Interesting and thoughtful logic there, Alfred. One of the greatest proponents of proper speed, not posted speed, in the state of Michigan is one Lt. Gary Megge of the Michigan State Police.
http://jalopnik.com/michigan-state-police-lieutenant-denies-speed-kills-myt-1612236051 Conventional wisdom wouldn't have you believe that a Lt. with the State Police is talking about speed the way he does.
In Michigan, most divided highways (except in the densest of urban areas) have a 70 MPH posted speed limit. I can tell you with certainty ones chances of being pulled over for anything between 70-80 is nil; I routinely drive past State Troopers at 75-78...following a lot of traffic, all behaving.
It's the outliers they are after...85 when everyone else is doing 78 or something like that. Or, the slowpokes doing 45 when the minimum speed (yes, we have that too) is 55. Michigan also has an 80% percentile rule, and that states that the posted speed limit must be what 80% of the traffic flows at, absent any other speed controls. Exceptions are for the obvious: school zones, residential neighborhoods, and some other road engineering factors.
Was I doing a safe and reasonable speed? Absolutely. Dry pavement, very little traffic, clear good roads, and still some ambient light from the sky. Had I been going faster or slower I might have missed the deer at that point in time. Had I been going a certain amount slower I might have actually seen the deer and reacted in some stupid fashion, like swerve or brake. Faster did not seem to be the order of the day. The fickle finger of fate wiggles at strange times. Did I make a mistake? Yes...now I know this particular stretch of highway, which borders heavy forest, is a potential trouble spot for deer collisions. I can avoid it on local roads at dusk. I did not see this deer coming and my eyes were glued to the road ahead...it was just
there.
Oh, 280SE Guy--that's a great photo. I don't know if that was near the precise location, but it could be. As you can see, good road, no traffic. I was in the left lane. Deer came from the left. Forest on the left, and forest on the right.
Scoot, get with the program. The car is made in Canada!
Oakville Ontario to be precise!