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Gas prices are forcing Americans to be creative, from toy cars to bus rides.

Mali?Hightower found a toy in someone's garbage to solve the problem of high gas prices.

The handyman, 30, from Ellenwood in?Georgia, stuck a broken pink Power Wheels Barbie Dream Camper, a battery operated toy car that was less than four feet high, with a two gallon, one piston engine. The handyman, 30, from Ellenwood,?Georgia, stuck a two-gallon, one-piston engine from a power washer into 'a broken pink Power Wheels Barbie Dream Camper -............... he was off to the store, with his knees up at his ears and.......

Filling up his Mercedes-Benz convertible 1996 costs him about $90. Hightower said, "That's way too expensive." He also added a rack for groceries on the top. "I drive it when I can." The soaring price of gasoline has influenced the way Americans make decisions. Americans, who have been enamored of their cars for years, especially less fuel-efficient SUVs, are now looking at alternatives, such as public transportation or staying near home.

According to AAA, Americans were paying an average of $4.52 per gallon of regular gasoline as of May 18. This is up from $3 before the Iran War began. According to a Washington Post/ABC News poll conducted by Ipsos in April 28, 44% of Americans had reduced their driving. Others are finding ways to make the most of economic hardship. Renee Tocci of Camp Farley, Mashpee Massachusetts, came up with an idea after spending $40 more to fill her Buick Enclave than normal. She would promote sleep-away camps as a way for parents to save money on the cost of schlepping around their children all summer. Tocci said that her colleague thought it was hilarious. "And I said, seriously, I will post it on social media." She started referencing fuel prices online and in email marketing to increase enrollment. One of her posts stated, "Here's an inexpensive tip that no one mentions: Send your children to overnight camp."

"EVERY WALK IN LIFE"

Dafne Flowers, a content creator from Silverdale, Washington, drives to Los Angeles several times per year to visit her friends. During her most recent two-month visit, Dafne Flores parked in Glendale to use public transportation.

Flores (28), said, "We are used to high gas prices but not this high." Filling up her Toyota Highlander costs at least $95. She avoids stations near freeways where prices are as high as $9 per gallon.

She can edit videos on the bus and save money by not parking. Flores claims that more Americans of her age are making similar choices online: "I see a lot videos of people taking public transportation."

From coast to coast, the trend is clear. According to transit administrator Laurie Linscott in Maine, the number of passengers using Bangor's bus system rose 21% from January. The majority of this growth occurred during peak commuter hours.

Linscott said, "I began watching people to try and get a demographic." "It was from every walk of life."

GIVEAWAYS OF GAS CARDS

A recent Thursday saw drivers waiting for more than an hour in a gas station at El Segundo in California. The tourism agency Visit Vegas offered up to $100 worth of gas to the 100 first drivers to get in line.

Few people who attended the event were planning a vacation.

Robert Jackson, of El Segundo, said that the fuel would last only a few days. He said, "I'm going to have to walk now and take the train." "It's tough. "It's really tough."

Segette Frank, a Los Angeles resident, used to shop all over the city. She said, "I don't go far because I do not want to run out gas." In Chicago, the CityPoint Community church plans to give away $25 gas cards worth $5,000 in the next few weeks. Pastor Demetrius Davis stated that they distributed over 70 cards following Mother's Day service.

He said that "Transportation is not a luxury to many families." "It's survival." The crunch so far hasn't caused an increase in electric vehicle sales, but it's vindicated existing EV owners, especially Tesla owners, who were caught up in the political backlash last year against CEO Elon Musk.

John Stringer is the president of Tesla Owners of Silicon Valley, an organization of Tesla enthusiasts. He recently posted a TikTok clip showing a sign at a gas station with sky-high pricing.

Stringer, a bit cheekily, says, "Oh man, I wish that was something that I had deal with," before turning the camera to his Cybertruck.

Stringer's relief, while a joke at first, is not a joke.

I don't remember the last time that I checked gas prices. Except for that video.

(source: Reuters)