Can't answer that one,
@Andrew92
But let me conclude my "left nemesis saga" with the one that started it; last April, in Wichita Falls (this is the doozy). Family were staying at Homewood Suites, and I was to fetch them to a funeral in Burkburnett. I used NAV, of course, and "she" led me up Maplewood Ave. Naturally I stayed in the righthand lane, then turned right into the driveway. (I had passed no one, or seen any vehicles that alerted me to what was coming.)
After picking up the family, I retraced my way to the mouth of the driveway and turned left to return the way I had come. I was chatting with family I had not seen in quite a while. So I (and everyone else in the full car) missed this:
That literally was the only warning. I proceeded up Maplewood Ave, in what I thought was the righthand lane. Then I saw a car coming IN MY LANE!? WTH!? They moved out of my way, of course and flashed their lights. That was about the time I passed a "One Way" sign and realized my error; there wasn't anything I could do but put on some Stinger speed to hasten to the far end of the divided road, where I got off at Elmwood Ave:
Of course, not having a bird's eye view, and not knowing the town, I had no idea that turning right out of Homewood Suites' driveway would have led me to a crossover to the matching One Way lanes. (Or, I could have followed NAV and avoided the entire botched left turn. This embarrassing screw up went a long way toward convincing me to pay attention to NAV in strange surroundings.)
At least it was over a year later before I muffed a left turn again. But followed by that wander across the double yellow lines on Suncrest last Sunday raises the alarm: more attention, not less, is required of the aging driver.
