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$10 a gallon gasoline?
Wowee I just saw a news clip that suggested gas prices could get to $10 a gallon.
What would you do (in terms of changing your driving habits or lifestyle) if gas hits $5 this summer? The bejazd family is making thoughtful decisions to conserve at every opportunity. High gas prices are actually helping our business at present, because clients who might have driven some distance for the same service are now sticking closer to where they live and coming to our office. I know I am walking more and turning down invitations to do things that involve driving very far. My son's high school actually has corrals for students' horses...they haven't been used in years!!! I'm wondering if we'll see kids riding their horses to school again next fall! |
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Maybe we'll start getting back to healthy! |
I have to say that my boyfriend and I did a lot more walking around the city this weekend instead of driving. It really paid off too . . . I lost weight and managed to eat well!
And when we had to go too far for a walk, we hopped on public transportation. The only driving we did was when he picked me up at the airport and dropped me back off! |
Do you suppose that if gasoline really reaches that level that Congress will take a look at oil company windfall profits?
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Gas is about 3.60 in S. Texas right now. At this point, I'm checking my schedule to begin working 4 days a week. I live 45 miles from work and I already drive very little other than home/work/grocery store. Most of my stops are not too far off my usual path. If it get's to $5, I may also move in with a friend a few days a week!
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i had a baby in October and lost my job soon after...that being said, we decided i would stay home for a while. Gas here in VA is almost $3.70 a gallon and after daycare too? i would be working for free. so instead, he is pulling a little extra overtime and the bills are still getting paid while i baby sit on the side. we also double up on our food trips, like two subs from subway, an extra strawberry-limeade from Sonic (well, that one is just me lol) and since my mom lives a block away we do a lot of "can i ride to the store with you?" back and forth!
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Maybe this is just me being extreme, but if gas gets that high...I see people going back to the old ways. I live in a really small town, so I am fortunate to be within walking distance from the local bar, general store, vet, church, etc. I can definitely imagine some changes in the local infrastructure if that becomes a reality.
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They are setting records. Huge records. |
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I hope this does not happen while I am still alive.
I hope they can make cars that do run on ethanol produced from corn SOON. |
My company fortunately lets employees work remotely sometimes... I often wonder how much more they will be letting us do this if it gets that bad.
I've turned down a couple of invitations for things I otherwise would have loved to attend (a friends engagement party for example) because it is going to be 3 driving hours away :( Unless I can work out a carpool deal, I don't think I could make it. I really worry what this is going to do with the airline industry (I've heard all KINDS of bad scenarios on the news) because my family relies on air travel to see each other :( I would be devastated if my sister or me or whoever couldn't get together because of insanely high airline tickets. |
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That is how much gas is here with a grocery store, starbucks, and gas station across the street from us. If it hits 5 bucks a gallon or higher, I will be quitting my job and staying home to conserve gas (husband has a good job, works out of the home, and can support me). my paycheck just cant compensate $5 per gallon gas and the cost of living increases that will go along with continued gas price increases. |
i would ride public transportation if gas got that high and the cost of the train/bus worked out to be less.
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I will just have to make do - and probably cut out some/most reenacting that I do (trips down to IL and southern WI). I don't have public transportation options and finding a decent paying job in my home town is next to impossible - and moving isn't really an option because of the housing market where I live so working out of town is about it. I'm just thankful my car is getting around 35-40mpg highway (and a 2-gallon tank of gas lasts the entire summer for my lawn mower!)!
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But at least corn is a renewable resource. Petroleum is not.
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I hope that don't. Any kind of product that involves corn will sky rocket and that'll hurt restaurants... and families who love corn. |
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I live in Iowa. I see first hand the positive effects that the corn ethanol boom has had in our state. But I don't think it's the be-all, end-all of ethanol. Farmers and refinery plant owners both know the effects producing corn ethanol has on the land and the environment. It's not perfect, but it's something at least for now. While the increase in price for corn, and increase for use in ethanol, has had an impact on food prices, it is not the only reason. It's all interconnected. High corn prices = more acres planted in corn. More acres planted in corn = fewer acres planted in other crops. Fewer acres planted in other crops = higher prices for those crops = higher prices for items that use that crop at the grocery store. But if the prices of other crops get to be high enough to be profitable for that farmer, he might switch back to that crop that might be a better fit for his location and growing season. Food prices in the US have been artificially low for a number of years. While the increase may be a shock to us, they're actually more in-line with other countries around the world. Plus, the corn used for ethanol is field corn - meant for livestock and processing. It's not like sweet corn that we're used to eating. As far as being as "unclean," the ethanol itself is not - it actually helps reduce certain emissions created by gasoline engines. What those opponents are usually talking about is the emissions produced by the agricultural machinery needed to plant, grow and harvest the corn and also by the trucks needed to ship the corn to the processing plant and the finished fuel to fuel pumps - which isn't necessarily true if the farmers use biodiesel (another renewable biofuel made from soybeans). Brazil has had a lot of success with ethanol. Granted, theirs is largely produced from sugarcane, which is more efficient than corn, but impossible to grow on a large scale in the US. ---------------- I drive a diesel Jeep. Diesel fuel is currently $4.27/gal. We can't take public transportation, I can't walk to work because I'm the one who has to take my son to daycare, I can't carpool with my husband because we work on opposite sides of the city. We don't take as many trips back to see our parents as we did and we won't take any sort of vacation this summer. We do get 25-28 mpg, so a $75 tank of fuel can last two weeks or more of just normal driving around. |
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...my old truck (2000 S10) was equiped to handle either |
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Ethanol might eliminate other pollutants released by fossil fuels, but with respect to global warming it gives off as much, if not more, CO2 than gasoline. And CO2 is supposedly the culprit in global warming. I'm not an opponent of ethanol or using corn to make it - these are just the facts as I understand them. BTW gas at the two stations nearest my home is $4.34 and $4.40 today. It's always high around here but I drive a Honda Civic. |
I can usually go two weeks between fill ups because I only work a mile and a half from home. Heck, I spend more in gas on my lunch breaks than I do to and from work.
I'm considering starting to walk to and from work now that it's summer and it's warm. What a great way to get some exercise! I wonder if I decide to do this, if I will stick with it, or if I'll be lazy....hah. Of course, then again, I drive a Celica, and to my utter disgust today, I filled up 13.5 gallons for $50.00 It's the first time I've ever spent $50 on a tank of gas. I was horrified. |
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from http://www.idahoethanol.com/pages/energy.html Quote:
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http://www.uidaho.edu/bioenergy/gallery.html |
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I love our diesel Jeep and am going to hate to give it up later this summer. But we cannot fit soon-to-be two kids + giant husband + me + dog in it. |
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