[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 1 points 2 months ago

Hopefully using this for transcontinent flight will be the one use. Since we should be able to build electric high speed rail everywhere that we travel over land.

[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 2 points 3 months ago

Not sure exactly what the lemmy.world thing means, but yes this was me and my partner! Quebec was great!

[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 1 points 3 months ago

lol, it's more a statement about us (and I'd guess the average US resident) than about them.

[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 2 points 4 months ago

Haha, no I flew last in 2019. Did a 6 month tour in the US in 2021 and have just been doing more local tours or renting bikes since then. I'm planning on saving up and quitting work for a 3+ month journey around Europe in 5 years or so. That's the plan at least, we'll see whether life says otherwise ;)

[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 2 points 4 months ago

Totally amazing and the very most solarpunk way of doing it imho. Especially that really beautiful classic train getting the retrofit.

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[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 year ago

This would be so lovely for some far northern/southern latitudes that need all the sun they can get to stay warm. With double or triple paned glass to insulate.

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The Case Against Travel (www.newyorker.com)

What is the most uninformative statement that people are inclined to make? My nominee would be “I love to travel.” This tells you very little about a person, because nearly everyone likes to travel; and yet people say it, because, for some reason, they pride themselves both on having travelled and on the fact that they look forward to doing so.

The opposition team is small but articulate. G. K. Chesterton wrote that “travel narrows the mind.” Ralph Waldo Emerson called travel “a fool’s paradise.” Socrates and Immanuel Kant—arguably the two greatest philosophers of all time—voted with their feet, rarely leaving their respective home towns of Athens and Königsberg. But the greatest hater of travel, ever, was the Portuguese writer Fernando Pessoa, whose wonderful “Book of Disquiet” crackles with outrage:

I abhor new ways of life and unfamiliar places. . . . The idea of travelling nauseates me. . . . Ah, let those who don’t exist travel! . . . Travel is for those who cannot feel. . . . Only extreme poverty of the imagination justifies having to move around to feel.

If you are inclined to dismiss this as contrarian posturing, try shifting the object of your thought from your own travel to that of others. At home or abroad, one tends to avoid “touristy” activities. “Tourism” is what we call travelling when other people are doing it. And, although people like to talk about their travels, few of us like to listen to them. Such talk resembles academic writing and reports of dreams: forms of communication driven more by the needs of the producer than the consumer.

One common argument for travel is that it lifts us into an enlightened state, educating us about the world and connecting us to its denizens. Even Samuel Johnson, a skeptic—“What I gained by being in France was, learning to be better satisfied with my own country,” he once said—conceded that travel had a certain cachet. Advising his beloved Boswell, Johnson recommended a trip to China, for the sake of Boswell’s children: “There would be a lustre reflected upon them. . . . They would be at all times regarded as the children of a man who had gone to view the wall of China.”

Travel gets branded as an achievement: see interesting places, have interesting experiences, become interesting people. Is that what it really is?

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[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 2 points 1 year ago

Imagine upping the size, running the vacuums on renewables and automating it though. You could distribute farm fresh veggies to the doorstep of everyone in an entire city. I think that'd be solarpunk as hell.

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You can read more about the fascinating history here: https://about.usps.com/who-we-are/postal-history/pneumatic-tubes.pdf

Credit: https://hachyderm.io/@miah

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This article features Ariella Granett who founded Flight Free USA and hasn't flown since 2019.

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Byway Travel tries to make flight free travel simple for more people to shift towards more sustainable travel.

[-] bonkerfield@slrpnk.net 1 points 1 year ago

I'm a huge fan of the ebike for camping too. In 2021, I took a year off work to ebike around the US.

This weekend's adventure was low-key by comparison, just a 14 mile ride from downtown Madison, WI out to a county park campground.

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