Driving In South Africa
In late January/early February I was in South Africa. Incredible place, lots to do... you can even go dive with Great White Sharks or, for an even more thrilling and scary experience, drive on their roads. Cape Town was pretty civilized but the rest of the country...
Our driver in Johannesburg was going 120-140 and traffic was flying past us. The only time they slowed down was for the speed cameras. (Yes, South Africa has photo radar.) Some people went 200+ on two-lane highways; others were going barely 60. People don't just drive on the highways in rural areas - there are pedestrians, livestock, wildlife, markets, fruit sellers and everything else. The concept of "pass in safety" doesn't exist - people just pull out and pass even if there is oncoming traffic. As a courtesy, most of the time people will move to the shoulder to allow faster-moving traffic to pass, but you have to watch out for pedestrians, livestock, etc. There's also nothing like cresting a hill at 110 km/h to see a Mercedes coming right at you while passing a fuel tanker truck, and a hippopotamus nonchalantly munching grass half in your lane too. Many of the drivers are drunk. Then there are the minibus taxis, who drive like demented kamikazes. They drive 100+ on city streets, charge across lanes with suicidal abandon, stop suddenly, pull out and force others to brake or (usually) swerve to let them in, turn across multiple lanes of traffic at full speed, and they almost never stop for red lights. You can literally be going through an intersection with dozens of other cars and a minibus taxi will charge through the red light, forcing all of you to brake.
And for the ultimate thrill ride, we took a regular taxi from the hotel in Johannesburg to the airport. The drive was pretty much like this video here:
Yes, that video is from South Korea, but the taxi driver was doing exactly the same stuff.
That said, if any of you ever get a chance to go to South Africa... take it. The driving is nuts but the trip is definitely worth it.