A man has turned 100 and is still driving after 87 years - and says road manners and potholes are the worst they have ever been.
Centenarian Eric Dixon still motors around in his Kia Picanto - and has no intention of stopping.
Eric has been driving for 87 years - getting his first job behind the wheel of a three-tonne lorry after leaving school aged just 13.
Since then he has driven every vehicle - from motorcycles to double-decker buses.
Asked how the roads have changed over the decades, Eric, from Canterbury, says the roads are worse than ever.
He said: “There was always plenty of courtesy and it was one thing that was drilled into me when I was learning to drive.
“There are no manners today. Canterbury has got busier and it will get worse.
“Potholes are the worst they have ever been.”
According to surveys, the average age at which people give up driving is 75.
But Eric, who passed his driving test aged on his 17th birthday, insists there is nothing he did in his 60s which he can’t do now.
As well as still getting out on the roads, the 100-year-old still takes good care of his immaculate garden, cleans his windows and even climbs up to clear his gutters.
He said people "worry about my age rather than what I can do."
He was watching ITV’s 100-Year-Old Driving School, which followed motorists in their 90s and older undergoing an assessment overseen by examiners.
He said “I was damn certain I was better than they are,” he says.
“But then I wondered if it was me thinking I was better than I am.
“Some of them should not be driving and it was them who made me think seriously about myself.”
He booked himself in for a government-approved test in 2017 to find out for sure that he was fine to still be on the roads.
The assessment included a nurse carrying out physical checks and asking Eric questions about his health.
He says the driving test was the toughest he had taken as “it included so much more” than others.
But he still got “10 out of 10”.
Eric says he could drive from Kent to any capital of Europe without a map or signposts - because he worked for a car company for 37 years after leaving the army.
The only time Eric had points on his licence was in the 1940s when he says he parked on zig-zag road lines in London.
He retired from the East Kent Road Car Company in 1984, and now lives a happy life with partner Margaret, who lives next door.
But despite quitting work, Eric has continued to lead a life on the roads.
In the autumn last year, he bought his current car, a Kia Picanto, having previously driven a Skoda.
Even aged 100 he shows no sign of slowing down and his passion for driving remains just as strong.
He still has a remarkable bill of health - with no need for carers or walking aids.
He said: "I am not on any medication.
"I lived on bags of fruit and vegetables from a boy during the war.
"You had to or you would go hungry."
Centenarian Eric Dixon still motors around in his Kia Picanto - and has no intention of stopping.
Eric has been driving for 87 years - getting his first job behind the wheel of a three-tonne lorry after leaving school aged just 13.
Since then he has driven every vehicle - from motorcycles to double-decker buses.
Asked how the roads have changed over the decades, Eric, from Canterbury, says the roads are worse than ever.
He said: “There was always plenty of courtesy and it was one thing that was drilled into me when I was learning to drive.
“There are no manners today. Canterbury has got busier and it will get worse.
“Potholes are the worst they have ever been.”
According to surveys, the average age at which people give up driving is 75.
But Eric, who passed his driving test aged on his 17th birthday, insists there is nothing he did in his 60s which he can’t do now.
As well as still getting out on the roads, the 100-year-old still takes good care of his immaculate garden, cleans his windows and even climbs up to clear his gutters.
He said people "worry about my age rather than what I can do."
He was watching ITV’s 100-Year-Old Driving School, which followed motorists in their 90s and older undergoing an assessment overseen by examiners.
He said “I was damn certain I was better than they are,” he says.
“But then I wondered if it was me thinking I was better than I am.
“Some of them should not be driving and it was them who made me think seriously about myself.”
He booked himself in for a government-approved test in 2017 to find out for sure that he was fine to still be on the roads.
The assessment included a nurse carrying out physical checks and asking Eric questions about his health.
He says the driving test was the toughest he had taken as “it included so much more” than others.
But he still got “10 out of 10”.
Eric says he could drive from Kent to any capital of Europe without a map or signposts - because he worked for a car company for 37 years after leaving the army.
The only time Eric had points on his licence was in the 1940s when he says he parked on zig-zag road lines in London.
He retired from the East Kent Road Car Company in 1984, and now lives a happy life with partner Margaret, who lives next door.
But despite quitting work, Eric has continued to lead a life on the roads.
In the autumn last year, he bought his current car, a Kia Picanto, having previously driven a Skoda.
Even aged 100 he shows no sign of slowing down and his passion for driving remains just as strong.
He still has a remarkable bill of health - with no need for carers or walking aids.
He said: "I am not on any medication.
"I lived on bags of fruit and vegetables from a boy during the war.
"You had to or you would go hungry."
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FunTranscript
00:00 I was watching television on one occasion and there was a program by Rosper, the prevention of accidents,
00:09 and it was some old age pensioners being taken out and seeing what their driving was like.
00:18 Well, I must admit, they're all pensioners and one or two were quite good.
00:25 I'm not deleting them, but one or two, oh dear, they should never ever have been driving.
00:32 They shouldn't.
00:33 Being a professional driver all my life, I respect driving.
00:38 I respect other people's driving, but you can't respect them because they don't know how to drive.