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Older drivers - are doing it most

(8 Posts)
Annobel Wed 18-Jul-12 19:43:48

When I filled up last week, I realised it was over a month since the last time. I'm not doing long distances now because with I still have polymyalgia which makes my shoulders (and the rest of me) tired and achey. I can usually make the same journeys by train as or more cheaply than by car. I miss my stop off at the National Herb Centre near Banbury where I used to have a light lunch and a shopping session.

Greatnan Wed 18-Jul-12 19:35:15

I am driving less since I moved here,because there are so many wonderful walks straight from the door, but I do whizz round Lake Geneva every few weeks to visit juragran! When my daughters lived in Kent I used to drive up from near Perpignan to Calais, staying one night en route, but when they moved to Yorkshire I couldn't face another five hours. I try to ration myself to one fill-up of petrol a week, which costs about £35 - I have a very small car. I do have to use the car to do my big weekly food shop as the nearest supermarket is about 10 miles away, and I like to explore various historic towns and villages from time to time.

JessM Wed 18-Jul-12 14:25:45

Yes, well, ageist journalists. And in the economist you don't get to find out who is doing the writing. There is an ageist pic too, of Miss Daisy making a scared face while attempting to drive

Anagram Wed 18-Jul-12 13:45:13

Over 60s are geriatrics??? shock

tanith Wed 18-Jul-12 13:24:36

I don't consider myself a geriatric driver just yet!!

tanith Wed 18-Jul-12 13:23:31

I tend to not use the car for local journeys apart from if its a big shop preferring to walk. Its mostly used for transporting family members ( its a 7seater) if we are having a gathering, travelling to support an elderly friend with shopping trips and holidays in the UK.. oh and trips to the dump with garden refuse for recycling. Oh! and airport runs mostly for family as it can accommodate people and luggage . I should start charging for the last one methinks..

whenim64 Wed 18-Jul-12 13:15:58

Most of my driving is to visit family and friends, help with childcare and ferry non-drivers around. The rest of the time it's shopping or picking up things at the garden centre - quite a few rockery boulders have done the trip in the last few months. I couldn't do any of them on foot.

I certainly don't travel further than when I was working, though - dashing up and down across the country and round the M60 for meetings amounted to about 20,000 miles a year - I do a third of that now.

JessM Wed 18-Jul-12 12:41:36

Not sure if you can read this link (it may be subscription only) but in article in the economist entitled: When the grannies get going The rise of geriatric drivers (!!)
They discuss the following interesting statistics:

"Fears about growing hordes of erratic old fogeys menacing the roads have proved largely unfounded. Fewer over-60s are involved in road accidents than any other age group. "
"Sedentary journeys have replaced many excursions formerly made on foot. In 1995 walking accounted for 35% of trips made by the over-70s and 28% of those made by people in their 60s. The figures now are 20% and 18%, a far bigger decline than for the population as a whole."
but most interesting of all:
"People in their 60s now take more car trips and travel farther than adults as a whole"
Who would have thought it.
Is it because we are dashing about having fun - or because we are driving around to care for others and do volunteering?
www.economist.com/node/21558601