this post was submitted on 02 Dec 2024
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Do you drive? If you live, work, and buy groceries within five miles distance, consider ditching your car and cycling instead. If you're nervous about how feasible this is, you can save on gas by keeping the car while you get used to riding. But the full savings come when you're not paying for insurance, parking, and maintenance of the vehicle.
I haven't owned a personal auto in a decade, and doubt I ever will again. The more you eschew our auto centric way of being, the more ridiculous it will look. When I see people in traffic now all I can think of is how fat, angry, miserable and lazy your passing motorists will look.
Everyone's got reasons they can't give up their cars, and unless you're a farmer they're almost all bs.
I'm not going to put my wife's wheelchair on my bike as we travel, especially when it would be 5-6 hours by car to go to her dad's place.
Right there. You've normalized driving 5 hr, roughly 200 miles? It's a crazy way to be. No one's proposing you strap your wife to your handlebars
I don't have to be a farmer... About 330 miles, actually. I don't have to worry about doing that anymore (he recently died). However, my wife and I went to a major city twice last month, an hour and a half one way, for medical reasons. We go at least once a month.
I also have to take an obese person to another city 45-60 minutes away multiple times a month. I did so today and will again Friday. He can hardly see me. No way would he be able to ride a bike.
You don't seem to realize that there are people with health conditions that preclude them from riding a bike. I actually used to walk everywhere when I was in college. It's not really feasible now even if it's not about 120 degrees outside.
In good cities (countries) you take a train, and take the bus to the train station, where the bus lowers itself to the pavement so you can wheel right in. I'm guessing you live in USA though.
Yeah. I should have provided more context. I have heard that one can visit multiple countries in Europe in one day. It takes two days to cross Texas. The country, especially in the west, has lots of smaller towns and cities that are spread out.
In Utah, almost of the population is in the Salt Lake City Metropolitan area near the top of the state. The middle of the state is practically barren and the southern area only has St. George (~100K population).
In Nevada, it's Las Vegas (642K) in the south and Reno (264K) in the west. Almost all of the state is federal land.
When I was in Tucson, Arizona, (542K) I used the bus system a lot. The wait times were between 10 minutes and an hour.
The city I went to for my first college had a population of less than 5K at the time (now about 5.5K), the next city is 10K, and the county now has about 39.5K.
My city has about 20K and we have to travel to see any specialists.