

I'm from the DC/Maryland area and am just here for grad school, but I commuted from home as an undergrad and had seen enough "interesting" roads over there as well. Actually, my current drive is a lot shorter and better than the old one used to be, although finding parking at the campus is entirely another matter. :p

  

Offline Fineus

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They had something going for them most people didn't. Mazaratis. Ferraris. and Jaguars. Any road will be ****ing amazing in one of those.
Hate to be picky, but it was a Lamborghini, Aston Martin and Porsche.

By a strange quirk of fate I've actually visited the area they filmed in - my friend took a year out of University to do a language placement and it was based at the lake they crossed in the show. Absolutely stunning area but the site isn't wrong and the surrounding roads aren't really that good for tearing it up.

For what it's worth there are some great roads in southern England for driving along if you catch them at the right time and they're empty. I'm not sure entirely what Top Gears criteria were but I'm sure there are plenty of nice driving roads all around the world if you look for them.