Why do you holiday in the US?
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Not really scooping but I made a list in a previous post. Adds up to 23.
I can probably add a couple I visited in passing but have not made a lasting impression.
I can probably add a couple I visited in passing but have not made a lasting impression.
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I think most of Florida fits your depiction of Miami, don't forget to include all of the visitors from all over to your mix.
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I think even driving styles are noticeably different in various parts of the US. In the northwest people tend to drive slow and courteously (seems everybody is always driving 5 mph under when driving up the 5 in Seattle).
The LA-area, if you're actually moving, is frantic, but there is a modest politeness.
The LA-area, if you're actually moving, is frantic, but there is a modest politeness.
Driving in Boston is like driving in LeMans. You move at top speed, close together, and glancing to the left or right is taken as a sign of weakness. But traffic moves very efficiently because individual motorists know how to comprise a cohesive, dynamic flow. Natives are brought up knowing how to navigate narrow, weirdly designed roads like Storrow Drive, with its surprise lane changes and sharp curves, at a good clip.
Driving in the Northwest, to gently counter MastaHanky, is the polar opposite. Motorists are oblivious to one another and overall traffic flow, so backups are endemic. They're reading newspapers or doing their eyelashes in there. And left-lane banditry (blithely cruising in the overtaking lane at or below the speed limit) is a way of life here. It's the only place in the country I've heard drivers defend their right to squat in the fast lane at 55-60 mph, even when it plugs up traffic flow and causes desperate right-side passing behind them, or even accidents. I think Seattle is actually the most dangerous place to drive in the US because of this defiant individualist mentality from motorists who aren't that skilled (no driver's ed required here; even auto safety inspections are not required). Every once in awhile some suburban mom in a hulking SUV mows down a couple of children because she was eating a bowl of cereal while driving or something.
PS. I have been to 46 states... all but HI, AK, ND and MT.
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... and 30,000 Miles compensation as well for the sheer touristy-ness of it!! 
We have good friends in Anchorage, AK. Sadly, not quite good enough friends to justify the unbelievable cost of getting to see them!!

Originally Posted by SFOSpiff
Alaska, actually. It has a fairly small window when it's worth visiting (except maybe on a cruise) and it's far enough that it's a bit of a hassle. I'm sure I'll make it one day.
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Driving in Boston is like driving in LeMans. You move at top speed, close together, and glancing to the left or right is taken as a sign of weakness. But traffic moves very efficiently because individual motorists know how to comprise a cohesive, dynamic flow. Natives are brought up knowing how to navigate narrow, weirdly designed roads like Storrow Drive, with its surprise lane changes and sharp curves, at a good clip.T.
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- Is that thread deviation, as it refers to Canada?
- Is that a lie, as nobody can live at more than 70 mph?
- Is that actually interesting, when some people in the UK regularly drive at 100+ on major motorways? [see 2 above]
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