Post by John HolmesPost by Robert BannisterOften, they are bits of old road left over from when they straightened
the road, but yours and Tony's descriptions are as good as any.
They're not called "lay-bys" in Australia either and now the right
term won't come to me.
"Rest area" is the most common sign on them around here, often with some
slogans such as "drowsy drivers die" or "powernap now".
That's one kind of stopping place. A rest area is usually well off the
road. It might have a picnic table or even a toilet. On a major highway
you can count on seeing one about once every half hour.
There's another that is often found at 1 km spacings on NSW freeways,
and less frequently on some other divided roads. There's room for one or
possibly two cars to pull off the road, but that's all; and there's
usually an emergency telephone. You wouldn't want to powernap in such a
place. They're good for stopping when you want to investigate that
rattle in the back of the car, or change drivers, or you have an urgent
need to step into the bush and water a tree. The telephone (usually
solar-powered) is there in case you need to call a tow-truck or an
ambulance.
I see these things all the time, but for the life of me I can't remember
their name.
There's something similar, but cruder, on narrow mountain roads, where
the only point is to let slow vehicles pull over to let others overtake.
These have a different name, and again I've forgotten it.
--
Peter Moylan, Newcastle, NSW, Australia. http://www.pmoylan.org
For an e-mail address, see my web page.