Random thoughts about being carless in Cincinnati

by julie on September 2, 2010

Fountain Square WalkSorry, folks, we’re going to dive a tiny bit away from food for just a post today, but you still might find this interesting (trust me, food will be involved).

Cincinnati is a car town.  Most folks have one, and a lot of us would be pretty lost without one.  On Sunday, a cable snapped stranding me in Northside (thank you, AAA) and since the auto shop I go to had to order a part, I’m basically carless until next Tuesday.   Now, I could just go and get a rental car, but I figured that I live downtown, I’m close enough to a bus line, and The Boyfriend has a car, so I decided to skip the rental and see what happens.

As my car is at a technician on Reading Road, I walked back home the few blocks down 13th.  I realized that, in three years of driving that road, I’d never walked it.  I wish I’d had my camera, as it’s my favorite view of the city by car, and it’s actually very pretty by foot as well.   You see all sorts of detail you’d never see in cars–  intricate woodwork on row houses, an empty, hilly lot that has a spectacular view of the city– and the people sitting outside were very neighborly.

The first two days, I worked from home, and on Monday didn’t even leave the house.  Boring.  On Tuesday, I got a bit of cabin fever and decided to leave the house for lunch.   I also needed to buy some paint for our bedroom, so I walked two blocks to Park + Vine and picked up some excellent Picnic and Pantry Thai potato salad (a delicious coconut-milk sauce instead of mayonnaise, combined with soy, peanuts and red peppers) as well as Mythic paint (it’s zero VOC– doesn’t even smell like paint!).  Park + Vine doesn’t carry paint supplies, so I walked over to Rohs (pronounced “Ross”) Hardware and picked up the appropriate supplies.   All of this within walking distance, and supporting local businesses.  70 cents of every dollar you spend at a local business stays in the community– good for the local economy, and great to support your neighbors.  Tuesday night, I met a friend at Tonic for a drink and grabbed a burger at Local 127 (their third version of their potato skins are heaven) and walked right back home.

Wednesday and today, I hopped on the bus at Court and Walnut to get up to Mason via the 72.  It’s very easy for commuters to get downtown from Mason, but a bit more difficult for commuters to go north from Downtown.  They have two times each weekday I can head up (6:40 and 7:40) and two times I can go back home (3:30 and 4:30).  I’m not sure if there is low bus usage north to Mason from downtown because of lack of routes, or if there aren’t many routes because there is a lack of riders.  I guarantee I’d ride more  if I had more choices in the times I could ride.  The 71X, which goes directly from King’s Island to downtown, has more choices, but no PM routes from King’s Island/Mason, and no AM routes to King’s Island/Mason.  Oy.  I am hoping that as more people move downtown, bus service will expand a bit.  I mean, I really LIKE riding the bus:  I can read and I don’t have to get stressed out with traffic, but most days I work well past 4:30.  We’ll see. It would also be nice if Mason had sidewalks and crosswalks to add some walkability (playing Frogger at 8:30 AM isn’t my idea of a fun way to start the morning).

Metro, by the way, is very responsive.  I mentioned to them on Twitter that there was no sign marking the stop that the bus driver kindly told me about that was right across the street from my office, and they’re getting a sign up.  Pretty cool.

On the way back from the bus, I stopped in Coffee Emporium and picked up possibly my favorite guilty pleasure: oatmeal cream pies.  There will be more on guilty pleasures in another post, but these aren’t so guilty– they’re vegan and from Sweet Peace Bakery, run out of a home in Northside.  They do “Oatmeal Dream Pies”, “Fauxtess” frosted cupcakes (complete with cute swirl of white icing), “Betterfingers” (which I’d had previously and enjoyed quite a bit) and Voreos, a vegan oreo along with other treats.  A definite find and I’ll be stopping in there and Park + Vine to pick up more.  Sure, they’re not super healthy– they’re cookies and cupcakes, so there’s still sugar and fat– but they allow me to go back to my childhood without all of the chemicals and preservatives in the over-processed versions.

Dinner?  I hadn’t had a chance to walk over to Findlay Market, so I walked over to the Cricket Lounge and got dinner.  Happy hour is between 4-7 Monday-Friday, and I’d argue it’s the best deal in town.  I had two glasses of wine (normally $8, half price), a quesadilla with some amazing braised chicken in what tasted like adobo, with fresh salsa and avocado (normally $8, half-price) and lemon-blueberry bread pudding ($8).  I had leftovers, and my bill was right around $20.  Amazing!  I mentioned I missed their burger deal, and they still sort of have it– the burger is $5 and their domestic bottles are $2.50 (they no longer have beer on tap), so for $7.50 you get one of the best burgers in town (in my opinion) plus a beer. Nice deal.

Tonight, after work, I’m looking forward to walking home from the bus and grabbing a cup of coffee at the Coffee Emporium. Afterwards, I’ll grab some painter’s tape at Roh’s Hardware and pick up a few things at the Kroger on Vine.

Which community are you in? Is it walkable?

(Photo courtesy Mary Beth Berberich)

  • ReedieJR

    @winemedineme Yellow are way cute…but with going into fall I would pick the orange.

    • http://twitoaster.com/country-us/winemedineme/ winemedineme

      @ReedieJR yellow?

  • ReedieJR

    @winemedineme Sorry, was trying to reply to someone else!

    • http://twitoaster.com/country-us/winemedineme/ winemedineme

      @ReedieJR I was SO confused.

  • josh

    I live in Walnut Hills and work downtown. I havent driven to work in months. You cant beat a ten minute to work especially when your work pays for your monthly pass.

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      No kidding, and I’m sure your transportation costs are super low too!

  • maggiemucha

    @winemedineme great post! I decided to live in Oakley when I moved here because I wanted somewhere walkable.

  • http://www.drew-o-rama.com D R E W

    nothing beats clifton gaslight/ludlow ave. for walkability!!

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      I really wish Keller’s IGA would clone itself and be somewhere in downtown/CBD. My favorite grocery store, period.

  • Johnny Youngblood

    Julie has really firmed up that old booty of hers from all that good walking. Keep it up!

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      Aw, so cute. You think 29 is old.

  • RubySmilesKnits

    I’ve been carless for about a year, it’s been awesome. Take the bus downtown everyday from Carthage (Vine and Paddock) and back. I head to the grocery or Findlay Market with the special folding cart I got for Xmas. All of my transportation for the month is $70. No insurance, maintenance, gas etc. Takes some planning but it’s pretty easy and relaxing!

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      The lack of stress is great!

  • http://beautifullyflaweddivinelychosen.blogspot.com/ Maureen Jacob

    great post julie!

    just a quick question…why does sweet pea bakery make voreos, when nabisco’s traditional oreos are originally vegan?: http://www.peta.org/accidentallyvegan/veganshoppingqs-snacks.asp?category=snacks. it’s redundant! :p

    wonder if they new that?

    guess they just wanted their own version made on their own equipment.

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      Really? I had NO idea. I just assumed they were filled with something foul (like Cupcakes are).

  • http://beautifullyflaweddivinelychosen.blogspot.com/ Maureen Jacob

    yup!used to be my go-to vegan sweet snack (frozen of course)

    i bet that sweet peace knew of it (but maybe they don’t) but just called their oreos vegan because it has organic ingredients. i think it’s still misleading though.

    oh well, i love their stuff!

  • kathleen

    Great post!

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      Thanks Kathleen!

  • Brandy

    I live downtown and walk pretty much everywhere! Walked to Macys after work yesterday to return some items, then stopped at Champs on my way back to pick up some dinner. Love the fresh (somewhat) air and being so close to so many things. I drive to and from work in Clifton because my hours change weekly so taking a bus is not feasible at this time. I park my car Friday after work and dont drive the whole weekend, love it!

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      There are many, many weekends where Terry and I won’t get in the car after 5 o’clock on Friday until Monday morning. It’s great!

  • jim uber

    I live downtown, and have a 49 cc honda scooter. You should try one. It gets me about 100 miles/gallon and easily gets me to clifton, mt. adams, walnut hills, obrienville, … even Northside or Hyde Park (via Eastern ave) aren’t too far. So between walking for downtown shops, restaurants, and events, and the scooter for “out of the basin” activities, it’s 95% of my transport needs (at least for 8 months out of the year).

    Plus I still get a kick out of filling up for $2.50!

    • http://winemedinemecincinnati.com julie

      The Boyfriend wants a scooter pretty badly. If bus routes were a bit better, I think between a scooter and one car we’d be pretty covered.

      100 miles to the gallon? Be still my beating heart.

  • http://www.keenisgreen.com Kara

    You know, reading this made me miss living downtown SO much! I was carless for an entire year (thank you, transmissions) and I managed to, well… manage without one! I rode the bus and loved it and it allowed me to get some serious reading done. I walked EVERYWHERE. I got a sweet bicycle and started riding it around. I discovered all of the really neat stores and restaurants in OTR and other parts of downtown.

    And then I decided to jump across the river to Covington. While I absolutely love where I live and the feeling of the neighborhood (Historic Riverside District), it really bums me out that there isn’t a grocery store within reasonable walking distance, among other things. Perhaps there’s a mom & pop store I’m unaware of? I wish I knew more of Covington’s little secrets.
    I have a car now, but I don’t use it at all. I walk!

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