The Anonymous Widower

Walking From Leamouth To Canning Town Station

This morning in what could be the last of the summer sun, I took a 277 bus to Leamouth and then walked to Canning Town station along Bow Creek.

The area is one of the more interesting in London, with the River Lea of which Bow Creek is part, gradually silting up and reverting to reed beds. The inside of the bend used to be the the home of the Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company and now it is one of the tunnelling sites for CrossRail. The successor of the works football team of the Thames Ironwork still exists as West Ham United, but the company is long gone, deespite building many ships for the Navy and companies like P & O.

From Canning Town station, I  got the DLR, the Emirates Air-Line cable-car and the Jubilee line to Canary Wharf for lunch. I suppose, I could have taken the Jubilee line from Canning Town station, but the cable-car has better views.

Thinking about the route, you could take the 277 bus from any number of places like Highbury and Islington and then go back to Central London on the Jubilee line.  but on a sunny day, don’t cut out the cable-car as it gives some spectacular views.

October 14, 2012 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel, World | , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

The Jubilee line Cancels My Plans

This morning, I had intended to take the Overground to Canada Water and from there take the Jubilee line to Waterloo for a wander round the South Bank.

But just before Whitechapel, the driver announced that the Jubilee line had broken down.

So I took the Metropolitan line to Liverpool Street before getting a bus home.

Why is it every time, I try to take the Jubilee line, it decides to go AWOL?

I’m surprised it held up during the Olympics. Or was it because, most people know it’s rather unreliable, they didn’t take a chance.

September 15, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 1 Comment

Has London Got Friendlier?

Every Sunday morning, I take the Overground to Shadwell, where I switch to the DLR and go to Royal Victoria station, from where I get the Emirates Air-Line over the Thames to the O2.  From there, I go to Canary Wharf station, where I have a late breakfast in Carluccio’s.  This was my intension this morning, but I left my Oystercard behind, so I took the Jubilee line from Canning Town station to get to Canary Wharf. I’ve done it now perhaps six or seven times and it allows me to get a good view on the mood of London. Today everybody was very chatty and there was a generally friendly mood.

This wasn’t the first time, that I’ve noticed this upbeat mood on a personal level in recent weeks. One particular feature, is that I’ve had more talks with black people lately, than I’ve ever had in my past sixty-odd years. Could it be, that the Olympics is helping us to live together better, as in fact we all have more common interests, than those things that divide us?

In one instance, I walked away from a bus, with a black woman about my age, chatting about our health problems, both of us remarking that twenty years before, we’d have probably not said a word.

If this is the legacy of 2012, I’m all for it! Or is it just that finally we’ve developed a modern society?

August 19, 2012 Posted by | Food, Health, Transport/Travel, World | , , , , , , , , | 5 Comments

Olympic Walking Routes

Yet again last night, I feel victim to the badly laid out walking routes away from Olympic sites.

From the Olympic park, they always assume you want to get away on the Jubilee line to the centre of London, so late at night they always ban you from going to Stratford, where they funnel everybody across the bridge to the station.  As I want the Overground out of Stratford, it’s very difficult for me.  They want everybody to walk to West Ham. It’s probably quicker and easier to get to Dalston from Welwyn Garden City, than it is from West Ham.

Let’s face it, the Jubilee line is about as useful to me, as a chocolate teapot.

In the end last night, I walked to Eaton Manor Gate and then found I just missed the W15 bus, I needed to get to Hackney Central for any number of welcoming buses home. I should have taken the Victoria Gate and walked through the park for a 277 or 30. But hindsight is a wonderful thing.

I had a similar problem at ExCel trying to get to the cable-car, where you had to walk twice the length of the Excel building to get going in the right direction. Wasn’t the Emirates Air-Line supposed to be an important part of the Olympic transport network?

I can only assume that Olympic travel routes were drawn up by someone who doesn’t walk or use a bus and probably lives in Houston. They certainly didn’t bring the 488 bus into their thinking, despite the fact that Transport for London said they extended the route to Dalston for Olympic purposes.

They certainly made it difficult for those who live close to the stadium and just a couple of Overground or Underground stops away difficult.

August 11, 2012 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

My Usual Sunday Circuit

For four Sundays now, I’ve done a circuitous route to Canary Wharf, using the DLR, the Emirates Air-Line and the Jubilee line. Although today was the second competition day in the Olympics, I did it again today. These pictures were taken on the way to Royal Victoria Docks station for the cable-car.

it’s one of best parts of the DLR for photography and I sat on the south or right side of the train looking towards Canary Wharf and the Dome.

July 29, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

A Morning Trip In The Rain

I’ve been there many times in my past, both as a child and as a parent.

It’s raining, cats, dogs and hippopotami and all of the things to do indoors have been done to death. So this morning, I decided to see what the new Emirates Air-Line is like in the heavy rain.

I took my usual route to the Northern terminal at Royal Victoria DLR station, by taking a bus and a tube to Bank station and then getting the faithful Docklands Light Railway. Is there a railway anywhere in the world, that was built as on-the-cheap as the DLR, that has morphed so successfully from an ugly duckling into a swan? Or possibly in the DLR’s case to a whole game of swans.

Even on the short trip from Bank to Royal Victoria, there is much to see, like the expensive yachts, housing and offices, the many spires of the East End and mud flats, factories and construction of the River Lea. It is a trip that delights most children.

I took these pictures on the way to Royal Victoria, during the crossing and then at North Greenwich.

Afterwards, I took the Jubilee line to Canary Wharf for a late Full Italian breakfast at Carluccio’s.

So was it a worthwhile trip? And would it be with young children?

  1. I only got wet walking between Royal Victoria DLR station and the cable-car and between the cable-car and North Greenwich tube station.
  2. The queues were less than last Sunday and marginally worse at North Greenwich.  Is that because there’s parking on the South bank of the river.
  3. The view from the gondola wasn’t too bad at all. Is the glass treated with a water repellant?

So on balance, a trip in the rain, may even have an advantage in that the crowds are smaller and you don’t have to wait.

July 8, 2012 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 4 Comments

It Was the Jubilee Line Again

When there is a London Underground chaos story, it’s always the Jubilee line, just like it was on Wednesday. I think a lot has to do with Blair’s government, who were desperate to get it finished for their millennium bash at the Dome, so they paid what the workers demanded. But you never hear of such horrendous problems on other lines.

May 25, 2012 Posted by | News, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

City of Lost Tourists

I’ve said before that tourists seem to get lost in London.

Today it was a Dutch couple, I encountered at Shadwell in the mezzanine level above the Overground, who were trying to get to the British Museum. I was pretty sure, they’d seen the tube map and thought they could get to Bank on the DLR to get a train nearer their destination. So I led them through the gates to the nearby DLR station and up in the lift to the platforms for Bank. Some of these interchanges to and from the DLR are tricky, to say the least. But that is more to the nature of the DLR, which has grown like the proverbial Topsy.

My nominations for bad interchanges to and from the DLR include.

  • Canary Wharf, where the DLR and the Jubilee line are two separate stations.
  • Canning Town, where there are two DLR lines and the Jubilee line on various levels.
  • Poplar, which is a major DLR interchange and a good place to get lost.
  • Shadwell, where the DLR and the Overground are two separate stations.
  • West Ham, where the DLR and the Underground meet haphazardly, nowhere near West Ham United Football Club.

Note that three involve my least-favourite Underground line; the Jubilee line.

I suppose one of the DLR’s problems is that most of the stations are unmanned and most of the maps only show the DLR and its interfaces.  So the system assumes a certain amount of knowledge amongst the passengers. On the other hand, every train has an excellent Train Captain, who can usually give you the information you require.

Perhaps what is needed is a Route Finder at each station, similar to those on the bus spider maps. It would give a list of major attractions and the route to take.

May 3, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

We Need More Canning Town Stations

Canning Town station is a major interchange in East London and will be important in getting spectators to the Olympics.

The Jubilee line, two DLR lines and lots of bus routes meet there.

We need more interchanges like this in London and over the whole country for that matter. As I have said before, Hackney Downs and Hackney Central stations should be combined, with a bus station below.

March 16, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , | 4 Comments

How Various Nationalities Could Get to the Olympics

London has always been a multi-national and multi-cultural city, so there has always been large groups of various nationalities in various parts of the city. Where I live is just a stone’s throw away from where my French Huguenot ancestors lived and go a little bit further south and east and my Jewish ancestors could be found at the start of the 19th century. Even now, certain Caribbean groups have settled in places like Brixton,New Malden has been populated by Koreans and there’s an area of Camden with lots of Georgian restaurants. London is a complete jigsaw of nationalities.

So you can get a few mildly humorous rules about how the various nationalities might get to the Olympic Park.

The Koreans in New Malden, as do many, have an easy trip.  They just take a train into Waterloo and then take the Jubilee line round to Stratford.

Remember the London Underground rule to estimate journey times; 2 minutes per station and add 5 minutes for an interchange.

The French should walk to the Park from West Ham or Hackney Wick stations, on top of the Greenway, as this walk and cycle path, sits on a major part of London’s sewerage system, which was built by a man called Joseph Bazalette, whose grandfather was French.

A few of the Russians will be very rich, so will be in VIP limos, but if they and their fellow countrymen do go by public transport, they’ll take the Olympic Javelin Shuttle from St. Pancras station.  But one day they might like to go by the Central line and go a few stops past Stratford to look at Gants Hill station, which is to a design for Russia by Charles Holden.  There’s some pictures I took of the station here.

February 23, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment