I’m sure most of us have had an absolute white-knuckled drive through a terrifying road - whether it’s a terrifying mountain switchback or just a poorly designed miserable highway. Go nuts!

  • @AncillaryJustice
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    1310 months ago

    Got lost on a mountain road with my partner in scorching heat in Apple Valley, CA with no cell phone reception. Picture a one lane road not much wider than our car with an almost sheer cliff on one side. It lead to a point with a super steep rocky climb that my little coupe would have no chance of getting over. The only option was to backtrack. There was no way I was going to drive in reverse the whole way down, so I got out and tried to gauge how much room there was to turn around. I look over the edge and see an old rusted pickup truck belly up at the bottom of the gorge. I calmly get back in the car and ask my partner to make hand signals when I get close to the edge and started doing a 137+point turn inch by inch to get the car turned around. Eventually we got out of there and had a fun rest of our trip, but feel like we could easily have met the same fate as that upended truck. I later told my partner about that truck, and they said they saw it but kept calm and didn’t tell me so I wouldn’t freak out either.

  • starlinguk
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    710 months ago

    Corsica. The Calanques de Piana. The road is barely one coach wide, and it’s got a sheer drop on one side and goes straight up on the other. Everybody parks on the passing places so if you meet someone you’re screwed. I met a coach. Luckily I was driving a Twingo. I managed to get past it with one side of the car about 5 cm from the drop, with the coach driver helping me out. The coach badly scratched one of the cars parked on the passing place. Karma for the dumb tourist.

  • Southrydge Freedom
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    610 months ago

    Devils backbone by Loveland, CO. Such a steep and curvy road. Road was made up of mostly really large rocks, so didn’t feel much like a road. Was definitely scared my truck would slip off at any wrong move, never went there again lol

    • Sweetroll
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      510 months ago

      Also in Colorado: on the way to Handies Peak, there’s a one lane road with a steep drop off on one side and a mountain incline on the other. No guardrail. We made the mistake of going on a holiday weekend, so we were scraping past one Jeep after another, with the plummeting depths inches from our tires. Never again.

    • @GiddyGap@lemmy.world
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      210 months ago

      Devils backbone by Loveland, CO

      Is that the actual name of the road? Can’t seem to find it anywhere.

  • ZeroSkill_Sorry
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    510 months ago

    The road to Hana on Maui, in the dark, in the rain, with the wipers not working that great. Every hundred feet is a hairpin turn or a one-way bridge. The locals drive it at like 80 mph. Definitely an adventure.

    • Randy_Lorde_Marsh
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      310 months ago

      Definitely road to Hana. Especially doing the complete loop that has you end upcountry. Those cliff-side sections where the guardrails are rusted and busted are intense in the best conditions.

  • @ScottyShines@lemmy.world
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    510 months ago

    Highway 63, before it was twinned as much as it is. During the oil boom fucking sports cars would appear out of nowhere and try a suicide pass of 8 vehicles coming right at you going the opposite way. Terrifying. A truck tried to pass another way back in 2012 and ended up killing 7 people including an 11 year old girl which sparked the need to twin the highway.

  • @SEND_BUTTPLUG_PICS@lemmy.world
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    410 months ago

    I just drove to Alaska and back by way of the Alaska highway through Canada in a Ford van. The road is pretty destroyed for about 300 miles around the border of Alaska and Canada. Huge potholes, massive hills, sections of road that have collapsed, wildlife, dirt and gravel sections, massive cliffs, and twisty roads all while traffic is moving at 55-70ish mph.

  • Joe B
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    410 months ago

    In iraq, the insurgets blew up the left abd right sides of the road. you litterally can only drive in the middle of the road, some roads where blown up all together so we just had to follow the guy in front of us and hope to not get blown up :P

  • @zeroscan@lemmy.sdf.org
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    410 months ago

    Most of the roads in Ireland, at least for my 'Murrican sensibilities. My wife and I took our honeymoon in Ireland and rented a car to get around. Aside from driving on the opposite side of the road, we were unprepared for how narrow all but the main highways were. The typical road there is comparable to a small country road here, is often lined with hedges right up to the edges, and often lacks a center line. The sheer terror of going past a large truck going the opposite way on one of those for the first time was very, very memorable. We eventually got used to it, but that first day or two of driving was definitely white-knuckled.

  • CrudmanOP
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    310 months ago

    Some background: I have a horrendous fear of heights.

    To start, I remember going down to South Carolina when I was 18 to visit my friend. Her friend drove us through an Appalachian mountain road at blood-curdling speeds and I was kind of drafting out my will in my head.

    Similar story to when I went to California for my cousin’s wedding more recently. I find something about those mountain roads around Hollywood to be absolutely nauseating. Serpentine, narrow, had me holding on to the Oh Shit handles of the rental car.

  • TechyDad
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    310 months ago

    I was taking my son to a Bar Mitzvah party and it was starting to get dark. Google said I needed to turn left. The road looked a bit “rural,” but who am I to argue with Google?

    I immediately realized that I should have argued. The road was a dirt road with ditches on either side and bare trees overhanging. It looked like a scene from a horror movie right before the psycho clown attacks with a chain saw. I kept this thought to myself, though, to prevent my son from freaking out. Instead, I just freaked out internally while calmly expressing confidence that we’d arrive soon.

    The road was barely one car width so turning around was impossible. Backing up would have been difficult as well. So on we went. The road twisted and turned and at one point I swear we drove through someone’s back yard.

    Finally, we got back on a normal road, but Google was being even more useless. I found someone and asked them where we were and how we should get back to where we were supposed to be. The person said that we shouldn’t be on this road at all as it was a private road. They weren’t upset, though. Apparently, this happened frequently with Google’s directions. The person gave me directions and we soon made it to the Bar Mitzvah party without being too late.

  • @moonsnotreal@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    310 months ago

    I forget the name of the road but it was a class 4 dirt road in New England near my Dad’s place that looked like a stream bed and had actual boulders sticking out a few inches in places.

    • CrudmanOP
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      210 months ago

      Hate that. Took my car down a trailhead to unload my kayak and felt like I was gonna pop my oil pan

  • @0235@lemmy.world
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    310 months ago

    well… it made the news: https://www.northantstelegraph.co.uk/news/people/is-this-britains-worst-road-kettering-parents-furious-at-school-access-1327488

    Quite tame for most other places, but unusually standard for the UK.

    Road I live on a manhole cover is literally half exposed out the road. not the rover to it, the actual frame the cover goes into. council doesn’t care. But they just repaved a road which had only been done 5 years before, and definitely didn’t need re-doing.

  • Dylpickles
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    210 months ago

    I’ll give two but both of them are more situational than they are explicit design flaws.

    The more recent one: I was driving with my current girlfriend to Tennessee from Georgia on an incredibly twisty, narrow mountain road that was simultaneously undergoing construction. Not too bad right?

    Well this construction meant big ass barriers blocking the shoulders entirely. That + it being 2-3 AM, pitch black, and raining it’s needless to say my steering wheel still has the imprints from my terrified grip that day. I wish I could’ve stuck my head out and asked the other drivers if they were as stressed out about that road as I was.

    Second one: first ever driving in snow back in December of 2019 I wanna say. I was I dunno 21?

    My now ex-girlfriend and I decided to take my car on our road trip from Georgia to Colorado because I had just gotten new tires. Sounds like a good idea, right? Little did we know my fuckin heater would give out maybe two hours into the trip. Cut forward a few hours we’re in the flat hell that is Kansas and there’s a whole ass blizzard happening.

    Driving through heavy snow for the first time in my life was daunting enough but add on the fact that my windshield would not stop freezing over/fogging up, my now ex-girlfriend yelling at me about how cold it was, and my extremities losing feeling as my ex hogged the space heater I wired to my car battery and you have a pretty miserable ass trip.

    I drove the whole way through. I drove all 24 hours without switching off to let her drive because she was too scared to drive in those conditions. I mean I can’t really blame her for that but I can blame her for being really mean to me the whole time and I can blame her for how she acted when we broke up the next month.

  • Lord Dumbass
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    110 months ago

    North Texas has some really bad roads that I’ve seen, especially if you go through a country road