Did you like it? That area has some nice scenery, especially into the Dolomites. Many foreigners find Italian motorway signage to be confusing (as shown in this video as well...)
@EuropeanRoads I didn't look at the signs. I just drove using google maps and completed the trip without any problems. Driving in European cities was difficult, but highways and country roads were good for driving. Thank you.
Bonjour or bonsoir, monsieur. European Roads, what's it like driving on the motorways and autoroutes of Europe? On autoroutes in France they have a lot of tolls (peage). I don't mind paying the toll if I was driving on the autoroutes. Speaking of Italy (Italie), I went to the country and Naples was very chaotic. The Italian flights, both from New York to Rome (Roma) and from Rome to New York was terrible. The stewardess, people on the flights, was rude, and they kept bumping into me as they walked back and forth to do their job. But all and all, going through the Italian countryside with mountains on a bus was nice. I was on my way to get on a cruise ship to head to Greece, Turkey and Cyprus. I went on a cruise in 2023. Watching your video, it looks like you had to stay in the overtaking lane because of cars and lorry trucks in the slow driving lane. Lots of 'em. I've enjoyed the video. Merci beaucoup.
Great video! Did you film the A23 up to the Alpe Adria section? It’s a scenic road. Glad to see videos from Italy on the channel. Do you plan to film the A1 between Bologna and Firenze? this section is very interesting i think, between the different A1 panoramic/A1 var developments, the abandoned part between Bologna and the separation of the direct and panoramic section, the abandoned tunnel of the panoramic section as well as the final part where the Bologna>Firenze traffic descends via a long tunnel (7km) of three lanes in a single direction (the longest of this type in Europe) when the northern traffic goes up via the 4 old lanes
I did record A23 into the Alps, I have yet to edit that footage. It was pretty nice as the weather was clearing up after heavy rains going from Rijeka to Trieste.
I was there like a year ago, and near Palmanova junction two lorries wanted to switch to the opposite lanes at the same time just before the split, causing a significant mess and slowing the traffic down to an almost dead stop. The signage is pretty bad there, even more awful than in Italy in general (idk, it's the first country with motorways, but their signage is weird, and sometimes even misleading, like no one has come up with better solutions yet).
Yeah it's so misleading, the arrows almost never match the amount of lanes. Also my dad once thought that the big arrow painted on the right lane meant that that lane would become an exit, while in italy a straight arrow means exit. Also I don't get why at this specific junction it's a right arrow, since there is no separate exit lane... Italians...
Woow... I did not expected to see my roads, my town is Gorizia, I often drive on this road.... Thank you to show it 😁😁😍
I drove in Venezia, Padova, Verona, Trento and the Dolomites last week.
Did you like it? That area has some nice scenery, especially into the Dolomites. Many foreigners find Italian motorway signage to be confusing (as shown in this video as well...)
@EuropeanRoads I didn't look at the signs. I just drove using google maps and completed the trip without any problems. Driving in European cities was difficult, but highways and country roads were good for driving. Thank you.
Bonjour or bonsoir, monsieur. European Roads, what's it like driving on the motorways and autoroutes of Europe? On autoroutes in France they have a lot of tolls (peage). I don't mind paying the toll if I was driving on the autoroutes. Speaking of Italy (Italie), I went to the country and Naples was very chaotic. The Italian flights, both from New York to Rome (Roma) and from Rome to New York was terrible. The stewardess, people on the flights, was rude, and they kept bumping into me as they walked back and forth to do their job. But all and all, going through the Italian countryside with mountains on a bus was nice. I was on my way to get on a cruise ship to head to Greece, Turkey and Cyprus. I went on a cruise in 2023. Watching your video, it looks like you had to stay in the overtaking lane because of cars and lorry trucks in the slow driving lane. Lots of 'em. I've enjoyed the video.
Merci beaucoup.
Going there (further) on Friday from Hungary. I've done the trip at least 10 times.
Great video! Did you film the A23 up to the Alpe Adria section? It’s a scenic road. Glad to see videos from Italy on the channel. Do you plan to film the A1 between Bologna and Firenze? this section is very interesting i think, between the different A1 panoramic/A1 var developments, the abandoned part between Bologna and the separation of the direct and panoramic section, the abandoned tunnel of the panoramic section as well as the final part where the Bologna>Firenze traffic descends via a long tunnel (7km) of three lanes in a single direction (the longest of this type in Europe) when the northern traffic goes up via the 4 old lanes
I did record A23 into the Alps, I have yet to edit that footage. It was pretty nice as the weather was clearing up after heavy rains going from Rijeka to Trieste.
interesting setting of toll station
It's a tight squeeze, not much space to merge back to two lanes.
Strange that the toll plaza didn’t have a dedicated Telepass lane
I was there like a year ago, and near Palmanova junction two lorries wanted to switch to the opposite lanes at the same time just before the split, causing a significant mess and slowing the traffic down to an almost dead stop. The signage is pretty bad there, even more awful than in Italy in general (idk, it's the first country with motorways, but their signage is weird, and sometimes even misleading, like no one has come up with better solutions yet).
Yeah it's so misleading, the arrows almost never match the amount of lanes. Also my dad once thought that the big arrow painted on the right lane meant that that lane would become an exit, while in italy a straight arrow means exit.
Also I don't get why at this specific junction it's a right arrow, since there is no separate exit lane... Italians...
Muy corto el video, hacer videos largos en 4k HDR.