Scarlett
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- Jun 27, 2011
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Another thing to note about Montego Bay and Jamaica in general is the almost complete disregard for road rules.
- Most motorbikes are ridden by young men wearing no protective gear, weaving in and out of lanes at speed.
- 75% of drivers believe speed signs are advisory and go fast. 10% are genuinely dawdling because they might be drunk, or their car is so beat up it can’t go any faster, or they’re being very conservative. The rest are probably okay.
- There are ‘rasta vans’ (aka route taxis) everywhere. They assume they have right of way in all situations and will pull out, or swerve to pull in whenever they feel like it, across multiple lanes.
- there are a lot of potholes, so you need to pay attention ahead of you all the time.
At least they all seem to obey traffic lights.
Easy as!
Noting all of the above, I was not looking forward to my last day on Jamaica, as although I had arrived at MBJ, I was departing from KIN. Part of the good deal on the hire car was no one-way fee to drop it off at KIN. I allowed 4 hours for the drive from Mo Bay on the north west coast to the capital Kingston in the south east. Fair to say it was not a relaxing drive but was competed without incident. Window cleaners infest many of the intersections in Kingston and didn’t take no for an answer when they saw a tourist, so I tried to get in the habit of slowing down well before an intersection to try and not get stuck at the lights. Some got pretty angry at me but luckily they didn’t damage the car.
Another point to note is that where many people are concerned about the rate of murders in the US, apparently they average out annually to ~6 people per 100K of population. Jamaica is ~55 people per 100K and most of those occur around Kingston. My stop to refuel the hire car before getting to the airport was pretty quick.
There is a north-south toll road for about 70KMs through the middle of the island. The toll was about AUD20 but well worth it for a good standard of road.
- Most motorbikes are ridden by young men wearing no protective gear, weaving in and out of lanes at speed.
- 75% of drivers believe speed signs are advisory and go fast. 10% are genuinely dawdling because they might be drunk, or their car is so beat up it can’t go any faster, or they’re being very conservative. The rest are probably okay.
- There are ‘rasta vans’ (aka route taxis) everywhere. They assume they have right of way in all situations and will pull out, or swerve to pull in whenever they feel like it, across multiple lanes.
- there are a lot of potholes, so you need to pay attention ahead of you all the time.
At least they all seem to obey traffic lights.
Easy as!
Noting all of the above, I was not looking forward to my last day on Jamaica, as although I had arrived at MBJ, I was departing from KIN. Part of the good deal on the hire car was no one-way fee to drop it off at KIN. I allowed 4 hours for the drive from Mo Bay on the north west coast to the capital Kingston in the south east. Fair to say it was not a relaxing drive but was competed without incident. Window cleaners infest many of the intersections in Kingston and didn’t take no for an answer when they saw a tourist, so I tried to get in the habit of slowing down well before an intersection to try and not get stuck at the lights. Some got pretty angry at me but luckily they didn’t damage the car.
Another point to note is that where many people are concerned about the rate of murders in the US, apparently they average out annually to ~6 people per 100K of population. Jamaica is ~55 people per 100K and most of those occur around Kingston. My stop to refuel the hire car before getting to the airport was pretty quick.
There is a north-south toll road for about 70KMs through the middle of the island. The toll was about AUD20 but well worth it for a good standard of road.