• OprahsedCreature@lemmy.ml
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      1 year ago

      If they could combine that with weather protection and more public transportation the car might finally die that final sweet death.

      • mosiacmango
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        1 year ago

        Weather protection comes with a good jacket you can buy with the money you dont spend on cars.

        I rode in all weather for years. Rain or shine, you really do get used to it.

        • frostbiker@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I rode in all weather for years

          Same. And that includes snow and ice, for those at the back that think that riding a bike in winter is only possible in LA. If people can walk in that weather, people can ride a bike even more easily as the exercise keeps you warmer.

        • ZiemekZ
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          1 year ago

          Jacket doesn’t do shit for rain. Believe me, I’m an Aspie and I have too much sensory issues for getting out of home in bad weather. The day it rains is the day i WFH. All the problems stem from the fact that the jacket is too close to the body, generating sweat (and I already sweat too much without it), not to mention it’s not watertight. An enclosed velomobile would probably solve the problem, but I don’t think this sort of vehicle is legal in Poland and can guarantee getting to the office as fast as I’d on a motorcycle or even a moped.

      • nooneescapesthelaw@lemmy.ml
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        1 year ago

        I wish i could also move more people with me on the bicycle

        It would also be great if there was some sort of heater/AC in it as well

        • Zpiritual
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          1 year ago

          I ride from -20 to +35C in basically any weather and since jackets and shorts exist that’s all that’s needed. My friends have their own bikes they can ride…

            • Zpiritual
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              1 year ago

              What? Why? I biked since I was like 5 with my parents to wherever including supermarket. Not sure what you mean honestly.

              • apprehensively_human@lemmy.ca
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                1 year ago

                People be growing up knowing nothing but absolute car dependency and the infrastructure that comes with it. They cannot fathom any other way of existing.

                • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                  1 year ago

                  People be privileged and not realising that their way of life is not suitable for everyone. Bikes are not the answer to every question.

                  • apprehensively_human@lemmy.ca
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                    1 year ago

                    I should have been more verbose. We as a society (in North America especially but also elsewhere) have suffered through decades of redlining that has resulted in racial and economic divides.

                    The wealthiest suburbs are being subsidized by the poorest neighbourhoods with all the money being funneled into infrastructure that directly supports car dependency.

                    In order to participate in society, you are now required to own, maintain and insure your own vehicle(s).

                    I am suggesting that we’ve been robbed of a way of life where cars are not necessary to survive. Where your kids can hop on their own bikes and safely take themselves to where they need to go without worrying about if they’ll be struck by a car.

                    I’m talking about active transport not as a hobby for the privileged, but as a normality for all.

              • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                1 year ago

                Where I am there are hills everywhere. You know that old joke about walking five miles uphill to school in the snow, and ten miles uphill to get home? That’s here. Plus, it’s the UK, so when it snows, the roads and pavements are lethal.

                Plus, some people have kids under 5 😉

                More seriously though, because of the amount of hills, and the fact that most people work all day, bikes are not the best option here. The nearest supermarket is several miles away with a lot of hills in between. If you’ve got plenty of free time, riding to the shops with the kids could be fun, but for most people public transport is the answer. It’s just a shame that it’s terrible here .

                • Zpiritual
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                  1 year ago

                  Well I live in Sweden and we have snow here too buddy. Lousy public transport sucks though, but that’s what you get in a carcentric society, no options…

                  • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    1 year ago

                    Exactly, you live in a country that doesn’t shut down because of half a millimetre of snow. We genuinely get public transport shutting down if there’s snow, and we’ve infamously had trains stop running because of the wrong type of leaves on the line. For a country that mostly has adverse weather conditions, we’re absolutely useless if the weather’s anything but dry and sunny.

                    I honestly don’t know what we can do here to get better public transport and encourage people away from cars. Once you’re further down the valley, there’s enough room to build other transport methods alongside the roads to allow a transition, but further up, there’s barely enough room for cars to pass each other in some places, which means that buses would struggle too, and there’s no room to make a one way loop to free up space either.

                • frostbiker@lemmy.ca
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                  1 year ago

                  Plus, some people have kids under 5

                  Yup, that’s us. We walk, use transit, or the kid rides on her bike child seat.

                  E-bikes exist if you don’t have the legs to tackle those hills yet.

                  • Tippon@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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                    1 year ago

                    I’d love to get an ebike, but at the moment the price is too high, from what I’ve seen. The cheapest ones seem to be over £1,000, unless you get the little fold up bikes, but they don’t look like they’d be comfortable for a long ride where you’re pedaling lots.

                    A gravel bike style would be better here too, simply because we’re in the valleys, and lots of the trails are a bit rough.

                    Back to the point though, getting to the shops and carrying a week’s worth of shopping on a bike with young kids is impractical here. It would be great if it was practical, but other than the hills, we don’t have the infrastructure for the most part. The roads have to be shared, even if it’s just for now, and there are lots of stretches here where there’s not the room for bikes with motor vehicles, and especially not on the pavements. This time of year is even worse - it’s dark in the morning and night, and the weather is usually crap. All of it increases the risk of accidents, and that’s the last thing any of us want.

        • frostbiker@lemmy.ca
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          1 year ago

          I wish i could also move more people with me on the bicycle

          Depending on the size of those people: bike child seat, bike trailer, or they can ride their own bicycle. Cargo bikes can easily carry two kids or one adult without even using a trailer.

          It would also be great if there was some sort of heater/AC in it as well

          That is called “dress for the weather”. Even snowflake pinko commies like me can do it.

          • ZiemekZ
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            1 year ago

            That is called “dress for the weather”.

            Sorry, for majority of workers who can work remotely “dress for the weather” means staying in pyjamas, because bad weather means WFH.

    • ZiemekZ
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      1 year ago

      And a small distance to my destination. When my previous job was 8 km from home, I could do the journey in half an hour on a Xiaomi M365 e-scooter, very popular in Poland. But unfortunately our company was absorbed by another one, with office 16 km away, which means prohibitively long (for my sleep-deprived ass) 55 minute commute. And no, public transit doesn’t make it shorter. So a motorcycle driving license it is.