• oce 🐆@jlai.lu
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    12 hours ago

    To give another point of data.
    People walking pilgrimages like El Camino de Santiago de Compostela routinely walk 23 km (14 miles) per day for multiple weeks. And those are people in all kind of shapes and ages, including slow walking grandparents. Trained people can do twice more.
    Humans are really good at long distance, not just athlets. Modern life made us forget about it and anything longer than 5 km sounds impressive.

    • Korhaka@sopuli.xyz
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      8 hours ago

      Exactly, a day is a long time. You can take breaks along the way and don’t have to push yourself for speed. When I was in my teens the local scout group often went to the next town over, about a 20km round trip. No one trained for it, some people may have been a little tired by the end of it but not excessively so and it was fun.

      Similar trips done both walking and cycling, of course cycling it takes much less time. Even our school ran a bike trip at the end of the year, wish I measured the distance but certainly 10s of km as it was pretty much a full school day riding. Minus maybe an hour at the start of the day to check over bikes and a bit for lunch.