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Chaos is a word that best describes Indian roads! For a first time visitor of the country, Indian roads and how Indian's drive is real source of amazement and interest. With millions of vehicles, animals and pedestrians zig-zagging on the roads, a simple trip in a taxi or three-wheeled auto-rickshaw can be a hair-raising experience, let alone trying to cross a road as a pedestrian. While visiting foreigners fear for their lives when traveling on Indian roads...it's just another part of everyday Indian life and culture.
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With a population of over a billion people you can expect to see a lot of vehicles on Indian roads. The sheer array of vehicles is also astounding. You've got trucks, buses, cars of all sizes, rickshaws (three wheelers), bicycles, bullock carts, hand-pushed carts, stray cows, buffaloes, camels, dogs and to top it of thousands of pedestrians. The quality of the roads are nothing to be proud of either. You'll find huge pot-holes, open man-holes, dug up roads, rocks and pipes and wires are all part of what is supposed to be the drivable part of the road. Navigating your way through that...is not an easy task, but there is an unspoken system in place, whereby smaller vehicles usually give way to larger vehicles and the largest vehicles rule the road.
India is not a quiet country by any means. Indians love to use their horns when driving. They’ll honk when turning corners, when overtaking and incessantly when there are vehicles in the way or to just to mobilize a dozing cow in the middle of the road. Blowing the horn is not a sign of protest as is in some countries. In India it is a force of habit. The Mumbai government once tried to implement a "No Honking Day" but it was met with shock and disbelief from most drivers. People actually claimed it was near impossible for them to break the habit, if even for a day.
Well the 5:1 ratio might me be quite a stretch. But the point is, it's not uncommon to see as many animals and livestock on Indian roads as cars. You’ll find fearless creatures like cows, buffaloes, donkeys and dogs meandering along all over the place. They are so used to the traffic and people that the roads are no exception.
AAnimals are not the only things to feel right at home on Indian streets. The roads, pavements, dividers or sidewalks are where many Indian's make their day to day living or feel right at home.
Something as simple as crossing the road is a high-risk adventure activity in most Indian cities. You look both ways and all you see is a sea of unending traffic. While there are some pedestrian lights in the city centers they should be used at your own risk. Even the zebra crossings dotted here and there are completely ignored by motorists.