Solarpunk Travel🚲🚆⛵

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Community for those focused on sustainable travel. Our society's current levels of energy intensive and frequent travel are not compatible with life on a finite planet. We advocate for long-term slow travel to see the world, and low energy local travel to deeply experience your community. Green washing free zone.

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The communities listed above are decentralized. Centralized instances are omitted as they go against the fedi purpose and it’s better to cultivate digital rights in the free world. That means instances that have a disproportionately large population or are centralized on Cloudflare are not listed.

founded 2 years ago
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The Federal government of Germany is planning to reduce the flight tax and an organization called Campact is collecting names to a Petition against that. They ground this by saying that the train tickets could be lowered using the income from the flight tax. I figured that's worth a signature, and maybe you people might think the same.

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Some thoughts about my 5 weeks of cycle tourism in France, Spain and Portugal.

First, that thing is not a motorbike! It has a certificate of EU conformity as an e-bike, which got me a hefty state rebate on the €1200 price (from a French regional authority). To qualify as an e-bike in Europe you're limited to 250W max output and 25km/h, with no throttle. Those caps can usually be jailbroken but I'm not interested in doing that: I'm touring, not delivering pizzas. The bike is made by Engwe, a Chinese budget manufacturer. It weighs 36kg, has a low-end Shimano gearset, no torque sensor, mechanical brakes with no regenerative function, and welding that looks like it was done in a hurry. On the other hand, it's a bike, it's made of metal. I keep it oiled and tuned and inflated correctly, and the ride is silky smooth. After 1500km I have zero regrets about not spending more. Thank you China.

The fat tyres must be a heresy for purist cyclists, who probably see them like vegans see SUVs. I think that's unfair. As I see it, fat tyres are to skinny tyres what hiking boots are to sneakers: both are fine, but with the former you have the freedom to take your eye off the road.

In terms of comfort, I've found that riding an electric bike is not a fundamental improvement on a push bike. For me anyway, it turns out that discomfort is mainly a factor of things that a motor cannot improve: basically, the fact of being perched precariously on a tiny seat on a two-wheeled object in the path of other road users. The main benefit of the motor is that it takes the edge off hills.

Roads in western Europe are generally excellent. In Spain and Portugal many of them are quite new (often built with EU development funds since the 1980s). I regularly had rural roads almost completely to myself.

The big disappointment of the trip was the cycle routes, in particular the EuroVelo ones. I planned to follow Eurovelo 1 (Atlantic route) and 3 (Pilgrim's route). But it turns out that many sections are not even paved! Again, this seems to be a question of taste. Some cyclists love bumping over stones and gravel, for whatever reason. Personally, I love rolling along in silence and without any fear of punctures (oddly, the luxuries that motorists take for granted!). In the end I chose to ignore all cycle routes. This was particularly a shame in Spain, which has a parallel network of vias verdes (green ways), former railway branch lines which make for ideal cycling. Alas many of them are unsurfaced and even potholed. The exception was the Basque country, where they are paved, signposted and well-maintained, like the rest of the public infrastructure there. The section from Eibar to Vitoria in particular was such a pleasure that I actually slowed down so as not to get there too quickly.

Car traffic was the main bummer of this trip as any other I have ever taken on a bike. This is where an electric motor really helps, because on an e-bike you are never out of breath. In my view there are few experiences as miserable as huffing and puffing up a hill in a cloud of diesel fumes from passing trucks overtaking in first gear. But, as mentioned, smaller rural roads in western Europe are mostly pretty empty.

On the rack is a backpack, attached by bungees. I was literally bikepacking. This setup is simpler than traditional panniers and makes it easier to take trains, which I did several times. Taking bikes onto (slower) trains is becoming easier in Europe but it still needs planning. French trains have bike hooks, which are incompatible with heavy bikes (or panniers). In Spain the station staff sometimes don't know the (ever-changing) rules. Once I was refused access to my train by security guards who believed (wrongly) that electric bikes were banned (in fact, they have a exemption). By the time I'd proved them wrong, my train had left. I made an official complaint and expect to be refunded. Not a happy experience, but mostly things went smoothly. Commuter trains in particular are becoming easy-peasy throughout western Europe (the ones in Barcelona are now packed with bikes). Spanish stations are mostly modern and accessible by lift. Less so in France, but things are improving.

In sum, an adventure. I see a bike as a mode of transport that opens up otherwise inaccessible destinations. In this, the experience was a great success.

Photo: near Alcoy in Alicante province.

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Hello solarpunk travelers! I'm passing through Copenhagen next Tuesday-Thursday (September 30 to Oct 2) before taking a train to Hamburg. I want to avoid Airbnb & Booking.com for obvious reasons, but thought I'd ask if any of you might have recommendations to stay, OR be possibly open to hosting a like-minded traveler..

You can see my profile to learn a bit more about me, and are also welcome to DM me. I'm on a budget, so would be eternally grateful, but can also definitely repay you in money, food, tech/vegan/permaculture oriented chats, or some music too!

I will ultimately be able to book a traditional hotel, hostel or lodge, but thought this might be a nicer way to travel, and meet some like-minded people in the process also. Needless to say, you'd be very welcome to stay at mine in the UK if you ever visit!

EDIT: This is my other, more active account -- https://sopuli.xyz/u/piezoelectron

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Moneytrans was the only offline way to buy Flixbus tickets without getting hit with commissions. Now #Moneytrans is gone, at least in Brussels. Every Moneytrans shop in Brussels is closed. Anyone know what happened? I find no news on this and the moneytrans.eu website is access-restricted.

There is apparently no #Flixbus office anywhere in Belgium.

For a €5 ticket, travel agents charge €5 in commission. Indeed, the commission is 100% the cost of the trip in those cases. Fuck me. All unbanked people seem to be fucked by this.

Or am I missing something? Did anyone take over the commission-free Flixbus contract from Moneytrans?

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cross-posted from: https://lemmy.zip/post/22064287

More and more people are using this form of travel to get around the continent, using high-speed routes and a network of night trains that continues to expand. We traveled from Madrid to Prague and witnessed how the future of European transportation is clean and fast

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That kind of plane could very much fly trans Atlantic with stop overs in Iceland or Greenland or further south from Kap Verde or Guinea to Brazil.

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Originally posted at Hacker News.

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I would be stoked to get to join this trip as a kid.

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