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Spring 2023

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Hand Signals | The Paiute Trail
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Hand Signals

Group

Communication

Traveling in a group requires communication. Make sure everyone in your group understands basic hand signals.

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Did You Know..?

1988

began in Circleville, summer of 1988

16

connects 16 small southern Utah communities

1280

mile network

112

112 peaks in Utah over 12,000 feet, 2 of which – Delano and Belknap – are on the Paiute Trail

700

The Tazz Fremont Indian pictograph is ~700 years old.

Common Sense Communicating

Every OHV group uses hand signals of some type. Know the signals used by your group and use them regularly. Most OHVs do not have turn signals. You need to know the hand signals for traffic usage. Anytime you drive on paved roads or in populated are as the law requires that you use hand signals if your vehicle does not have turn signals or brake lights; universal hand signals are:

Left turn – Left arm straight out to the side.
Right turn – Left arm lifted to a square, hand up.
Stop – Left arm to a square hand down.

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