Whats Your Walking Score ?

Whats your walking score ? Our neighborhood is a 60 which is not too bad for a small town.
Check out your walkability here

repost from Monday, May 07, 2007
This morning I got an email from "French Women Don't Get Fat". It was really interesting. All about walking. Americans don't walk places. We might walk for health reasons but hardly any of us walk to the store, walk to a friends house a mile away, walk to church, walk to the museum and certainly not walk from market to market picking out our food for the days meal. I see people walking along the road, tennis shoes on, arms swinging, IPods plugged into their ears, serious and intent on burning up those calories. But honestly that's not much fun. Its work, its like going to the gym. Its sweaty in summer, cold in winter and only the very brave head out in rain. Our babies strollers are made so they collapse into small things able to be stored in the back of our vehicles since we just use them to cart the baby from the car to the mall and then back again to the car. We have forgotten the joy, the benefits of walking with pleasure to accomplish things such as marketing. Part of this comes from our rushed lives. Walking takes time. I can head off to the post office, city hall to pay the water bill, and the bank in the car and be home in 15 minutes. Walking on the other hand would take me an hour or so. I would stop to talk to people I know, I might stop to watch a crow hop across the road and I may just be inclined to stop at the local cafe and have a coffee. No drive thru there so I don't stop when in the car.My mothers generation walked more. In the Boston area I knew many of my mothers friends that never even had a drivers license. There were corner stores. Small markets, hair salons, barbers, drug stores, dry cleaners all within a short distance of just about every home. I walked to the corner store as a child often, maybe even daily. Ladies would dress their babies pretty and parade them down the road in big buggies, people would stop and talk and comment on the baby. We have lost that and we have gotten FAT. Other countries haven't taken to driving the car for every little trip. They still walk and they are thinner than we are.It said in the email this morning that the average person in Switzerland consumes 20 lbs of chocolate a year, but they are not all fat. They walk. Consider walking some place to do something. Consider saving some money at the gas station by dressing up a bit, going for a walk to the store or some other place. The benefits are profound, both physically and mentally.

Comments

Sunny said…
This is one area where a lot of communities in this country really fall short. When J and L go places the first thing they check out is the walkability of the locality. There are a lot of places they have found that are simply un-walkable. Too dangerous. Set up for autos only. One thing I like about the K country is that folks can walk just about anywhere. Sidewalks galore. Really more set up for pedestrians. OK, not EVERYwhere, I've seen some unsafe situations with that TRAFFIC! Doesn't stop me though, and I lose a few over there every time.
Marci said…
My walk score was 0.
Marianna said…
We scored a 52...not bad for suburbia, I guess. The neighborhood in Indiana that we moved from last year scored a 14!! I knew it was highly car-dependent, but wow!

Marianna
Stephanie said…
Mine is a 65. I am lucky. :)
My walk score is 0. It says we are car dependent but they must be going by if there are sidewalks around because we walk a lot here just not to the stores or anything, Just nice long walks in the country.

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