Call me a cynic, but I couldn't help wondering what Auckland Transport knows that the rest of us don't, when it declared March "Walk Month", announcing it will be "encouraging Aucklanders to take to their feet and discover the many benefits of walking".
To offer prizes to people willing to leave their cars at home on the eve of the excavation of inner-city Albert St - a major bus artery - for the City Rail Link tunnel suggests the transport authority is not primarily worried about the state of our hearts. Rather, "Walk Month" is more along the lines of the World War II "Dig for Victory" campaign when the war planners feared the system wouldn't be able to cope and people would starve if they weren't persuaded to grow their own food.
Six years of major CBD traffic disruption has only just begun and AT is already conceding that preliminary work in Victoria St West moving underground utilities is "slowing traffic flows". AT's solution is to promise more dedicated bus lanes around the CBD at the expense of motorists, and ask commuters to cut their car trips into town, walking, biking and catching public transport instead.
As I no longer work in the CBD, I'm not stressing. I certainly haven't been up at dawn, oiling up the old hiking boots. But experiences in recent weeks with the two vital Link routes suggests it isn't much point AT encouraging more people on to their buses until they get the existing system right.