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Tips on driving in the Dominican Republic.
Eyes wide open! Driving in the DRs larger cities is not much more different than driving in any large city. If you need
to get around in the city for a short term, you will be better off taking taxis. If you will be here for a while, or will
be heading out of the city, getting behind the wheel is a fun way to see much more. The important thing to remember is to
drive on the defensive. Dominican drivers can be aggressive as they inch their way through bottle necks and frequent traffic
jams.
Regardless of the new expressways where cars zooming by at more than 120 kilometers/hour seems the usual,
the following tips on driving continue to be valid for driving in the D.R.:
• The Ministry of Tourism and Ministry
of Public Works are implementing a system of roadsigns. In case of doubt of where you are, as. Take to the roads with map
in hand (you can purchase one at Texaco gas stations) and ask every few kilometers or every new town. Dominicans on the street
will be happy to guide you.
• Avoid traveling on Dominican highways at night. Period. Your path may e obstructed
by animals, pedestrians or vehicles without reflectors or lights.
• If you leave the city early in the
morning, keep in mind that those travelling into town have probably not slept. Put your headlights on (low beam) and be alert
for any abnormalities, such as zig-zagging.
• Experts have proven that a vehicle traveling from 80-130
kms. will arrive only six minutes earlier than one maintaining a continuous speed of 80 kms per hour. Most accidents occur
when picking up speed “to make up for lost time.”
• When caught in a political caravan or traffic
jam, get out your favorite music or turn on the radio — and relax.
• Exercise special care when driving
in the rain. Visibility may be reduced to a dangerous 35 meters on highway sand highways bordering the water become extra
dangerous. Stick to 60 kilometers per hour when driving at night on a rainy day along the slippery Autopista Las Americas
which leads East from Santo Domingo. Avoid driving into any puddle of water where your visibility will be affected. Better
still, leave tomorrow instead.
• The new thoroughfares with their double lanes in both directions have
solved the problem of blinding lights. Nevertheless, if you are traveling on one of the secondary roads keep in mind that
many drivers believe that high beams are necessary, especially when other drivers are blinding them in return. Do not interpret
this as rudeness. Just try not to crash until you regain your sight.
• The most dangerous vehicles are
trucks loaded with farm produce, mini-buses, and patanas. The latter are trucks loaded with containers or large cisterns.
The unwritten law of the road is that they have the right of way. Many who didn’t believe that didn’t live to
prove they were right.
• Accidents frequently occur on hills, where there are two lanes going up and just
one coming down. Impatient drivers descending may “borrow” a lane from those ascending —leading to a sudden
crash.
• To facilitate the flow of traffic, the traffic authorities and the municipality have agreed on one way
streets. This could mean you are a block away from where you are headed but have to go around the block to get there. Have
patience. The good news is that most of the one way streets, at least in Santo Domingo, have signs that indicate this. Regardless,
always check the direction of parked cars or better still, watch the flow of traffic.
• A green light may
mean “Stop” if there is a police officer beneath it helping to “speed” things up. Before speeding
across a street, double check to see if there is a green-shirted (AMET) officer substituting for the traffic light, regardless
of whether this is working or not. Body posture is often more important than hand gestures in interpreting the officer’s
intentions. If his body is sideways to you, you can generally go, while a full frontal stance usually means that you should
stop.
• If a stop light is not working, do not interpret this as if you have right of way. It is possible
that it is not working on your side, but on the other side the drivers have a green light. Proceed with extreme caution.
Beep language The
driving game is played differently everywhere you go, be it California freeways, New York City, or Paris. Santo Domingo is
no exception. Hand signals for right and left turns and for stopping are, technically, exactly the same here as in the United
States. So, a person can drive here with no genuine problems. Nevertheless, there are a lot of signals unique to this country.
These would be helpful to know, too, if you are going to drive here. And they are not in the books.
One rare signal is not made by the driver of the car at all.
The person in the passenger seat usually makes it. He sticks his arm out the passenger-side window and, keeping it straight,
palm forward, waves it up and down. Usually he looks back at the cars behind to see if they will heed his signal and communicates
his observations to the driver. His arm waving means: “We want to turn right,” or “We want to move into
the right-hand lane. Let us move over.”
Hand signals in general are rather ambiguous in this country.
The top signal often gets confused with the left turn signal. And the right-hand turn gesture is seldom used. This is especially
true of women, a man would say.
The driver’s arm out the window may mean he is going
to stop or pull off to the right, if he is moving; or it may mean he is going to go, as with a cab driver who has just stopped
to take on a passenger. It may also mean he is turning or pulling to the left—even though the arm is in the same posture
as when the signal means “stop.” That is, the arm usually has only one position: straight out at window level,
palm forward.
The Horn Someone once said that to drive in Santo Domingo you need a horn more than brakes.
Was he right! Dominicans use the horn from dawn to dusk. And there are innumerable varieties of beeping.
One little short beep: “I’m here: do you see me?”
This signal, however, if used at a stop light, is particularly insulting to foreigners. Yet Dominicans love to play the game
this way. It then means, “The light is green, stupid. I saw it before you did. Now get moving!” At least, that
is how foreigners interpret that beeping. Of course, Dominicans want motion, but they mean no offense.
Two little beeps, for instance at an intersection: “I’m
coming through.”This is an announcement of intentions subject to last-minute change. Whereas... Two long beeps: “Out
of the way” or “Watch out! I’m coming through, and if you get in the way, we will have an accident.”
Maybe it is part of the “machismo” phenomena. Maybe not. But for sure, Dominicans play a lot of “chicken”
on the road. The driver with the most nerves of steel gets to go first.
This is not only true at intersections, but with passing everything
else. “He who hesitates is lost.” The thing to remember here is that hesitation on your part is read immediately
as a “go” by the other driver. So you cannot hesitate and then “go” yourself.
One long honk of the horn means, “Danger, stupid; can’t
you see!” Breathe easy if you hear this one, because 80 percent of the time the danger has just passed, like the thunder
after the stroke of lightening that did not kill you. For most of the time, this is the Dominican driver’s only revenge,
his only vent for the anger, when you have just cut in on him, putting both of you in danger.
That you have scared him to death does not matter to him so
much. What matters more, deep down inside, is that you were more “macho” than he. And you won the game. His only
recourse is this horn honk —and perhaps a few select words yelled out of the window if he can catch up to you.
Lights Lights
blinking at you during the day mean two things. The first is not too interesting. It is: “You have got your lights on
by accident.”
The second is a social phenomenon. Dominicans have spontaneously
developed a form of self-defense against the radar speed control units. The daytime-blinking lights is it. It warns on-coming
drivers that they are approaching a radar trap, or even a parked police vehicle.
One respects authority. One even recognizes that these speed
traps have had a sobering effect on speeders and truly reduced accidents since their arrival to the Dominican Republic. Just
the same, one has to smile at the blinking lights. (Of course, it’s up to you to pay back the service in the same coin.)
At night, these same blinking lights (or low-beam, high-beam
alternation) have a different meaning. Usually used at intersections, they are blinked by a driver who considers that he has
the right of way and is going through. On the other hand, if the driver behind you blinks his lights, it means, “I’m
going to pass in a hurry.” Probably there is an emergency. So pay attention to incessant blinking lights.
After dark, and even sometimes during the day, the headlights
are used to signal drivers' messages. Pay attention, also, to one long light flash. It means, “I’m coming through,
no matter who has the right of way.” At night this may be an oncoming car switching from low to high beam. He may be
on your side of the street and unable to get back into his lane in time (because of a big hole, for instance).
Sirens and improvised sirens Speaking
of emergencies... As soon as you have driven a few days in Santo Domingo, you will notice a surprising phenomenon. Dominicans
do not pull to the right for sirens because ambulances are often used as hearses, especially in the countryside; and because
frequently people in possession of sirens abuse the fact by using them unwarrantedly. Furthermore, several cars will take
advantage of a speeding ambulance to get behind and make it to their destination faster. So for these and other reasons, Dominicans
do not respect the siren.
That does not mean you should not. Dominican law is exactly
the same as the United States law with respect to sirens. People should pull to the right, and they should yield the right
of way to the vehicle with the siren. Just look around before you pull to the right. Since no one else will be pulling over,
you could cause an accident for being a good citizen! Ambulances are still scarce here. The majority of emergency cases
(sudden illnesses, accidents, etc.) are taken to the hospital in private cars, taxis or believe it or not, pick up trucks.
The drivers of these cars honk their horns incessantly. And the person in the passenger’s seat may wave his arms franctically
out the windows directing cars to yield the right of way as his car whips in and out of the traffic. These improvised sirens
definitely are respected —at least to a greater degree than the conventional ones.
Drive a truck There
is at least one more sign drivers in Santo Domingo should be aware of. It is neither horn nor lights nor hand signal. It is
the position of the car itself. Many drivers (wrongly, according to the law) consider it more prudent, especially in heavy
traffic, to pull off to the right before making a left-hand turn. Thus, a car stopped momentarily on the right may suddenly
swing across all lanes of traffic to make a left turn.
So, for safety’s sake, before passing any stopped car
on its left, honk one or two little beeps to let him know first. A modification of this posture is the driver who
swings into the right-hand lane just before executing a left turn —as if he were driving a truck, not a bad suggestion
for a foreigner who cannot remember all these signals. Just drive a truck. And let the others read your signals instead of
the other way around.
Unfortunately for most of us with our small cars, we
just have to learn to play the game —and the quicker the better. Watch out when you go back to the States,
though. It is another game there, you know. As one American visitor exclaimed after riding ten minutes with an American friend
resident of Santo Domingo, “Why driving like that, you wouldn’t last ten minutes in the States before the police
picked you up!” (Kathleen Mitchell)
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Tackling public transport For those who have the RD$50+ to
pay for a private taxi, there is no city better served. A call to one of the many companies listed in the Yellow Pages will
get a car to you 24 hours a day usually in less than five minutes. You can order your car with air-conditioning or even be
picky and request a driver who speaks English.
But for those who need to be constantly on the go and cannot afford a private taxi,
there is the public transport system. To the uninitiated, Santo Domingo’s system of public transit can be intimidating—cars
that look like they should be in scrap yards, minibuses with shouting conductors, or large overflowing buses all vying for
the commuter’s fare. But although the appearance—and sometimes the reality—can be chaotic, and
the rides far from luxurious, getting around by public transit in Santo Domingo is usually fairly quick and easy. And at three
pesos a ride for the bus and five to ten pesos for the “multi-fare paying taxi”, it is far less expensive than
a tax you could call by phone. Here’s a primer for tackling public transit.
Catching a ride To
get a ride on the city’s public transportation system, just stand on the side of any relatively major street and let
your fingers do the walking. Stick your hand out and sort of wave in the direction you want to go. For example, to go straight,
flick your finger parallel to the street. Observe more experienced riders for style tips.
Many vehicles just travel the one road, then turn around and go back. Others will
turn onto other main streets. For example, some cars head west on Av. Independencia, then turn north on Av. Máximo Gómez.
To catch one of those, point your thumb back over your shoulder. Drivers and conductors will help you by doing their own pointing. Often
you will need to take a couple of separate rides to get where you want to go, and as long as you know where that is, it isn’t
too difficult. Stick to main roads if you’re uncertain, and ask the driver to tell you when you reach your crossroad.
Carro
talk Limited knowledge of Spanish is no impediment to riding public transit. There are only a few words you need to
know: Say Derecho? if you want to go straight ahead. If you want to know if the vehicle goes as far as a specific street,
ask Hasta la Kennedy? (or whatever street). The only answer you need to know is a nod or a shake of the head.
There are several ways to say you want to get out of the vehicle. In the buses
or minibuses or even in cars, if the radio’s blaring you might have to scream. Don’t be shy, or you may end up
somewhere you’d rather not be. General “stop” expressions include Déjame! (Let me out!) and Dónde pueda!
(Wherever you can!).
To stop at the next corner, say En la esquina! At bigger intersections, you might
want to say Antes de cruzar! or Después de cruzar! (Before or after you cross the intersection.) Hysterical screaming would
probably work equally as well as any of these suggestions.
Your car, sir There are several kinds of
vehicles plying the public transport trade. The carros públicos are regular cars, some as much as 20 years old. They are usually
in varying states of decomposition: cracked or missing windows, no door handles, holes in the floor, smoke coming from various
and unexpected places. Expect to sit, depending on the size of the car, with two or three other people in the front
seat (including the driver), and three or four (or five) in the back.
Pollitos are yellow Nissan minivan taxis and are relatively new, with most having
been imported in 2000 to improve the public transport system. Come 2002, expect the Garzas or white Nissan minivan taxis to
go into service. These are being imported by the Hipolito Mejia administration, also to improve public transport.
Guagua usually refers to minivans or minibuses. The vans are often in worse shape
than the cars, although the minibuses can actually be quite recent models. The same principle of seating applies: if it doesn’t
look like another person can sit there, they probably will anyway. Guaguas normally have a cobrador, the guy who
hangs out the door yelling his destination at people on the side of the street. He also takes your fare, and tells you where
to sit for optimum sardine-like capacity. Sometimes he tells jokes, too, and he almost always flirts with the women.
The big OMSA buses run on main avenues like Independencia, Nuñez de Cáceres, Winston
Churchill, John F. Kennedy and 27 de Febrero. The Gustavo Mejia Ricart bus commutes through the Naco area. At rush hours,
it’s three people to each seat, and as many as can stand in the aisle. If you’re lucky, you stand or sit near
the front or back door, to avoid having to squeeze past dozens of people to get out.
That’s the advantage of the carros públicos, in spite of their sorry condition.
You never have to climb over more than four people when you want to get out. Another advantage to the carros publicos is that
they will stop where ever you need them to. The OMSA buses have fixed stops.
The normal fare on the buses is three pesos for each very long route. The carros
publicos will charge RD$5 for a short route. Sometimes the cars will charge you double if it’s a long journey. Check
to see what the other passengers are paying. Try to have small change with you. You can book a carro publico to your destination.
He will charge about RD$40 for the ride.
The important thing when riding public transit is not to lose your sense of humor.
Dominicans generally find it all pretty funny, too.
Motoconchos You want to avoid taking one of these
whenever you can. These warriors of the road compete with the cars by taking fare-payers straight to their destination. The
accident rate of these vehicles, though, is by far higher than that of any other kind of vehicle. Indeed, one of every two
accidents in the Dominican Republic involves motorcycle bike riders. Motoconchos, though, will take you where you need to
go and are usually used for short rides. They charge RD$10 per ride. They are more popular in the towns than in the capital
city and add significantly to the noise pollution of these towns.
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