Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good reminder OP, agree! Sure there are exceptions, like PP pointed out, but really you are typically talking about 5-8 minutes of looping back around--not worth an accident or your safety (or that of others).
Nope, there really arenāt any exceptions. You missed the exit/turn, you take the next one. You donāt endanger everyone else.
+1
+10000
There are no exceptions. Maybe if it were a zombie apocalypse and you were the only driver left alive anywhere, on all the roads everywhere.
Otherwise, you miss the exit/turn and take the next one, even if it's 15 miles down the road. Being late is MUCH better than getting into an awful accident that kills you or someone else.
I cannot understand how anyone believes otherwise.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good reminder OP, agree! Sure there are exceptions, like PP pointed out, but really you are typically talking about 5-8 minutes of looping back around--not worth an accident or your safety (or that of others).
Nope, there really arenāt any exceptions. You missed the exit/turn, you take the next one. You donāt endanger everyone else.
+1
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you in theory, of course. I do understand why people unfamiliar with driving in and around DC panic and do crazy maneuvers to make the exit, though. If you miss your exit on the GW Parkway near the Memorial Bridge, for example, you don't get a chance to turn around for quite some time. Driving on the Rock Creek Parkway can be similarly fraught. I don't know how you all navigated the tangled up roads by the Kennedy Center or the Memorial Drive/GW Parkway zig-zags without GPS.
+1000
The signage in this area is absolutely wretched and it is way too easy to not see the correct lane until the last minute, especially if the roads are unfamiliar.
As for KCen area--I'm not even sure GPS helps. You really just need to learn by doing or have a driving guru to show you. I used to choose to drive through Dupont Circle at off hours just so I could learn to navigate it.
I saw movie, The American President, before moving to DC. Had flashbacks to it the first time I drove through Dupont Circle.
The funny thing about that movie is that she says she was driving from the Hill to the White House, so why was she in Dupont Circle in the first place?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A good reminder OP, agree! Sure there are exceptions, like PP pointed out, but really you are typically talking about 5-8 minutes of looping back around--not worth an accident or your safety (or that of others).
Nope, there really arenāt any exceptions. You missed the exit/turn, you take the next one. You donāt endanger everyone else.
+1
Jeez, folks... "Exceptions" to my estimate of only 5-8 minutes of "wasted time" for a missed exit, e.g. PP states there is greater distance between exits on GW Parkway. There is no exception the rule that you do not go backwards on the freeway!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I agree with you in theory, of course. I do understand why people unfamiliar with driving in and around DC panic and do crazy maneuvers to make the exit, though. If you miss your exit on the GW Parkway near the Memorial Bridge, for example, you don't get a chance to turn around for quite some time. Driving on the Rock Creek Parkway can be similarly fraught. I don't know how you all navigated the tangled up roads by the Kennedy Center or the Memorial Drive/GW Parkway zig-zags without GPS.
+1000
The signage in this area is absolutely wretched and it is way too easy to not see the correct lane until the last minute, especially if the roads are unfamiliar.
As for KCen area--I'm not even sure GPS helps. You really just need to learn by doing or have a driving guru to show you. I used to choose to drive through Dupont Circle at off hours just so I could learn to navigate it.
I saw movie, The American President, before moving to DC. Had flashbacks to it the first time I drove through Dupont Circle.