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Galen @Gnosis @Token2049 pfp
Galen @Gnosis @Token2049
@galen
On hiking protocols: among Japanese hikers there seems to be a pretty consistently observed etiquette / protocol for passing priority when two groups meet on a narrow trail. 99% of the time, the ascending group has right of way. I think this makes sense: ascending is more taxing than descending. The overall system should help maintain the flow and focus of the group in the midst of the harder activity. Last week I went hiking around in Canada for the first time in a decade (Joffrey Lake, British Columbia) There was no apparent priority protocol, maybe because so many of the hikers were tourists (just like escalator protocol breaks down in Singapore in neighborhoods that mix left and right side tourists)
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misha  πŸͺ¨ pfp
misha πŸͺ¨
@mishaderidder.eth
Reminds me of driving a car in the mountains on narrow roads, mostly it is the general rule that uphill traffic has the right of way. For cars uphill it’s harder to stop and reverse. I think only Switzerland explicitly mandates to yield for a car coming up the hill.
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Galen @Gnosis @Token2049 pfp
Galen @Gnosis @Token2049
@galen
Interesting! Yeah, in Canada it was total chaos. When I hike in Japan, it's usually 95% Japanese folks, but in Canada it seemed like 80%+ tourists (including myself now)
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pentacle pfp
pentacle
@pentacle
in Auckland in the 60s they used to have lanes marked out on the footpath much like on roads with fast and slow rules - and you weren’t allowed to just stop ! strange how that just vanished as it would have been way better than the chaos that exists now
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