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When was the last time you walked somewhere?
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Félix
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Apr 30, 2009 05:32PM

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Lori wrote: "Sally, my husband claims he gets all the fresh air he needs by walking to his car across campus, and then keeping the window open while he drives. Oy."
Depending on what time I get there in the morning I either am a half mile or a mile and a quarter from my building to my car. I can get about a block away, but then the English dept is smack dab in the center of campus, which itself, is a square mile.
Depending on what time I get there in the morning I either am a half mile or a mile and a quarter from my building to my car. I can get about a block away, but then the English dept is smack dab in the center of campus, which itself, is a square mile.
Dave, yes, I know, I'm heavy on the commas today. I'm nauseous all the time, and rather sleepy. All the time.

(That's what everyone says to me any time I mention being tired/nauseous/dizzy/having a headache/having the sniffles/having a hangnail)
Sarah Pi wrote: "When I'm in New York (like this coming weekend!) I walk EVERYWHERE. New York blocks just seem walkable. I can walk the entirety of Manhattan...it's quantifiable."
Me too. One of my recent trips, I took a 7-mile walk through Manhattan. Many years ago my friend and I walked from the Columbia campus to the World Trade Center. (It felt good to sit down after that.)
Here, I walk every day. I do need to take public transport to get downtown, but in my neighborhood, and downtown, I walk everywhere. Walk to the library. Walk from downtown to the Mag Mile for shopping. Etc.
Me too. One of my recent trips, I took a 7-mile walk through Manhattan. Many years ago my friend and I walked from the Columbia campus to the World Trade Center. (It felt good to sit down after that.)
Here, I walk every day. I do need to take public transport to get downtown, but in my neighborhood, and downtown, I walk everywhere. Walk to the library. Walk from downtown to the Mag Mile for shopping. Etc.

Ha! My post from 2009. Still applies.

I live in an urban neighborhood with sidewalks everywhere but it's still very residential, shady, trees, and I live close to the lake which is nice. The problem is it's so boring, I've walked every block a million times and it's all flat. I so wish we had a few hills.


Same here. I like it a lot. It tends to make me more mindful of my surroundings, and gives me time to think about things.






http://cameronsprinkle.tumblr.com/pos...

Me too. One of..."
LG, walking on the north side of Chicago is much easier than I think most people take for granted (except for, uh, some of the crap going down in Boystown lately). I used to walk from the Art Institute to Roscoe Village and back. In my head that sounds like a huge journey but, once you start, it only took a couple hours, if that, esp. if I walked on LSD (Lake Shore Drive, not the drug, dear readers) and caught Lincoln eventually to cut diagonally across town. I wouldn't do it every day, if I worked downtown, but every now and then it was fun.
I still walk a lot, but lately I've been riding a new bike. Different thread.

I was thinking "only two miles" and they were thinking "two miles!" Maybe I have better shoes.

I like biking, too. I biked to work a couple of days ago, now that it's finally sunny and dry weather. It took me about 40 minutes, each way.


I frequently walk to the bus line--it is six blocks away! The library is three blocks away.
When it is cooler, I try to walk more in spring and fall.

Sad to say the score in my neighborhood is 0 out of 100!
As you might have guessed, I live in a very rural area. In some ways it would be nice to live within walking distance of things like a library and coffee shop-the closest thing is Wendy's which is about 3 miles from me.


My neighborhood is 91, "walker's paradise." I knew that already, of course. But unfortunately my boredom score when I walk around my walker's paradise is 91 as well. I WANT HILLS. And forests.

Until the Missouri got angry, we could walk across the pedestrian bridge that connects to many miles of trails on the other side of the river, too.
They have closed the Iowa access to the bridge because it's on one of the levees they are watching minute by minute.



I think you're right, Janine. If you can bike to everything you need, you're not dependent on a car, and you're getting good exercise just going through your daily routine. Groningen seems like a great place to walk, in my opinion.

When I worked in an office, which was a source of anger and stress, I used to go on walks in the middle of the afternoon just to get the hell out of there for an hour. When I was doing that I dealt with the stress better and lost weight. Now I have much less stress, almost no anger, but I do need to lose weight.
Maybe I should try the whole walking thing again.
Books mentioned in this topic
A Walk Across America (other topics)On the Beach (other topics)