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Do you know what the most pointless piece of road safety advice is? Drive to the conditions.
I get it and it鈥檚 well-meaning. But it鈥檚 pointless. A waste of breath. Because some people are incapable of doing it.
And it would seem from some of the reports in the past 24 hours about those two buses which went off the road yesterday on the Twizel-Tekapo highway after hitting black ice, that perhaps the drivers of those buses knew nothing about how you should be driving in sub-zero temperatures.
So they either didn鈥檛 know how to drive to the conditions - or just didn鈥檛 care.
This isn鈥檛 a one-off, either, by the way, and, I reckon the time has come for us to stop mucking around with this 鈥渄rive to the conditions鈥 nonsense and do one of two things.
We either follow the lead of some European countries and make winter tyres mandatory on all vehicles. Or, as soon as we know temperatures are going to be sub-zero where there鈥檚 a state highway, we close the road. We don鈥檛 wait around until the road is frozen over and it鈥檚 too late.
I see the guy in charge of the bus company involved in yesterday鈥檚 crashes is disputing any suggestion that they were going too fast. He would say that, though, wouldn鈥檛 he?
It鈥檚 not like he鈥檚 going to come out and say 鈥榦h yeah, those muppets I pay to drive my buses have got no idea about driving to the conditions鈥.
So, instead of relying on some bus company owner in Auckland, I鈥檓 going to give more credence to the eyewitness account of a chap by the name of Tony McClelland, who was on the road at the time. I bet he isn鈥檛 buying what the bus company guy is saying, either.
He was driving from Christchurch to Omarama. And he鈥檚 been in the news saying that the road conditions on that highway yesterday morning were the worst he鈥檚 ever seen.
He hit black ice himself near Tekapo Airport, nearly lost control of his van and almost ended up in a ditch. So he called the police and asked them to close the road.
Here鈥檚 a quote from what he鈥檚 saying: 鈥淵ou're looking at minus-5, minus-4 degrees, foggy conditions - that State Highway should have been closed. No doubt and it wasn't. There's just a big black sign up by the airfield saying 'dangerous conditions, black ice'. That's how people die."
Thankfully, no one did die. One person has serious injuries and two others have moderate injuries. And thank goodness those buses ended-up where they did - off the road and not in the middle of it.
But back to Tony McLelland. Once he鈥檇 called the cops, asking them to close the road, he thought about turning back but decided to press-on. But he stuck to 60kph. And it wasn鈥檛 long after that that he saw these two buses 鈥渇lying out of the fog鈥. That鈥檚 what he鈥檚 saying.
And here鈥檚 how he describes what he saw. "They were not doing 60. They were not doing 80. They were doing at least 100, probably a little bit more."
And he obviously drives that road quite a bit, because he says it鈥檚 not uncommon to see drivers hoofing along at 100 kph during winter, when there鈥檚 black ice on the road.
But this sort of nutbar driving happens everywhere. Less than two weeks ago, police caught a driver doing 134 kph in icy, foggy conditions on the road to Aoraki/Mt Cook - with the whole family on board.
This was on State Highway 80. It was around minus-3.
The day after that, the police came out with a warning, saying the number of people driving at 鈥渉orrendous鈥 speeds in winter conditions is appalling.
Over a two-week period, 26 people had been caught doing speeds over 120 kph in icy conditions.
So what happened yesterday isn鈥檛 an isolated one-off. It鈥檚 happening on an all-too-regular basis and just telling people to 鈥渄rive to the conditions鈥 is worthy, but lame.
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