The least expensive and most convenient form of personal mobility is walking, followed by public transportation where available. One step up are bicycles and e-bicycles followed in ascending rank by motor scooters, small motorcycles, larger motorcycles, smaller cars, larger cars, ‘crossovers’, SUVs, and at the top end, light trucks and vans. If one has enough resources, they might enjoy full and convenient availability of each form, but for one reason or another most of us must compromise. The need to do this is probably fortunate since it forces one to make decisions about personal mobility which probably help to slightly reduce our individual environmental impacts, and also may cause us to be slightly healthier.

For example, if I have enough time, and the distance to where I need to be isn’t too great, and the weather isn’t too severe, and I don’t need to carry much, I’ll walk. If it’s a bit farther and the load, weather and time allows, I’ll pedal. My small daily-transportation motorcycle comes next and after this there’s a larger motorcycle and a medium-size car available. Beyond that and my car can pull a small open utility trailer whenever necessary. Anything greater than these options I must rent or hire. Having access to all this makes me luckier than most.

I’ll generally choose the minimum suitable option for two reasons of roughly equal importance: A.) Lower cost with a reduced environmental impact, and B.) greater enjoyment and fun. For me walking is enjoyably calming and pedaling is similar but slightly more exciting. Next, absolutely any old crappy motorcycle is still tremendously more fun to operate compared to any car, even the coolest. Unless the weather also happens to be atrocious. But I have some nice gear for that.

Keeping all these options in my mobility quiver means occasionally resoling or replacing worn shoes and doing some of the maintenance and repair work necessary to keep the various vehicles safe and functional. Again, I’m luckier than most to usually (but not always) be capable of doing this work myself. Depending on the vehicle and job.

Not everyone thinks about their mobility this way. Linked below is an interesting recent essay by a guy named Harrison Markfield who writes for an academic press called ‘The Iowa State Daily’ which is a publication of the Iowa State University in Ames. He writes well about how ICE vehicles are bad for the planet and in his view electric vehicles are hardly better. He is also of the opinion our innate desire for comfort, convenience, status, range, and control (why automobiles became popular), may be a societal dead-end.

This last assertion seems like academia ‘Ivory tower’ hubris and BS, so with some very small moto-centric reservation I must disagree. Mr. (professor?) Harrison Markfield misses or ignores motorcycles and scooters ENTIRELY as socially, economically, environmentally beneficial, fun and responsible mobility options, and he also ignores how almost everyone from poor to plutocrat intuitively self-manages a quiver of their mobility options, which can (and does) change as a result of ever-shifting surrounding influences.

In aggregate, we humans are nothing if not flexible and resourceful. Which is where everything begins.

Read it here (two pages), or download it here (PDF).

What do you think? – Mr. Subjective, 2-2022