I totally agree andy. The number of people who do not put on their lights in bad weather, I presume because they 'can see perfectly well' is incredible.
I hate fog and we get a lot of it where I live and I am becoming more frightened to drive in it for reasons stated above.
yes Islay, I meant I used the word frightened when I should have said cautious, so I guess I don't agree with the OP, I agree with you. If you ever feel 'frightened' to drive you really shouldn't get in the vehicle.
TWR I was driving in that fog that very day and I was almost in tears. I started off in country lanes where I could barely see the side of th road and it was thick frost too. When I got to the motorway I though it was going to clear but it didn't. I could barely see the road signs and yet there were idiots speeding past me. When I got home after 2 hours driving in it I had gripped the steering wheel so tightly all the way home that I could barely move. Absolutely horrendous day.
Sherry, a firm I once drove for Employed a person, his load was in the Birmingham area, the weather was bad, he phoned up the firm said he was frightened to death & caught a train home, never to be seen again, " Frightend / Cautious".
I avoid it like the plague if possible. Accidents like the Oxford one occur every time we have fog, and its always the same cause.......people driving far too fast, without proper lights, and far too close to the car in front.
I have an early start to drive to Bristol tomorrow morning and I just hope there is no fog.