One downside of moving to Western Norway is the sheer number of knuckleheads here that keep signalling left in roundabouts and never signal to exit. If you don't know where in the roundabout they entered, you have no idea where they intend to exit. I had to step on it to get out of the way of one of those just now because I guessed wrong about where they were going. I also frequently have to just stop and wait them out just in case.
@veronica Guessing is always wrong, indeed. I hate those eejits too.
@veronica thanks for mentioning this, now I finally took the time to read about that just before my next trip to Norway. In Germany it is illegal to signal when entering a roundabout and I always wanted to know why Norwegian drivers did this in Norway all the time.

@6ff334e Here are the rules for Norway. I'm not sure how well translation tools handle it, but the illustrations are fairly good too. 😁

https://www.vegvesen.no/trafikkinformasjon/langs-veien/trafikkregler/kjoring-i-rundkjoringer/

Kjøre i rundkjøringer

Når du kjører i rundkjøringer, skal du tilpasse farten, bruke blinklys og plassere deg slik at de andre bilistene forstår hvor du skal kjøre ut.

Statens vegvesen
@veronica I just read a German summary with reference to that and I now understand it fairly well I think.

@6ff334e I lived in France for four years, and people signalling left, but not right in roundabouts were an issue there too. They had a lot of tiny ones in town squares though, and there it was fine. But we also had a large three lane one at the end of a stretch of highway, and many did it wrong there too. There were collisions there frequently.

It was just outsider CERN, so we called it The Large Car Collider. 😁