The Anonymous Widower

First Class to Leeds

I travelled in First Class to Leeds yesterday. I do get more and more fed up with the standard of the class on Saturdays.

I paid about thirty pounds more for a comfy seat, a table and two cups of coffee each way.  My fellow travellers also got some rather boring-looking sandwiches both ways.

But I suspect, judging by the number of empty seats and those on Virgin a couple of weeks ago, the train companies First Class offerings on Saturday, are not the hottest product.

At least that on First Hull Trains is better! But on the other hand, it didn’t seem to sell many seats.

It strikes me though, that the train companies need to do a bit of thinking about their First Class product.  And whilst they’re at it, they could look at their gluten-free offerings too!

Inciodentally, I had breakfast in Carluccio’s before I travelled and got some sandwiches from Marks and Spencer in Leeds station. I also noted that Leon’s restaurant had some good gluten-free breakfast offerings.

So some things are getting better, but the trains aren’t keeping up with the competition. Although you could argue, that the presence of Leon’s and Carluccio’s in stations, is down to policy changes at Network Rail.

December 16, 2012 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

Should We Londonise All Buses?

I know I’m a Londoner and live in the finest city in Europe, let alone the UK or England, but in my travels around the country, I have come to the conclusion, that most bus services outside the capital are very second-rate.

To start with, I should say that in most places it isn’t mainly the buses themselves, as towns and cities like Leeds, Manchester, Bristol and several others have buses that on a quick look to be on average to be the same condition and age, as those in London.

But there are three major differences.

  1. Most London buses are front entrance and centre exit, which effectively means that they pick up and set down passengers a lot quicker.  It also means in London’s case, that a wheelchair passenger has an easier route to get on and off, as he or she uses the middle door. Because of the smaller dwell time at stops, two door buses actually travel faster and carry more people more efficiently. Whether this means the capital cost per passenger journey is lower, I don’t know.  But it may well be so!
  2. London buses also announce the next stop both visually and audibly.  Many visitors to my house are very surprised, when I say something like take the 141 to Balls Pond Road and get off there.  The system also announces route changes and can be used by the driver to send a selection of common messages to the passengers.
  3. But the biggest difference is that all London buses are touch on, either with an Oyster card or a concession like my Freedom Pass.  If you have a paper ticket, you show it to the driver and they tell you to get on.  There is no timewasting mucking about with paper tickets, that London obviously deems to be just litter.
  4. From next summer, you will be able to touch in on your bus journey with any credit card, as Oyster is being augmented for the Olympics.

But it is the field of information that London buses are streets ahead of every other bus system in the UK.

  1. As a child, you were always told, that every tube station had a street map of the local area. So if you got lost, just go to the Underground station. So now, like many Londoners, when you are going somewhere foreign like Croydon for a North Londoner or Wembley for a South Londoner, you never carry a map and rely on the map at the destination station. It usually works. Now this street map system has been extended to the buses and most bus stops have a local street map. Only last night, whilst walking back from the pub, I used a map on a stop to show a tourist from Germany, how to walk to the pub where he was meeting a friend.
  2. These street maps are paired with spider maps, which show all the routes in the area, where they go and at which stop you catch the bus.  Frank Pick and Harry Beck  would be proud of this idea from their successors. Spider maps work well and if I’m lost after a walk, I just find the nearest bus and work out how to get home. Incidentally, Transport for London call them bus route diagrams, but you can’t argue with umpteen million Londoners, who call them spider maps and that term is now the one generally used by all.
  3. London has recently introduced text messaging at stops to find out how long you have to wait for the next bus.  Other cities have this and it should be the norm everywhere.
  4. Important London bus stops have displays showing how long you’ll have to wait for the next bus.  But as people are starting to use the text system more and more, I suspect, the number of these displays will decrease.
  5. You can also see when buses will arrive at a stop either through the web or from a phone app. I don’t have a smartphone, but my dumb Nokia 6310i is perfectly capable of telling me if a 30 bus, which is my preferred route home, is due ten minutes out of Kings Cross or Euston.

So how do some of the places I’ve visited compare to London in various areas?

Two Door Buses

You see the odd ones about, but not many.

On-Bus Information Systems

I’ve never seen one, but I’m told Colchester has them.

Maps at Bus Stops

Very few and most that I’ve seen have been very inferior and totally useless for visitors.

Text Information

This is a typical London next bus information notice.

London Sign For Bus Information By Text Message

And here’s one from Leeds.

Leeds Sign For Bus Information By Text Message

No prizes for guessing, which is the simpler system.

Not only is London, just a five digit number but the sign is easily read and is as low as they can put it, so that everybody from say eight to eighty can read it with ease.  I can’t believe that there are over 45 million bus stops in Yorkshire! The london sign has the great advantage that it is small and just strapped to the post.  So perhaps it could even be used on a temporary bus stop at road works.

I’ll let Frank Pick have the last word on this.

The test of the goodness of a thing is its fitness for use. If it fails on this first test, no amount of ornamentation or finish will make it any better; it will only make it more expensive, more foolish.

And he was born before the age of modern technology. He would have had a field day, if he was still alive and in charge of transport for the whole of the UK.

So to answer my original question, the answer must be an undoubted yes! London has proven that good, frequent and understandable bus services attract more riders, so the sooner we Londonise all buses the better.

People will go on about cost, but the first thing to do is get the maps at stops in place and get sensible text messaging systems working. And then we just have to make all new buses to the London standard!  Remember too, that London retires quite a few buses each year.  Many of these with a bit of refurbishment would be very suitable for lighter use in the provinces. Certainly, many of the older ones in London are much better, than the disabled-unfriendly old banger, I got back to the centre from Elland Road.

I think too, that we will underestimate the benefits of having the same bus information systems all over the country.

As an example, how much of my time and effort have I wasted trying to find out where to catch a bus on my challenge? And how much money have I wasted on unnecessary taxis?

So if it made travel easier and cheaper, would it make it easier for people to travel to work in the next town or perhaps have a day with Aunt Edna in Felixstowe?

We need any economic stimuli however small.

Remember too, that if we need new buses, that these are generally built in the UK,  so much of the capital cost of new buses stays here. So if that is the case, why did Red Ken betray British workers, by buying a load of useless bendy buses? Few liked them, except perhaps fare dodgers.

October 23, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 13 Comments

What Do We Do With the Old District/Met/Circle Line Trains?

Last night, I travelled to and from to Upton Park on some of the old D-stock trains. They may be thirty years old and are to be replaced in 2015, but they asren’t fit for the scrap heap yet.  In fact with a bit of a tart-up, they would probably last another twenty years or so, judging by how well most Metro-Cammell trains were built.

Ride to Upminster and back on one and then say that they should be scrapped forthwith. You won’t get the words out, as none of the problems on the line, are the D-stock.

The good burghers of Harrogate, who might or might not live up to that Yorkshire stereotype of being canny have proposed that some of these trains be used between Leeds, Harrogate, Knaresborough and York.

The respected rail commentator, Alan Williams, hasn now weighed in with some south common sense.  It might be Yorkshire common sense to, as I think he lives in Scarborough.

  1. He asks why this system is not being proposed elsewhere, like for the Welsh Valleys.
  2. He also says that it the thinking is very much in line with the McNulty Report. I suppose one could ask, if the civil servants are in-line with it. They probably aren’t as they never travel outside of London, except by air or limousine! It would be interesting to know how many of the top civil servants, who effectively run our railways have travelled in a Pacer.
  3. He says too, that they could use a modern protected third rail system, where the electric rail couldn’t be touched by trespassers. This is used on the DLR in the UK and in many places abroad. Perhaps civil servants would be more impressed with the proposals after a round trip of Europe inspecting systems elsewhere?

We could have a competition, where there was a prize for the most innovative use in a railway context of the D-stock trains.

September 28, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

East Coast Tickets Are Not Exchangeable For A Sensible Fee

For my Day 1 trip from Accrington to London, I booked an advance ticket on the 10:05 from Leeds to London, that arrived at 12:30.  The ticket cost me £26.45.

But at the time I booked, I hadn’t thought that I could fit in the Aston Villa part of the trip.

So I found that if I took an earlier train from Leeds, it would give me more time. But no matter, it said that I could exchange the ticket for a fee.

So I looked it up on the web this morning and found that there were tickets for earlier trains still available, albeit at a higher price.  There were also Super Off Peak tickets available at £28.90, which is probably what I should have bought in the first place.

So I went to Kings Cross and found out that to exchange the ticket for a named train would cost me a fee of forty-one pounds or so. I’ve changed advance tickets in the past and I think I got charged five or ten pounds or so.  That would have been reasonable, but not ideal, as in fact, I’m not sure which train I want to take. As it’s a Saturday, I have a feeling that a Super Off Peak ticket allows me to travel on most, if not all trains.

So I left, after realising I had a nice story for my blog and of course, I still had a valid ticket on the 10:05, even if it is a bit tight to get to Aston Villa.

At home, I found that the £28.90 ticket was still there, so to see if I could get it cheaper, I tried the TrainLine.  But that wanted £40.90. I don’t pay booking fees to anybody, so they can go and find some other mugs.

So I went back to East Coast and eventually bought the ticket at £28.90.

It’ll be interesting to see what price, I could pay for a walk-up ticket at Leeds on Saturday.

To return to the title of this page.  I don’t consider, a forty pound plus fee acceptable, when I can buy a fully flexible ticket for about two-thirds of the sum.

This trip is starting to get interesting.  Perhaps I should follow Tony Hawks lead and travel with a fridge. The problem is that I’ve had enough medical problems in the past few years, I don’t want another caused by humping a fridge.

September 26, 2011 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , | 2 Comments

Yorkshire Cannyness?

The railway between Leeds and York via Harrogate is severely overloaded and is run using the the dreaded Pacers.

Now it is being proposed that the line be electrified using a simple third rail system and reuse ex-London Underground, District Line trains.

It is an idea that might work and provide a better service.

Although I’m generally in favour of overhead electrification, there are lines like this where less intrusive third-rail electrification may be more suitable. On this line there is also a two mile long tunnel, Bramhope Tunnel,  which would be prohibitively expensive or impossible to electrify using overhead wires.

Although this proposal is based around using London Underground D Stock, which are generally about thirty years old, there is no reason to believe that as CrossRail and Thameslink progress throughout London, that other suitable trains will be released.

July 15, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | 3 Comments

A Cable Thief Finally Wins a Darwin Award

After several attempts recently, like this one and these on the Central line in London, someone has finally won a Darwin Award in Leeds.

I know it’s sad when someone dies, but it does appear that in this case the electricity company involved has done a lot to make the site safe.

July 5, 2011 Posted by | News | , , | 1 Comment

Buses Outside London

Most London double-deck buses have a separate entrance and exit.

This means that those leaving the bus, don’t get in the way of those getting in.  It also makes it a lot easier for wheelchair access and those with children in buggies.  I don’t travel on buses outside London very often, but find negotiating the obstacle course of suitcases and buggies to get to the front door somewhat tiresome. In Cambridge for example, I will walk if I can, rather than use the bus.

So if a double xit bus is so much better and as I think speeds up public transport, why do so many buses not have a centre exit.

Single Entrance/Edit Bus in Leeds

Here’s a bus from Leeds yesterday.

I suppose it’s all down to costs!

March 13, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , | Leave a comment

Walking Around Leeds

I took these pictures as I walked round the city before the match.

There was also a very comprehensive Henry Moore exhibition in the Art Gallery, which I wished I’d been able to explore fully.

March 13, 2011 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

A Day in Leeds

Yesterday, I went to Leeds to see Ipswich play at Elland Road. I took the train from King’s Cross at 8:10 and arrived in the city on time just after 10:30, three cups of free coffee later.

In my view Leeds is a much superior city to Manchester, as like Liverpool, it is fairly compact and you can get most places on foot from the train station.

The station now has improved and is now near to what I would call a destination station.

The last time I came, the roof was going up and now it is complete.

The New Roof at Leeds Station

 Is this roof the only complete modern station covering to match the great Victorian structures at St. Pancras, King’s Cross, Raddington and Lime Street in Liverpool?

I met an old Metier colleague and her daughter in the city and after lunch, we went to the ground to see the match.

Leeds United have a reputaion for being unwelcoming, but this was the firast away seating that had a proper Welcome Sign.

Welcome Sign at Elland Road

It should also be said that they were very accommodating in adjusting the tickets, so that I could sit with my friends.

The match wasn’t the most exciting but Town deserved their point and it was good to see Kieron Dyer in an Ipswich shirt again.

March 13, 2011 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , | 3 Comments

Manchester is a Top Place to Go

Who says this crap? It’s apparently in the New York Times list at number 20 of 41 places to go in 2011 ahead of Miami and Zanzibar.

Manchester is a poor city and is very much second class compared to Liverpool, Glasgow, Newcastle, Leeds and of course London. You could argue it does have two good football teams, but London has three.  It’s got no iconic buildings and it is not a World Heritage Site like Liverpool.  I suppose you could argue, that Manchester has a couple of good hotels and is well connected by train to Liverpool and Leeds for days out.  It also has a real tennis club.

January 14, 2011 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 6 Comments