ChatterBank3 mins ago
Do tractors etc feel bad about going slow??
This is a bit of a random one...
I live out in the sticks & travel 10 miles to work in the nearest town down a windy main road... this road is very busy during rush hour, as everyone from the countryside is driving in to town.
Twice this week I have got behind a slow-moving vehicle (tractor, horse-box, lorry full of cattle...) doing about 30mph for the whole 10 miles, causing a huge trail of traffic coz there is nowhere to overtake...
I know everyone has the right to use the roads at any time, but I just wondered if farmers etc sit there & think "oh sh*t I forgot it's rush hour, I'm holding all these people up" or are they just not bothered??
I'm not having a go so please don't be nasty... just curious!!
Answers
No best answer has yet been selected by fairy!. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I'm not convinced they couldn't do that work at other times of the day. I'm not aware of many farmers working a 9-5 day...
In fairness, on a couple of occassions I been behind a tractor drivers that has pulled over for a minute to allow traffic to pass but its certainly not the norm.
There are stretches of the A1 (I think) where tractors & slow-moving vehicles are specifically prohibited at morning & evening rush-hours. Can't remember exactly where but I have seen them & wish they were in place where I live!
Yes it can be frustrating, and I hate being stuck behind a slow vehicle as much as anyone. Bear in mind however, that horseboxes and other livestock transport have no choice but to go slow, as sudden braking will throw the animals around. I help my mate with his horses, and if I see a large queue behind us, I just like to think that people have it in them to be patient, and wait for a suitable place to overtake.
Maybe farmers could travel at other times of the day, but then many schoolchildren that are taken to school in big 4 x 4's that clog up our town centres could also walk or get the bus to school, but their parents are able to choose to drive them, just as the farmer is able to choose when to use the roads.
I live in the country and I know some farmers will pull over whenever there's a chance to let the traffic go past. They're the ones we should be singling out and giving praise to because they're OK.
But then you get the other farmers who think it's funny to hold you up, or they just don't care whether you get to work or home or wherever on time or not, because they can hold up loads of traffic if they want to because they've got nothing better to do while they're rolling along in their tractor, trundling past every layby - 'Har-har. aren't I funny? I don't give a ****!' They're the ones you get stuck behind who never pull over.
Unfortunately, the latter are the majority - and my husband was born and bred into farming and he says the same thing because he was one of the former examples, so I'm not biased!
I don't think you're 'having a go'. I'm glad to see that not everybody walks (or drives) around thinking all farmers are friendly and cute cos they're not; they're hard-nosed businessmen and some of them have a mean streak inside them!
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