SacramentoMike
Not Safe For Work
Still involved in what may be a life-long process of reviewing, organizing, editing and posting the vids I made in the Alps this summer, and finally got this one posted on YouTube. I labeled it "Lane Splitting, Italian Style."
Our tour guide told us that morning that we'd be coming into a town Called Riva (or Riva da Garda, since it's on the shore of Lake Garda, which can be seen in the background in part of the vid), and that the road would be pretty clogged with traffic. But don't worry, he says. Lane splitting is legal in Italy. "In fact, they might give you a ticket for not lane splitting." Now, I know what lane splitting is here in Cali, but this was something else entirely, as you'll see. They just split the whole damn road!
As to how the locals feel about it, they're clearly used to it and it didn't seem to bother anybody. I stopped next to a brown van at one point and exchanged a few words with the driver--don't remember what was said, but at the 1:15 point, as I was about to pull away again, you can see he gives me a thumbs-up. Probably wishing he could do the same.
The full video, in two parts, is a good fifteen minutes of this stuff--went on for miles and miles. But this two minutes is enough to give you a good flavor of it. When we arrived at our destination, the 'Zonies and the Canadians in the group were wearing grins that barely fit inside their helmets. So was I.
Our tour guide told us that morning that we'd be coming into a town Called Riva (or Riva da Garda, since it's on the shore of Lake Garda, which can be seen in the background in part of the vid), and that the road would be pretty clogged with traffic. But don't worry, he says. Lane splitting is legal in Italy. "In fact, they might give you a ticket for not lane splitting." Now, I know what lane splitting is here in Cali, but this was something else entirely, as you'll see. They just split the whole damn road!
As to how the locals feel about it, they're clearly used to it and it didn't seem to bother anybody. I stopped next to a brown van at one point and exchanged a few words with the driver--don't remember what was said, but at the 1:15 point, as I was about to pull away again, you can see he gives me a thumbs-up. Probably wishing he could do the same.
The full video, in two parts, is a good fifteen minutes of this stuff--went on for miles and miles. But this two minutes is enough to give you a good flavor of it. When we arrived at our destination, the 'Zonies and the Canadians in the group were wearing grins that barely fit inside their helmets. So was I.