Americans are walking or cycling

Americans are roaming across the country.

From the source

A large number of Americans have begun to travel across the United States on foot and by bicycle.

Some feel pleasure, while others feel that this work reinforces within them a sense of belonging to the community, after the isolation imposed by the “Covid-19” epidemic.

As the epidemic subsided, Americans unleashed their dreams that were confined within the quarantine, and a small group of hikers walk or ride bicycles to move from one area to another.

It's a fun albeit grueling sport under the sweltering heat, climbing slopes, and dining at gas stations.

“It's not about what you see, when you're in trouble, someone shows up to help you, I've never experienced that kind of kindness before,” says Zach Wirzynski, who rides a bike and stops at a Virginia motel.

“After all this isolation, we wanted to connect with people,” says Megan Sowers, who is on a trip with her family. Soros and her husband, Brian, set off from Virginia on June 17, riding their bikes, taking their five-year-old son, Ennis, in a trailer behind his father's bike.

Hikers stop at stadiums and sleep in churches, camps, and some hotels.

The American philosopher, Vernon Howard, says of this: “Our freedom can be measured by the number of things we can get away from.”

Many passersby say they feel unburdened by the daily obligations of life on their travels, and are required to focus only on the next step or pedal.

Mike Crowley walked coast to coast in 2019, and towards the end, someone suggested he take a north-south trip, and seven months later he was in far north Michigan.

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