Do walk and ride a fair bit - we enjoy walking and riding on the whole. However - we do this more for fun than necessity. Large family means big shop and full boot of goodies - which would not be easy to stagget home with - even if we all carried several bags!
Most of our rides are of the leisure type .... youngest does not seem to like my riding though - attached a baby trailer to my bike one fine weekend recently and rode out with her - and you could hear us coming from a long distance!

Completely different in the car - gurgles and giggles away - and it does sound like "faster Paps"

before falling asleep...
But...
See little point in driving to the local store for bits and bobs - can ride it easily and sometimes walk with the dogs on such small errands.
Also as teabelly points out - and I'd say he's right on this:
teabelly wrote:
Depends on the journey though doesn't it? 1.5 miles at 3 mph walking pace is half an hour. If you have to take kids to school over that distance then that costs you an hour's time rather than 10 minutes. 1.5 miles to the supermarket for a weekly shop is impossible on foot. It is tricky enough on a bus trying to struggle on and off with several shopping bags. I'd say a 15 minute walk is realistically the most you're going to get people to do on a regular basis compared to taking the car.
Most of these stores are situated out of town as well - so again fairly difficult to get there without a car in real terms.
Most of it is time as well. Know a chap who had a slight unexplained health problem. His doctor advised him not to drive for a period of six months , Initially he walked his kids to school but this took almost two hours of his time on return journey twice daily. He has since purchased a bicycle and now drastically cut the time. Only he has to arrange security for the kids's bikes with another pal who lives near his kids' school because the school "does not allow cycling in the grounds and has no provision for bikes" Incredible!
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.If you had a car you would not choose to cycle the same journey in the piddling down rain, you'd take the car and stay dry.
Nope - not pleasant - unless you know you will dry out in front of a nice warm fire or have a warm shower or bath afterwards. Hardly eco-warrior behaviour!

(Is indeed what I suspect most of these "hardy" types do!
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If taking the car saves you lots of time then you take the car. I think a lot of people are working such long hours they will object to the government expecting them to waste more of their life doing their daily chores. The govt are constantly banging on about kids not having parents around but aren't they making it worse by not making sure there is adequate road space and houses are more affordable? People only do what they think is best out of the options they have.
True. Car saves time - and I think my lifestyle would be different if I lived in a town as well. Have relatives (my side of family) who live in Manchester area. OK - supermarkets are 24 hours - but their nearest is a half hour walk - and buses are on every 15 minutes in peak rush hours and half hour to one hour thereafter. They live 10 miles out of city centre - and a return bus fare costs about £6 return - and a saver ticket on a twice daily commute 5 days per week does not give that great a saving in real terms. They are not far from the Trafford Centre - but the direct bus is every two hours and is the airport bus from Bolton and the other goes on a long meander through some estates on its way to the centre - which takes up over an hour.

(This is Manchester - and not the back of beyond. Quite frankly - we've a better bus service up here in Cumbria!)
Cycle wise? Manchester apparently has some provisions - a few surprisingly good - such as around the Castlefield/area and obviously in the vicinity of the velodrome - and my sister down there reckons there is a decent network of old rail lines converted to walk/jog/cycleways and apparently since the Metro tram system is not being extended up to Bolton - the town has received some lottery cash to develop a cycle path network from the Rivington (hilly Pennine Fells area of the town) down to Manchester.
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I have no idea why some do travel 500 yards by car rather than walk. I can only assume they feel so short of time every minute is important to them or they find the fixed cost of motoring so high they like to get their money's worth.
Has always surprised me too.
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Question is if PT was made free for a month and extra buses were laid on would people switch? No method of PT can compete with the convenience of the private car so I think it needs to offer something that cars don't eg free wireless internet or some other tangible benefit that is going to make someone switch from their personal, private, comfortable space for a shared space.
PT is not cheap and usually dirty as well. If it was regular, clean and pleasant and synchronised with connections as in Switzerland, Germany, France and even Italy - perhaps it would attract more people. But think out of town shopping and bulk buying has also created a lifestyle which few wish to desert.
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I suspect the feeling of having one's time wasted by those in authority is partly why exceeding speed limits is such a popular pass time. Everyone is trying to gain back all the time they feel they have lost by following stupid regulations or silly traffic calming schemes.
I also suspect the impatience is related to convenience living - one click of a mouse button and you have internet data and software which can give an almost instant result. We also have the pre-pared egg omettlett whcih warms up in the microwve in 10 seconds and a person will still pace the kitchen looking at his watch ..
I do think we are losing out on life by this - wishing a life away and not savouring the moments - part of the fun in cooking is in the preparing anyway - and then taking time over the meal.