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FLAIR FOR DRIVING.

NOT A MATTER OF AGE. Following a controversy on the factors that make a good driver “The Motorist” says:— “Old motorists deplore the assertion that seventeen-year-olds can consider themselves competent when they so obviously lack the years of experience that are their own; and the young drivers reply vehemently that experience alone is not enough. “In that they are right. There are drivers past middle age, who, although they have driven for 30 years or more and never had an accident, are not skilled motorists. Learning when the roads were open and uncrowded, they have developed selfishness; and some cannot see well. On the other hand, for a youth to have control of any car, but particularly a fast car, even although he may have passed his driving test, is potentially dangerous unless he has restraint, imagination, and good sense in addition to sound faculties, quick reaction, and safe judgment. “Skilled driving is not a question of youth and age, but one of temperament and experience. Both are essential for safety; a flair for driving more so than the number of years or thousands of miles that one has driven. “Much of this flair is the result of observation, judgment, instinct, intelligence, and imaginative outlook. It can be acquired by certain drivers irrespective of whether they start driving at seventeen or seventy in a short time;' by others hardly at all. We all think we have it, but our, passengers are often better judges.”

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Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/KCC19370209.2.9.3

Bibliographic details

King Country Chronicle, Volume XXXI, Issue 4953, 9 February 1937, Page 3

Word Count
247

FLAIR FOR DRIVING. King Country Chronicle, Volume XXXI, Issue 4953, 9 February 1937, Page 3

FLAIR FOR DRIVING. King Country Chronicle, Volume XXXI, Issue 4953, 9 February 1937, Page 3