Have you ever hitchhiked or picked up a hitchhiker? Is it something that you might consider doing? Do many people still do it these days, I wonder?
In the 1980s and 90s you often used to see people standing by the roadside with a piece of paper or card bearing their intended destination but it seems quite a while since I last saw someone doing it.
After quitting BR in 1975, I hitched a lot. In 76, I hitched to India, and back again in 77 (except for the desert bit, from Quetta to Zahedan, in Iran. This avoided Afghanistan, and the $50 visa, IIRC).
I hitched a lot in Europe. Yugoslavia could be difficult coming out of Greece, and it was a big country to get through back in the day. Hitched deep into Turkey several times. Didn't really save any money in Turkey, as the buses were cheap, but it was fun. Didn't feel like doing it in Syria, but after they wouldn't let me walk across the border (no man's land was about 12 miles!), I got a lift into Jordan, and hitched a bit there too. One driver actually gave me about $5 to get the bus on to Amman.
Did I have any trouble? Several times. No details here, but once in NW Iran it felt particularly dodgy (in a truck, but not with Iranians). I also had a mad doctor (well, he called himself that) from Tehran to the Caspian Sea plain one Sunday night. I confess I really felt scared on that trip, he drank some raki, smoked something and drove like a nutcase - but then most in Iran did back then. (NB, I like Iranians generally as people.)
But I always survived, without any violence. These scary trips were the exception. Most of the time, things were fine. Going across Afghanistan in 76, I got picked up by two British Pakistanis who lived about 10-12 doors down from where I'd lived in Derby, in 72 (Pear Tree Road, for any Derbyites reading). When we got to Kabul, they begged me to stay with them all the way to their home town in Pakistan, but I said I was going to stop in Kabul for a few days. Pakistan was actually a great country to hitch in back then, very friendly people. I dont think, as a white male, I'd want to be hitching in Baluchistan today though. Far too many friends of the Taliban around.
My parents used to hitchhike a lot when they were in their 20s in the 1950s - my mum certainly did, both in Britain and in France and Germany. Back then Interrail passes hadn't been invented and personal safety was less of an issue than it is today. I've never done it myself, and it's not something that I'd do unless I urgently needed to get somewhere and for whatever reason I had no other options. I would only do it as the very last of all last resorts, though.
Things were different back then. After the war, in the 50s, I think most people were struggling in the UK, and with the growth of universities starting in the 60s, it was common to see hitchikers at motorway junctions. Germany was usually easy to hitch in during the 70s and 80s, just you had to avoid the tough places, or get round them. Koln was a tough city to get round sometimes. And Munich.
When I got a car, I used to drive off the Autobahns looking for hitchikers to kind of 'pay off the balance'. Never had any physical threats, but a guy in Slovakia cheated me once - I needed a few crowns and he gave me an unstamped Czechoslovak note - that meant it was no longer legal tender. He was an ethnic Hungarian Slovak. I still have the note in my wallet. What a little #####.
I felt things changed in the UK in the early 80s. I needed to get a lift on a rural road near the Northants-Bedfordshire border, and nobody stopped. On rural roads, people usually did, because you had to be going locally (more or less). Eventually a woman driver, on her own, stopped for me. By then I was only a mile from my destination - but I told her she'd restored my faith in humanity!