mgarl10024
Über Member
- Location
- Bristol
Hi all,
This is likely to all be common sense stuff, but I'm amazed at it none the less.
I've been cycle commuting for about 10mths now, but thanks to a really awful cold bug that has swept through the open plan office that I work in, I felt it was best to drive in for a few days to give my body a chance to recover (with my view being that cycling with a cold when you don't have to just prolongs things unnecessarily).
The things that have struck me:
1) Petrol prices. My local pump was £1.27/litre. This was for just standard petrol, not posh optima stuff. And my car (a 10 year old 1.1 Saxo) took £55 before it was filled. I reckon if I took it in running on fumes that I could get £60 in there. Just imagine what a 4x4 takes!
Conversely, My Saxo also did about 380 miles of city driving (can get about 500 on motorway runs). At 380miles/£55, I worked out that my commute was about £1.83 for petrol a day. That's not as bad as I was expecting.
2) Stress. Maybe it's because I don't drive as much now, and maybe I'm just not as immune, however the roads seem to be such a stressful place. There were queues with people jostling for places, and in one place (the m4/m5 junction) there were 3/4 lanes of traffic all merging. I was glad that at the time I was in an older car, as had I have been in a brand new one of my own I'd have been panicked it was gonna get damaged. I sat there, feeling a bit on edge, with my chest getting a little tight (not as in risk of having a heart attack, but as in not relaxed). I thought at the time that if I had to do this every day again that I'd find it very depressing.
3) Time. Now this was unusual. There was a crash on the motorway which caused lots of problems, and then near my home on a dual carriageway a police car had stopped a motorbike and so was blocking one lane. This all meant that my 6.3 mile commute took just over an hour. I'll stress that this is unusual, but on this day, it really would have been quicker on two wheels!
Just my reflections. Looking forward to next week already when I can get back on the bike!
MG
This is likely to all be common sense stuff, but I'm amazed at it none the less.
I've been cycle commuting for about 10mths now, but thanks to a really awful cold bug that has swept through the open plan office that I work in, I felt it was best to drive in for a few days to give my body a chance to recover (with my view being that cycling with a cold when you don't have to just prolongs things unnecessarily).
The things that have struck me:
1) Petrol prices. My local pump was £1.27/litre. This was for just standard petrol, not posh optima stuff. And my car (a 10 year old 1.1 Saxo) took £55 before it was filled. I reckon if I took it in running on fumes that I could get £60 in there. Just imagine what a 4x4 takes!
Conversely, My Saxo also did about 380 miles of city driving (can get about 500 on motorway runs). At 380miles/£55, I worked out that my commute was about £1.83 for petrol a day. That's not as bad as I was expecting.
2) Stress. Maybe it's because I don't drive as much now, and maybe I'm just not as immune, however the roads seem to be such a stressful place. There were queues with people jostling for places, and in one place (the m4/m5 junction) there were 3/4 lanes of traffic all merging. I was glad that at the time I was in an older car, as had I have been in a brand new one of my own I'd have been panicked it was gonna get damaged. I sat there, feeling a bit on edge, with my chest getting a little tight (not as in risk of having a heart attack, but as in not relaxed). I thought at the time that if I had to do this every day again that I'd find it very depressing.
3) Time. Now this was unusual. There was a crash on the motorway which caused lots of problems, and then near my home on a dual carriageway a police car had stopped a motorbike and so was blocking one lane. This all meant that my 6.3 mile commute took just over an hour. I'll stress that this is unusual, but on this day, it really would have been quicker on two wheels!
Just my reflections. Looking forward to next week already when I can get back on the bike!
MG