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View Full Version : One (unfortunate) reason we still have a car



niknak
08-29-07, 01:36 PM
To reduce our car use, my wife and I live less than 5.5 miles away from both of our jobs. We regularly ride our bikes to work. On Monday, however, my wife crashed and bruised her knee and shoulder enough that she can't ride to work. The fastest bus route takes 1 hr. 12 min. to go 5.5 miles :mad: If her knee didn't hurt, she could almost walk to work faster :p So until she heals, she's taking the car to work.

If we had a tandem, I could ride her to work and then ride over to my job.

Going car free is still a struggle in the suburbopolis of San Jose. Props to those of you who've figured out how to do it in sprawling urban wastelands.

divergence
08-29-07, 01:58 PM
Glad she wasn't hurt too badly, and I hope she feels better soon.

That tandem commute sounds like a fun idea, though. Wonder if there's a place that would rent you one while she heals...

acroy
08-29-07, 02:41 PM
ouch. the downside of riding a bike... you can fall and it hurts!

now to preach the car-free lifestyle: you could ditch the car, and when an incident like this pops up, rent a car for a couple weeks. say 2 weeks at $200/wk = $400, which is waht, 1/2 or 1/3 of basic yearly insurance on any junker? or take a cab. short-term expenses would peak on occasion but long-term i bet you save $$.

cheers

niknak
08-29-07, 06:04 PM
ouch. the downside of riding a bike... you can fall and it hurts!

now to preach the car-free lifestyle: you could ditch the car, and when an incident like this pops up, rent a car for a couple weeks. say 2 weeks at $200/wk = $400, which is waht, 1/2 or 1/3 of basic yearly insurance on any junker? or take a cab. short-term expenses would peak on occasion but long-term i bet you save $$.

cheers

Ha, you're right. We could've rented a car. Didn't cross my mind since we still have a car of our own. Man, there really are no excuses NOT to go car-free :eek: Thanks...

slowjoe66
08-29-07, 06:25 PM
Bike Friday makes a bike that goes from a tandem to a single bike, and it folds. You could do tandem to work and solo to your work.

cerewa
08-29-07, 07:04 PM
If we had a tandem, I could ride her to work and then ride over to my job.

If storage and expense are factors that make you feel less inclined to buy a tandem there is another option: a "tandem bar." that connects the bikes. Check out the link:
http://estore.websitepros.com/1440574/Categories.bok?category=x2Cycle+Products

wtb
08-29-07, 07:24 PM
I used to live carfree in San Jose. It did take forever to get anywhere on the public transit. I briefly had a 7-10 mile commute that was nearly 3 hours by bus... So infuriating.

Doug5150
08-29-07, 10:36 PM
To reduce our car use, my wife and I live less than 5.5 miles away from both of our jobs. We regularly ride our bikes to work. On Monday, however, my wife crashed and bruised her knee and shoulder enough that she can't ride to work. ....
This is probably the biggest reason I plan on always keeping at least one car, and a car with an automatic transmission at that. I've seen it many times that people get injuries (or surguries) where they are capable of driving an automatic, but their car is a manual-trans. So they're left with no way to get around on their own until they heal.
~

wheel
08-30-07, 03:41 PM
Well, I always found it interesting reading about how many ways there are not to go car free.

Then comes the invasion of ways around the current problem from people who are motor free.

I think planning is the best way to stay car free.

Personally San Jose, car pooling, craigslist, taxi /walk/bus, and walk and bus to work would I be looking at.