by Gary » Sun 01 May 2005, 20:20:33
I appreciate hybrid technology. My wife drives a hybrid. she tries to minimise the car use. When the dealer called about the first check-up at 5,000 miles or so (as I recall) she had not driven the car that many miles in the first few months. The dealer rep said something like "what's the matter, don't you like your car?" My wife said "i really do like it, but I only drive when I need to." There was silence on the other end of the line, then nervous laughter. What a concept! Intentionally using one's car only at need1 Trying to cut back on car use!
I myself use an Organicengines pedicab for my handyperson service business. I pedal every day. I can carry 800 pounds on my trike. I've got a trailer for another 300 or 400 pounds of stuff if I needed it.
I get great mileage: 0 gallons per mile. The petroleum used is mostly in tires, tubes, and breaks. I can use biodeisel to clean and lube the chain.
As Congressman Roscoe Bartlett has pointed out in his recent Global Media interview, we need to transform our lifestyles and our urban/suburban transportation assumptions and infrastructure. We need for most people to walk to work or else walk to a well-used bus/rail system.
Getting from here to there is not easy. It can start with some of us intentionally designing our daily lives to do without a car. This means giving up ease, comfort, and convenience willingly and voluntarily. Another novel idea.
Of course, Bartlett also agrees that we need to "relocalise" agriculture and make it organic, too1
I guess the discussion of hybrids is great, but we need to keep hybrids in perspective: they are useful and helpful, but we cannot and will not be able to replace our auto/truck fleet with hybrids. We need to greatly reduce our use of cars and trucks, and greatly increase walking, biking, mass transit, and to re-localise and decentralise much of our agriculture and business.
I think that hybrids are an important part of the solution to peak oil and the environmental problems we face. But we must always, always be clear that they are one strategy amoung other necessary changes.
I say with good humour -- way to go with the hybrids, but my pedicab is more better!
-- Happy fuel savings, in every way possible!
pedaling for peace and ecojustice -- Gary