Highway One Sign, proposed, 2/22/18

As seen on Highway 1 in the South Island of New Zealand this month, we need the same thing placed every mile of our Highway 1 in Big Sur! Please post on your blog for all drivers to see. Thanks, Alan Buchwald, Weston Ridge Road (BTW, NZ’s Highway One on the South Island is a lot like ours, including slides that close it off for a year at a time.)

bigsurkate

Appointed appellate counsel for indigent defendants (retired.) I have lived in Big Sur since 1984, first on the north coast, and on the South Coast since 1989.

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  • Please, no more signs on the highway. Especially yellow ones. Nobody obeys signs. Plodding tourists ignore the several well-marked special turnouts, impatient locals (and thier commuting workers) ignore the speed limit signs, campers sleep at the posted No Camping spots. Signs are a blight on the view. Too many already. Try relaxing. What's the hurry? Travel during non-tourist hours.

  • CA Highway 1 has these signs up by Moss Landing. I have seen them when going to Santa Cruz. They say "5 or more cars behind you? Pull over and let them pass!" It would be nice if they brought these farther South to the Big Sur area. Please make it happen! :)
    -Ernest (Pam's co-worker)

  • How about posting a sign a half mile before each turnout? Would not want to see this sign every mile as it would distract from the beauty of this drive and might tempt drivers to pull over in unsafe areas.

  • There are already new(ish) signs on 1 in Big Sur approaching the official pullouts informing drivers informing drivers that there is a pullout ahead and then followed by a "Slow vehicles with 5 or more following vehicles must use turn-out". They don't seem to have made any difference to driver behavior.

    While the NZ signs are definitely better (quicker to read, simpler to comprehend) and having more of them would definitely help too, I think there's another aspect to this that should be considered, namely that English is not the first language of many driving down the coast these days.

    One thing that I remember from growing up in the UK, and was reminded of again when I got to drive 1 in NZ a couple of years ago is that a lot more signs are graphical in nature, not textual. Here in the US, so many more signs are just textual - here we have "Men (sic) at work", there, they have a stick figure using a shovel warning of impending workers.

    I wonder if we could come up with a graphical, comprehendible sign that would speak to everyone driving down the coast, not just those with English as their first language? Maybe other countries already have and we could borrow their design?

  • Amen on the NZ sign! I don't mind "relaxing" and enjoying the view on my drive. But being behind someone who drives the entire route at 40MPH except when they brake to 20 for turns or suddenly accelerate to 60 whenever you get to a passing zone (so that nobody can pass them), or someone who is driving slowly while simultaneously filming themself using a selfie stick (which I see WAY TOO OFTEN), is not very relaxing. Anyone driving on any single lane road should, as a matter of courtesy, move over (when it is safe to do so) for people behind them who want to go faster, it's not their job to enforce what they believe to be the correct speed.

  • My brother-in-law was pulled over by CHP on the very windy section of the road between Carmel Valley and Highway 101 and lectured that if he were to go this slow on Highway One he would get a ticket. He was driving a large SUV. So even the cops can't get it straight, signs or no signs.

  • common sense and common courtesy should cover this but apparently neither is very common. people who would never consider clogging an aisle in a grocery store or a sidewalk while walking somehow loose all perspective when driving. I'm not sure new signs would change much, perhaps better drivers training, perhaps better parenting, but that horse has left the barn.

    I am actually quite looking forward to self-driving cars for this particular issue.

  • Traffic psychology is a very well study subject, 'Best Practice' is defined by those practices that have been verified by field research and are peer reviewed before adoption, one of the results is signs actually cause accidents, the basics of all study results are...SLOW DOWN & DO THE MATH, your chance of survival in any automobile crash over 40mph is 50/50, its physics.
    In automotive manufacturing you typically have 4 main groups, engineering, styling, accounting and government, these groups have many sub groups, it is the job of the principle engineer in the NVH-SQ group (noice, vibration, harshness, sound quality) to create the 'in-car experiance' Their job is to disguise the fact you are driving in a tin casket.
    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traffic_psychology

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