I have done some extreme hiking and walking in my life. I was in pretty damn good shape when I did those things. Today walking 48 miles a day on good roads or trails with proper gear, fresh water and ample food would be an epic challenge for me. I have worn my feet raw on some of those trips. It is nearly impossible to cover any distance when your feet are torn up.
We are expected to believe that this caravan of people 5,000 strong is covering epic distances and yet somehow all of those TV cameras and reporters have missed the buses, cars, and trucks giving these people a ride.
The question is who is picking up the bill? You start figuring out the cost of fuel, food, shelter and all of the other things required to get these folks to the border and its substantial.
The logistics is also a serious concern. I mean just coordinating a crowd that large to walk the right direction days after day would be challenging.
This is not random and this is not a coincidence that just a couple weeks out from the critical midterm elections this caravan of hope-to-be-illegal-aliens is on its way to the American border. I just wonder when we will be told the truth about who is behind it and if any network has the courage to tell us.
George soros
My question is how are all of these people eating? Who is paying for the food? Feeding 5,000 people several times a day is a MAJOR project.
The media is intentionally totally uninterested in the logistics of this invasion. Remember, "An army marches on its stomach."
I walk 3-6 miles some days. But I have to say that my leg muscles are tight the next day or two.
I can’t see walking 48 miles a day for a week without building up to that.
blisters, muscle fatigue, chaffed legs, etc.
And if the goal was merely to escape Horrible Honduras and Gutemalan Gulags, they are already FREE.
This is about coming to get benefits from Uncle Sugar and send money received here HOME to Honduras as they persist in waving the flag of their “horrible” homeland.
Ex runner since my hip replacement (and being in late '60s and wanting hip to last). Managed to run around the world and then some in distance and have actually ran farther than I ever walked...longest walk was original Hike for Hope in Rochester, NY, which was 25 miles...carried my girlfriend on my shoulders for last 4 miles or so. Ran 26+ miles a number of times...not competitive but generally managed to average 3 hours or about 7 minute miles. I miss my youth...