I like to think I cycle "everywhere". Well, I don't drive, so it's that walk or the bus. Or so I tell myself
I hadn't really considered just how many lifts I get with Mr6. Until now.
He's hurt his hand, minor fall off the bike, and has been in a cast for a couple of weeks now and we've a few more to go. And I am sick of walking or biking or getting the bus!!!
Weekly shop now has to be done online for delivery. If we forget anything, run out, or just fancy a treat I have to go for it. Not to mention it's costing much more to be shopping in tesco rather than good old Lidl.
Sundays we usually go out for breakfast, so that's out.
I need to go to the garden centre. And fair enough I can get there - 30 mins on the bike or 50 on the bus!! But I can't bring two large planters and a couple of bags of stones home. And, yes, I can get a lift from a friend, but I don't really want to have to ask, unless it's absolutely essential. And I can't go round all three and then decide what I really want to buy.
The summer's going to be a right off. Normally we'd chuck together a picnic and bomb out to the lakes or the beach, but £20 of petrol is affordable, and an hour or two drive reasonable, going by public transport triples the cost and the journey time. Not to mention a lot of places we go to aren't on a bus route.
I used to think we could be car free, but I've realised we can't.
How do those who genuinely are without a car actually manage?
I never learned to drive and even if I had, I wouldn't be able to afford to drive now.
Access to other places? I choose to live in a town with direct rail access to Manchester, Rochdale, Halifax, Bradford, Leeds, Blackburn, Burnley, Preston etc. I don't bother going to those places more than a few times a year except on the way to somewhere else but when I do go to them I go by train. (There are also buses but they cost more than the train and are slower)
Weekly shop? I live alone so I only shop for one plus occasional guests. I don't do a weekly shop, I do a smaller shop most days. My house is about 1 km from the local Lidl,
Morrisons and One Stop. We will probably be getting an Aldi soon too. I either walk or cycle to the shops and have no problem carrying up to about 10 kgs of shopping on my back in a big rucksack. Most of the time I am carrying less than 5 kgs. (I don't buy 50+ kgs of general shopping a week!)
Shopping for larger items? I buy most of them online. If I absolutely had to go shopping for big items, I would either ask someone for a lift, or go to the store to choose the item and get it delivered.
Need to go to garden centre? Strictly speaking, you don't
need to go - you
want to go! Most places will deliver anyway. A friend of mine isn't really more than an occasional cyclist but she has cycled to our local garden centre to buy things weighing up to about 5 or 6 kgs and carried them home on the rack on her bike. She also has one of those shopping trolley bags so she can go to the garden centre by train or bus and carry (say) 10 kgs in that and another 5 kgs or so in her rucksack. And friends/family offer lifts when they are going to these places.
Spontaneous holidays or day trips? Local trips are possible using the local trains and buses. There are lots of them. Spontaneous trips to more distant places
[CORRECTION]
are difficult because they often require significant advance planning. I am going on 5 day cycling holiday in August with my aforementioned friend. We booked the accommodation weeks in advance and have worked out what trains we need to catch with our bikes. We save money by buying tickets in advance, and I have a Senior Railcard which gives me an extra 1/3 off.
Trips to lakes and beach are off? EASY trips to lakes and beach are off - you could actually cycle to anywhere in Cumbria from anywhere else in Cumbria (and back) in a day, though it might well be pretty strenuous!

You could just choose to go to more local beauty spots instead. I have done day trips to the South Lakes from West Yorkshire. I have also done day trips to the Yorkshire Dales, the Forest of Bowland, the Vale of York, the East Yorkshire coast. the Peak District, and the North Wales coast either by bike or by a combination of bike and train.
To put it more simply - the secret of being car-free: be flexible in where you choose to live and adapt your expectations to what is practical from there. You could do that, but you just don't want to do it; fair enough!
