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  <title>perdition79</title>
  <subtitle>perdition79</subtitle>
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  <updated>2007-06-11T06:15:22Z</updated>
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    <id>urn:lj:livejournal.com:atom1:perdition79:534</id>
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    <title>Holding Court at the Gas Station</title>
    <published>2007-06-11T06:15:22Z</published>
    <updated>2007-06-11T06:15:22Z</updated>
    <category term="peak oil"/>
    <category term="worldwithoutoil"/>
    <content type="html">&lt;p&gt;A week ago&amp;nbsp;was the first time I've ever had to spend over&amp;nbsp;sixty dollars to fill my gas tank.&amp;nbsp; Actually, it was the first time I ever had to spend over&amp;nbsp;sixty dollars to fill any gas tank on any car I ever owned.&amp;nbsp; Here it is, early September and gas prices are over $6 a gallon already.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;I try to drive easy and&amp;nbsp;manage to get 35 mpg, using just under ten gallons for the whole week.&amp;nbsp; I made all the sacrifices: no air conditioning in 95-degree heat, tires inflated to an uncomfortably bumpy 36 psi, creeping away from a green light at speeds rivaling those of a fully-laden Mack truck.&amp;nbsp; Sure, it's the best mileage I've ever gotten in my 3500-pound Sebring convertible, putting the 26 mpg EPA highway estimate to shame, and I am right to grin about my achievement.&amp;nbsp; Seeing that digital display on the pump reading $52.06 made my week-long exercise in thrift a pyrrhic victory, to say the least.&lt;/p&gt;&lt;p&gt;I felt momentarily upset about it, until the young man filling his Ford Excursion started cursing at his $164 fill-up.&amp;nbsp; I thought of the three children in his back seat who should not be exposed to that sort of language, but figured this weekly barrage of expletives would become a familiar song in a time of rising gas prices.&amp;nbsp; He stops cursing for a moment, looks at me and asks "Do you believe these gas prices? I spend a third of my take-home just to fill the damn tank! I wish they would do something about this! Every hurricane raises the price a buck a gallon!"&amp;nbsp; Lately, the gas station is packed with people topping their tanks off with just a couple gallons every single day, but&amp;nbsp;that day&amp;nbsp;was slow. I was able stop to address his concerns.&amp;nbsp;&amp;nbsp;&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;I asked how bad his fuel economy was, and he said 13 mpg, because of his heavy foot.&amp;nbsp; "When I drive easier, traffic backs up behind me," he said, "and I usually just wind up speeding up again."&amp;nbsp; I asked about how he takes off from a traffic light, and he responded "faster than the guy next to me, I don't need someone cutting me off."&amp;nbsp; I explained how fuel consumption based upon vehicle weight and rate of acceleration are drastically different between his heavy SUV and my smaller convertible.&amp;nbsp; If he takes off in his 7,000 pound vehicle twice as fast as I do, he uses&amp;nbsp;eight times more fuel than I do (both are square functions), and gains only twenty seconds on his trip compared to me.&amp;nbsp; I encouraged him to try to purposely drive easier, and to try following a safe distance&amp;nbsp;behind that slowpoke in the middle lane whenever possible for this tank.&lt;br /&gt;&lt;br /&gt;Yesterday, I filled up again, and again I got about 35 mpg. $38.60 today, because I only used my car to drive to and from work, and&amp;nbsp;only got caught in traffic once all week.&amp;nbsp; No unnecessary trips all over the county this week; I took my bicycle to the park.&amp;nbsp; My new buddy in the Excursion was just finishing up at the pump when I pulled up, so I stopped for a chat.&amp;nbsp; He was proud that he averaged 19 mpg on that tank, and that he cut down on his driving and used only 11 gallons.&amp;nbsp; He bragged that he only had to put $68&amp;nbsp;in, since he has his wife doing the local&amp;nbsp;"soccer mom" duties in his old diesel Jetta he kept from&amp;nbsp;his college days.&amp;nbsp; "That's how we're going to get through this," I told him, "by driving smart, and driving easy. Because God forbid we have to resort to the 'C' word: Carpooling." That was good for a laugh, even though it really wasn't a joke.&lt;/p&gt;</content>
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