Before the advent of fossil fuel-powered transport, travellers crawled across the surface of the planet slowly. The world, back then, was bigger; getting anywhere at all was an adventure in itself. Today, the world is small. I can live my life in London, UK, and still attend family events in Sweden, where I’m from, several times a year. I can have my cake and eat it.
That is, if it weren’t for one thing: the climate. The emissions released by aeroplanes mean flying in them is among the most carbon-intensive things most people are likely to ever do. Trying to avoid these emissions, I have experimented with ferry and train travel between the UK and Sweden for over a decade. But plane is almost always the cheapest option. So what about cycling?
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But not all environmental benefits are measurable in emission units. “The bigger picture takeaway [with a long-distance ride] would be getting the conversation in people’s minds,” Yanocha says. “You would automatically think ‘oh, I’m just going to fly’, [but] actually you could do this on a bike.”
Cycling helps us appreciate nature, says Brandi Horton, vice president of communication at the US non-profit Rails to Trails Conservancy. "When you’re zooming around in your car or you’re on the train or you’re on a plane, you are not going slow enough to notice what lives [around] you. When you’re off the highway… you suddenly see something entirely different
But plane is almost always the cheapest option.
This is a crime.
It’s so true about the world being bigger on a bike. You get to see and experience so much more. It’s partly the slower speed but also because you can stop so much more easily. A car gets you places fast but it’s also a burden and a liability. Also, while cycling you’re not inside a separate and discrete container, you’re actually in the world.
I thought about this a lot when i’m driving, like i always see something interesting like a shop or stall and wanting to stop, but i can’t because either i’ll go by it in the next second or there’s car at the back and i might cause an accident or there’s just impossible to park there. With bicycle, i can do some sightseeing and stop quicker if something interested me. Unlike car or motorcycle, no one gonna bark at me for riding 10km/h.
Yes! I really don’t like having another car behind me making me feel like I should be hurrying up. On a bike I just stop on the side the road and let them go past :)
Bikes can’t swim lady
I mean, traveling 40 km on a ferry doesn’t really change much. She relied on mechanized transport for 2% of her 1500 km journey. Just pretend that she started in Dunkirk or something and subtract the 140 km she traveled in the UK if the short ferry ride bothers you.
Maybe not 40km, but still, are you absolutely sure about that?