One of the hardest parts of these articles is that I love hearing about them, hearing how much people are making progress and change, until I see the locations. I love seeing that a metropolitan area has this, and it warms my heart to see people able to make progress.
My bike is not a cargo bike, just a normal city bike with bags on it, which is satisfactory for the 3 miles of highway I have to bike to the nearest store, and then 3 miles back, ever since the one that was closer had closed down. I do this at night, or first in the morning, as where I live during the daytime it reaches over 100 degrees Fahrenheit, over 39 degrees Celsius.
Grandma is 71 and not in the best of health.
“I knew that she probably wasn’t gonna be able to bicycle very far on her own,” Poole said.
She chose a Bunch front-loader, a model with two front wheels and a box large enough for an adult to sit in, so Grandma wouldn’t miss anything.
“We rode her around the parking garage a little, and she was like, ‘This is the bomb diggety.’”
Grandma sounds like such a cutie
sometimes taking the extreme step of replacing a car with a cargo bike
This is not extreme.
Extreme is when you choose to use a fossil fuel car during the climate catastrophe.
Wait, are you saying carrying multiple tons of steel every time you need milk is extreme?
yeah but!!! the rain, it’s wet!! and stuffs! Oh !! and red lights ! checkmate
A second car has an annual upkeep cost of $8,000, while a cargo bike can be purchased for $3,000
Kinda sad they didn’t say the annual upkeep costs of a cargo e-bike
It’s like maybe $200 if you ride a lot and less if you do any of your own work… Which you can because it’s a bike.
Huh, I would expect a yearly tune up to cost $100-200 in labor only.
If you don’t do your own work, I’d estimate $1,000 per year in average maintenance for a good cargo e-bike that’s used daily.
The first one is usually like 6 weeks to 3 months and it’s free. The next one is usually half price. Here’s my receipt for our 3 year after a lot of hard riding:

This is the most expensive bill we’ve had. This year we had to replace the drive train. It was €90.
That bike is only 6k. Why would it cost 1k/yr? It’s not a car.
Edit: I lied. I found a bill for like €407. During that service we added a €200 bike alarm. The other year was €161.
And technically, the total cost of ownership is a bit higher. Total replacement insurance for us is like €60/mo or something. But again, you could do absolutely no work on your bike, throw it in the canal, and buy a new one every year, and you’d still be able to buy an extra bike on top of replacing your old one every year with the money you save not having a car.
That insurance cost is CRAZY. That’s 1% of the cost of your bike every month. I.e. you’ll have paid your bike in insurance premium in 8 years. This policy is only valuable if you expect your bike to need “total replacement” which I assume means it’s stolen, more than every 8 years?!
Just put that money in an account and you can buy a new bike every 8 years for “free” as your insurance policy.
I like the spin here. Headline should be “Most working middle-class citizens pushed out of the market for new vehicles”.

You can buy two good cargo bikes a year for the average total cost of ownership of a car. When so many trips are within bike range, why would you not do this?
We still need to fill edge cases. Hiking is really big where I live but you can’t take public transit to more than one or two trailheads, and certainly not some of the more remote ones.
I desperately want a nonprofit carshare in my area to fill the gap for this as well as occasional things like moving lots of stuff. Without a cost effective way to get a car when you really need one, people will own a car for edge cases. And when you have a car sitting there… you’ll drive it even when you don’t need to.
There’s a nonprofit rideshare in Ithaca, NY for inspiration! https://www.ithacacarshare.org/
Sounds like you have a project. :P
How much groceries can you fit on a bike? I usually leave with 4 or 5 large bags, and I’m single.
About 2 weeks worth for 1 person, about 1 weeks worth for 2 people. On just a normal bicycle with 4 panniers. A cargo bike can double that.
Once you hit large families, you can have multiple people biking to the grocery store together.
Our Urban Arrow fits 3, maybe 4 kids (ours are 7 and 4, and their friends). We literally moved our entire apartment with that bike.
We also have a cube hybrid longtail. I’ve put maybe 6 bags of groceries in the side saddle, with my front still open and two kids on the back.

Bag size varies a lot so an absolute number doesn’t really help much. 4/5 bags sounds like an insane amount of food for 1 person, so I suspect the bags we get are bigger.
My regular bike has 70L of storage in pannier bags. Cargo bikes will be holding hundreds.
4/5 seems insane
How many times do you go get groceries each week though?
Once. Hence my thinking they must be small
🚗🚶🚲
“Car” “go” “bike”
lolUntil October. Then comes the snow.
Fins and Swedes bike, you’re just cowards. The Dutch bike all year. Freezing rain in the face sucks, but it’s better than literally destroying my children’s future.
Edit: I live in the Netherlands and bike year round because we do not own a car (family of 4, for the record). Wear a fucking jacket. You’re not made of sugar.
I remember Dutch cycling under the rain, talking with the phone in one hand, umbrella in the other and wearing heels.
They are crazy, in the right way. I miss how bike centric Groningen was when I moved out.
Brother, we rarely get snow in October even before climate change started really messing with things. Used to be mid-to-late November for first snow pack, now it’s mid December and it’s a toss up if we’ll even keep the snow pack all winter now.
Anyways, people still bike in the winter here.
If the conditions are okay for a car to drive, any decently prepared cyclists won’t have a problem.
Don’t you have a coat?
Never been to twin cities but I’ll do groceries via bike in winter. Its a snow bike though.
Yes, fat tire bikes are very popular here in the twin cities.
Eh, usually the snow doesn’t stick until late November. We’ll get some freakish pop-up storms but it will generally melt away until around Thanksgiving.
And even in the winter, we have very good road crews to keep conditions pretty navigable all told.









