Carly Earl trials a family-friendly electric bike to see if she can reduce morning travel times – and be fitter, happier and more productive
Carly Earl trials a family-friendly electric bike to see if she can reduce morning travel times – and be fitter, happier and more productive
And now I’m arriving at my job, sweaty and exhausted. Now do it in the winter with 2’ of snow.
It’s always the most privileged looking, wealthy people telling us how easy it is to live car free.
Ebikes are almost too easy to ride, even uphill with 2 kids I never break a sweat. They’re not cheap though, but still cheaper than a decent car.
To answer the article’s question: yes, it’s much faster dropping my kids and getting to work by bike than by car. And I never have to worry about parking.
I am sure as shit not wealthy and do this myself, so it’s not impossible.
Also, it’s not exhausting once you acclimate to it. Plus an ebike entirely negates the argument that it makes you tired or sweaty (though I usually commute on an unpowered bike).
I get that it’s not for everyone but there are also a shitload of people who absolutely could do it and choose not to. Some are even openly hostile to the suggestion.
I got my ebike in winter. If I took a car I would still need winter gear once I get out. Plus, I’m supposed to schedule exercise for myself in the day anyway - doing it on a bike just means I accomplish it in transit.
And if you’re disabled fuck you!
Micromobility expands options for disabled people though all sorts of devices. One of my friends is a paraplegic and rides his Bowhead all over the place (looks badass too).
Around half of disabled people can’t drive, but everyone who can drive can use some kind of micro-mobility.
Even some who cannot drive can still use some sort of micromobility.
Hell, IMO, a powered wheelchair totally counts as micromobility.
I genuinely don’t know why you’re so pissed and toxic about the idea of it. If you can’t, you can’t, no one force you to do it.
Because they are trolling.
Well, they were trolling.
Now they are banned.
Doesn’t seems to be the case on my end, maybe it’s not federated :/
Huh, thanks for letting me know. I hopped on the home instance and banned them again just in case it wasn’t syncing from fedia.io - the account is definitely banned from this community.
FYI - Banning them doesn’t remove their posts.
Disabled=toxic, got it.
Speaking of toxic, enjoy your ban!
Banning people who disagree with you, now that’s toxicity
Your comment was “disagreeing” with someone else entirely and you are clearly here to harass people, but nice try I guess.
We have just 1 rule here: Don’t be an asshole.
You repeatedly broke it.
Interesting conclusion you arrived in.
Upvoted. But, if you can afford to use alternatives you should. It might be cost, weather, distance, etc that isn’t affordable for you.
I personally rode a motorcycle(later a maxi scooter) full time for 7 years with a 45 min commute. The first winter I bought tons of rain gear because we don’t get snow, just rain. The 3rd year I shelved it all and got uber/lyft.
The point though is that the more people that take a micro mobility route the more it benefits the people that can’t.
If transit was funded properly it would work but I don’t think there’s a single city in North America with a properly funded transit system. Where I live, traveling with kids means you’re waiting for a bus for 30-45 minutes for it to show up packed and no room left for you. So it’s a nightmare. I don’t even have a car but I wish I did, cause getting around on transit can take you 2 hours to travel 20 km
Some parts of LA are well covered. I took a bus from Hollywood to Pasadena and it was on a 10 minute schedule. The bus wasn’t packed, very clean. I also take the train and while they are trying, there’s still a lot of crazies.
Seattle? I’m looking at doing this for the first time this winter now that I’ve moved up here.
Southern California.