Killed my pet tortoise.
Back at Malaysia I did ran over 2 stray dogs and a couple of snakes, frogs since the last 15 years of driving however there was a time when I was working at Laos, I practically ran over a chicken or duck almost everyday lol. Remember there was one time I nearly freak out as was driving at 100km/h round a big corner and suddenly a bunch of cows decided to cross the road so had to e brake all the way. Luckily manage to stop in time but it was intense as my car was just a couple of inches away from hitting one of them, geez.
Killed my pet tortoise.
Back at Malaysia I did ran over 2 stray dogs and a couple of snakes, frogs since the last 15 years of driving however there was a time when I was working at Laos, I practically ran over a chicken or duck almost everyday lol. Remember there was one time I nearly freak out as was driving at 100km/h round a big corner and suddenly a bunch of cows decided to cross the road so had to e brake all the way. Luckily manage to stop in time but it was intense as my car was just a couple of inches away from hitting one of them, geez.
No one intentionally runs over animals with their cars la suprafan. So why feel guilty? I've hit a bird or an eagle.. not sure which, it had a large wingspan... it did a low pass flyby on the highway and I could see in my rear mirror that it was dead on the road. I really hope it wasn't an eagle.
My friend killed a monkey. Had hair, blood, bones and disgusting stuff stuck to his grill.
Just a note, I've attended numerous safety driving courses and they all teach that if you have to choose between an animal and personal safety, choose the animal. 99% of the time emergency braking will result in some sort of bad situation - the rear car might rear end you, side cars might jam their brakes too and cause a chain reaction accident, etc.
Imagine you drive along a quiet highway at night and you suddenly see an animal on the road. You swerve to avoid and startle the car next to you and they jam brake or get into an accident killing the passengers on board. You save the animal but kill humans.
Or you swerve and lose control of your car and turn turtle killing or maiming the people in your car including yourself.
Not worth it. Normally these sort of things happens on the highway and usually it's too late to avoid. If you have to, run over the animal. It's safer.
If kerbau then different story liao.........
If hit kerbau, car also die man.
No one intentionally runs over animals with their cars la suprafan. So why feel guilty? I've hit a bird or an eagle.. not sure which, it had a large wingspan... it did a low pass flyby on the highway and I could see in my rear mirror that it was dead on the road. I really hope it wasn't an eagle.
My friend killed a monkey. Had hair, blood, bones and disgusting stuff stuck to his grill.
Just a note, I've attended numerous safety driving courses and they all teach that if you have to choose between an animal and personal safety, choose the animal. 99% of the time emergency braking will result in some sort of bad situation - the rear car might rear end you, side cars might jam their brakes too and cause a chain reaction accident, etc.
Imagine you drive along a quiet highway at night and you suddenly see an animal on the road. You swerve to avoid and startle the car next to you and they jam brake or get into an accident killing the passengers on board. You save the animal but kill humans.
Or you swerve and lose control of your car and turn turtle killing or maiming the people in your car including yourself.
Not worth it. Normally these sort of things happens on the highway and usually it's too late to avoid. If you have to, run over the animal. It's safer.
My uncle slammed into a monkey one fine morning while on his way to work with his cupchai. He lost control and broke his ankle, and was hospitalized for a week and $20k damage on medical.
I myself did ran into a few creatures mostly at night with poor visibility. I feel guilty every time. So it makes me more alert and look out for signs of danger every time I'm behind the wheel expecting the unexpected.
I think it'd be easier to spot a cow than a smaller animal?
I think it'd be easier to spot a cow than a smaller animal?
Black cow on a dark road?
No one intentionally runs over animals with their cars la suprafan. So why feel guilty? I've hit a bird or an eagle.. not sure which, it had a large wingspan... it did a low pass flyby on the highway and I could see in my rear mirror that it was dead on the road. I really hope it wasn't an eagle.
My friend killed a monkey. Had hair, blood, bones and disgusting stuff stuck to his grill.
Just a note, I've attended numerous safety driving courses and they all teach that if you have to choose between an animal and personal safety, choose the animal. 99% of the time emergency braking will result in some sort of bad situation - the rear car might rear end you, side cars might jam their brakes too and cause a chain reaction accident, etc.
Imagine you drive along a quiet highway at night and you suddenly see an animal on the road. You swerve to avoid and startle the car next to you and they jam brake or get into an accident killing the passengers on board. You save the animal but kill humans.
Or you swerve and lose control of your car and turn turtle killing or maiming the people in your car including yourself.
Not worth it. Normally these sort of things happens on the highway and usually it's too late to avoid. If you have to, run over the animal. It's safer.
Black cow on a dark road?
No one intentionally runs over animals with their cars la suprafan. So why feel guilty? I've hit a bird or an eagle.. not sure which, it had a large wingspan... it did a low pass flyby on the highway and I could see in my rear mirror that it was dead on the road. I really hope it wasn't an eagle.
My friend killed a monkey. Had hair, blood, bones and disgusting stuff stuck to his grill.
Just a note, I've attended numerous safety driving courses and they all teach that if you have to choose between an animal and personal safety, choose the animal. 99% of the time emergency braking will result in some sort of bad situation - the rear car might rear end you, side cars might jam their brakes too and cause a chain reaction accident, etc.
Imagine you drive along a quiet highway at night and you suddenly see an animal on the road. You swerve to avoid and startle the car next to you and they jam brake or get into an accident killing the passengers on board. You save the animal but kill humans.
Or you swerve and lose control of your car and turn turtle killing or maiming the people in your car including yourself.
Not worth it. Normally these sort of things happens on the highway and usually it's too late to avoid. If you have to, run over the animal. It's safer.
Like that might as well make it damn near impossible la. Why go small?
black cow on a dark road with no lights and broken headlights driving a black tinted car and using sun glasses
Tu la. Trunk roads can sometimes be filled with kerbaus. Better be safe.
Wearing sunglasses at night is just asking for trouble on their own....:hmmmm:
Need mental help.
Near impossible would be, have u ever run over an ant on purpose?
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