Family time, watching TV: What Queenslanders did with extra time during COVID
Less traffic during COVID-19 meant Queenslanders missed out on doing one surprising thing, as what they got up to with the extra time each day is revealed.
QLD News
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It was one upside of the COVID lockdowns – Queenslands roads void of traffic. But it was also good for our potty mouths it seems, with more time off the roads meaning drivers were less likely to swear.
According to a survey commissioned by dashcam manufacturer Nextbase, 86 per cent of respondents admitted to swearing when stuck in traffic.
“F**k off” was the most common phrase uttered among foul-mouthed Aussie drivers, followed by “sh*t” (19 per cent), “d*ckhead” (12 per cent), “arsehole” (8 per cent), “c**t” (4 per cent), and “bastard”, “mother f**ker” and “son of a b*tch” which all came in at 2 per cent.
V8 Supercars Bathurst Champion David Reynolds, who heads up the Curb the Rage campaign aimed at reducing aggression on the roads, said drivers needed to remain calm.
“There are many triggers for road rage, and swearing in traffic happens to a large majority of us as the Nextbase study suggests – but when it’s aimed at another road user, dangerous situations are bound to occur,” Reynolds said.
“That’s when you need to tell yourself to slow down and concentrate on your driving.”
Queenslanders were handed back more than an hour extra a day during COVID-19, and what they did with the extra time has been revealed.
Nationally, a large majority of Australians saw a change in the time it took them to commute to work during the pandemic, as fewer people used their cars to travel to and fro, according to new research by Allianz Australia.
Less time on the road meant Queenslanders gained an extra 64 minutes of free time. A poll by the insurance group in which local respondents were given the option to select up to three activities revealed that cleaning was the most preferred thing to do at 41 per cent.
A similar number (39 per cent) said they used the extra minutes to spend time with family, followed by watching TV (29 per cent).
Sleeping more was preferenced by 21 per cent of those polled followed by scrolling social media (19 per cent), working out (16 per cent), working more (12 per cent), walking the dog (12 per cent), and making calls to loved ones (11 per cent)
Just over a fifth of Queenslanders polled also said they felt relaxed as a result of COVID-19 shaking up their routines.
Originally published as Family time, watching TV: What Queenslanders did with extra time during COVID