All of those distances are so cyclable though! I used to walk or cycle 3 miles to and from school no issues.
I get the impression that some people would like to return to the paucity of modern tech' that prevailed in the 50's.
The joy of driving , the thrill of the open road, that lovely "alone time" ...
it's all degraded a little when you ponder the harm you're (unintentionally) doing to everyone else.
I don't think many ponder![]()
Cars are a wonderful modern convenience - life was bloody awful before they became 'mainstream' imo.
Our consession to the environment is that the car we drive is much smaller and less polluting than the behemoths that used to sit on the drive.
I get the impression that some people would like to return to the paucity of modern tech' that prevailed in the 50's.
I don't think many ponder![]()
I'm pretty sure it's a mode of transport for more than anything. It ain't a farking 'lifestyle choice' any more than motoring is for most.But what many cyclists don't realise is that for most cyclists cycling is not a lifestyle choice but a sport, a hobby or a leisure activity. It has to fit in around everything else.
I don't recognise any of that as unusual to cycling, relative to motoring. While the carrying capacity is lower on a bike, it's not all that low, with a suitable workhorse and a trailer for planned purchases. But I've never cycled "seriously" and I hope I never do, if it limits possibilities that much!I started cycling seriously when I was thirteen, but apart from when I first started work two years later and had yet to get a licence the bike has never been used to commute or for any form of basic transport. I find it too slow and inconvenient, you are at the mercy of the weather and the terrain and are extremely limited in what you can carry.
I've lived in villages most of my life and a bike is ideal for covering the greater distances between places but still big able to use the tracks most of the year and not only the made roads. Don't need to dry clothes after medium or short journies if you wear good rainwear, and it doesn't rain half as much as most drivers think: the average is something like a dozen wet commutes a year out here in the wild wild east.Not all of us live in cities or work in an office where we sit down all day and have somewhere to dry our clothes and after a day on your feet doing any sort of manual work the thought of riding home into a wet headwind is not attractive. I raced and trained in it many times but never felt any desire to do any utility cycling in it. And believe it or not, a lot of people actually enjoy cars and driving as you'll see on the motoring thread here.. I can understand that others don't, but each to there own.
Cars are a wonderful modern convenience - life was bloody awful before they became 'mainstream' imo.
Our consession to the environment is that the car we drive is much smaller and less polluting than the behemoths that used to sit on the drive.
I get the impression that some people would like to return to the paucity of modern tech' that prevailed in the 50's.
I have become that infuriating old man driving a Volvo within the speed limit.😉
Please tell me there is more to expect as i get older![]()