The Anonymous Widower

There’s A Hole In The Bus

If you’re musical, you can sing it to the tune of the famous Harry Belafonte song.

If you not, then give us a rest, or take singing lessons.

I took this picture of the seat in front of me on the new BYD battery-electric bus this morning.

 

Has the stop button been nicked or has it just fallen out?

Or it could be the centuries old problem of finding good, reliable slaves?

A Nightmare Coming Home

I nearly always come home via Moorgate station, as it has good train and bus connections and I can get both the 141 and 76 buses to near my house.

  • The 76 bus is my preference as it is a reliable New Routemaster.
  • But the 141 bus takes me all the way home. Unfortunately, it is generally a Chinese BYD battery-electric bus.

Coming home, I arrived at the Northchurch Road in a 76 bus.

  • The time was 11:29 and a text said that 141 buses were due in 1, 8, 19 and 20 minutes.
  • A second text at 11:39 said that buses were due at 4 and 12 minutes.

Eventually, I got on a 141 bus at 11:44.

This is typical, as the buses don’t seem to synchronise with Transport for London’s bus reporting system.

But today in the cold weather, they have been particularly unreliable.

So I asked Google AI, if hydrogen buses are more reliable in the cold and received this answer.

Yes, studies show hydrogen fuel cell buses generally outperform battery-electric buses (BEBs) in cold weather, experiencing less range reduction because their fuel cells generate waste heat that helps warm the cabin, while BEBs must draw significant energy from the battery for heating, drastically cutting range. While BEB range can drop significantly (over 30%), hydrogen buses see a smaller dip (around 23%), making them more reliable for cold climates.

Sixty years ago, I was using nickel-cadmium batteries to make portable instruments in a chemical factory and I think that they hated the cold, but that lithium-ion solved the problem. Obviously, it doesn’t!

But I do have my suspicions about the design and build quality of these BYD buses!

 

December 17, 2025 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

The Diesel-Hybrid 141 Buses Always Seem To Get Through

Today, I had an all-too-typical bus-rid back from Moorgate after breakfast and a bit of shopping.

My direct bus is a 141, which is a second-rate, Chinese BYD bus, which has a number of problems as I pointed out in My 78-Year-Old Legs Are More Reliable Than The New Chinese Buses On London’s 141 Bus Route.

  • I just missed a 141, so I caught the next bus that was going my way.
  • It was a New Routemaster on the 76 route, so I took a chance, that it might pass the previous 141 bus, as they often do.
  • As we passed Moorfield’s Eye Hospital, we passed the 141, but it was stopped at the side of the road, with all its lights flashing.
  • I decided to change two stops from home and left two stops from home, from where I could walk.
  • I waited perhaps five minutes before an elderly Wrightbus diesel-hybrid arrived to take me home,

After today’s experience, I can’t help but remember the old joke!

  • Question: What’s red and lies in the gutter?
  • Answer: A dead bus!

Other colours are available.

November 22, 2025 Posted by | Shopping, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

The Story Of An O-Ring

I have a very unusual skin, as is partly shown by these pictures.

Note.

  1. There is a scar on the back of my left hand, where I cut it on the glass bathroom door in my bedroom.
  2. But with skillful gluing at the Royal London hospital and TLC and stern words from the practice nurse at my GP’s it healed perfectly.
  3. If I give blood samples or have an injection, I don’t need a plaster.
  4. My left foot is a deeper shade of red to the right. No-one has given me a reason for this.
  5. My previous now-retired GP, always took his own blood samples, when he needed them and had smiles all over his face. Perhaps, he was proving to himself, that it was happening?
  6. I wrote about my skin before in My Strange Skin, in 2020.
  7. One therapist said unusually for someone, who had a left-sided stroke, that my left leg is the stronger.

As my ancestry is part-Jewish and part-Huguenot could it just be that only the strongest genes survived from their poor living conditions my ancestors endured in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries?

My Cardiologist And His Wife, Have Suggested I Use An Emollient In My Bath

I am now adding Oilatum Emollient to my bath water, which I get delivered by Ocado.

It is not cheap, but my feet are now more made for walking.

I put three cap-fulls in a bath and lie in it for about 10-20 minutes.

An O-Ring Failure On Bad Friday

A rubber O-ring sitting in a groove on the plug, should keep the water in the bath, but as this picture shows the O-ring had seen better days.

The picture of the new O-ring shows how it should look on the plug.

On Bad Friday, the O-ring finally gave up and any water put in the bath, went straight down the drain.

A Fruitless Bad Friday

Internet searches proved fruitless in my search for a shop that was open on Bad Friday.

So I vowed to try again today.

Searching For cp Hart At Waterloo

cp Hart, from whom I bought the original bath, appeared to be open at Waterloo, so after breakfast on Moorgate, I made my way to look for the branch of cp Hart at Waterloo.

Note.

  1. Why does South London and its trains have to be covered in graffiti?
  2. Most of  it, is not even good graffiti.
  3. In my view, the Bakerloo Line should not get new trains, until the graffiti has stopped.
  4. I wandered round Waterloo for about ninety minutes before I found cp Hart, with the help of two police constables.
  5. And when I finally found cp Hart, they didn’t do spares.
  6. I tripped over the uneven pavement in the last picture. But as I usually do, I retained my balance and didn’t fall. Is that all the B12 I take for coeliac disease?

My mother always used to say, that you shouldn’t go to South London without a posse.

Eventually, I had a coffee in Costa and took the 76 bus home.

Success At Last!

To get home on a 76 bus, I have to change in De Beauvoir Town and whilst I waited for the 141 bus to take me home, I checked out the local builders merchants.

The owner was his usual self and fitted my plug with a free new O-ring.

I was now able to have a bath.

And watch the snooker.

I can certainly recommend a television in your bathroom.

Note the vertical handrail, that allows me to step easily in and out of the bath.

April 19, 2025 Posted by | Design, Health, Sport | , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , | 3 Comments

Struggling To Get Home From Moorgate Station

In most cases to get back to my house, I take a convenient 141 bus from Moorgate station.

  • The bus stop at Moorgate is the same side of the road as the exit from Moorgate station.
  • At the stop at my home, I just cross the not very busy road and there is a zebra crossing, if the road is busy.
  • The walks at both ends are not more than fifty metres.
  • The 141 bus, used to share the route with the 21 bus, which meant there was a bus every five minutes.
  • The 21 buses are more comfortable New Routemasters.

Now, that the 21 bus no longer shares the route, timings of the 141 are much extended, with sometimes a wait of as long as 15 minutes.

This is because.

  1. The traffic has got a lot heavier.
  2. One fleet of buses, is taking both groups of passengers.
  3. Islington has laid out numerous Low Traffic Neighbourhoods.

Consequently, the remaining 141 buses have a much higher passenger density and I don’t always get a seat.

This Saturday and Sunday, the Elizabeth Line wasn’t running, so the buses were overcrowded.

On both days, I had to get a 76 bus from Moorgate to De Beauvoir Town, as I had waited for a long time and one had not been shown on the app.

Yesterday, I would have had to wait 26 minutes for the 141 bus to do the last mile to get home.

So I walked and took these pictures of Islington’s not so pretty pavements.

Compared to Hackney, they are not a pretty sight. And the pavements did make walking difficult.

As I did the last leg to my house, five 141 buses passed me, as Transport for London don’t believe in spreading them out, where there are punters.

Luckily, I wasn’t carrying anything heavy!

Today, I was even luckier in that a 141 bus stopped, soon after I got off the 76.

November 17, 2024 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , | 1 Comment

Nightmare On The Buses

The title of this post, is not the title of a horror remake of the popular 1970s-sitcom’ On The Buses, but a description of my journeys on a 141 bus today.

Until, last Friday, I had two buses; the 21 and 141 to take between my house and Moorgate, which is an important destination for me.

  • There is a large Marks and Spencer food store there, where I regularly buy the gluten-free food, I must have as a coeliac.
  • There is a LEON there, where I regularly have my gluten-free breakfast.
  • Moorgate station is a good transport interchange from which I regularly start journeys over London.

But now there is only one bus; the 141.

In November 2021, I wrote The Great Bus Robbery, where I said this.

What is TfL’s latest crime?

The 21 and 271 buses are going to be combined into a new route between Lewisham and Highgate, which will go nowhere near the Balls Pond Road.

So we’ll just have the one bus route to the City of London.

On past form, if TfL say they will increase the frequency, I wouldn’t believe them.

This was my conclusion.

We will need the 21 bus to provide us with a route to Crossrail, as the 141 buses will be full.

The 21 bus is needed where it is and mustn’t be stolen.

Note that Crossrail is now called the Elizabeth Line.

Today, I made three journeys between my house and Moorgate station and this is what happened.

Journey 1 – Southbound

I arrived at the bus stop and after five minutes a 141 bus arrived.

But it was full and didn’t open the door to let any of the waiting six passengers board.

After another three minutes, another 141 bus arrived and we squeezed on.

But there wasn’t any seats left and I stood all the way to Moorgate.

Journey 2 – Northbound

I only had my breakfast and as I had things to do at home, I returned fairly quickly after finishing my breakfast.

Partly, this was also because a 141 bus turned up with some seats available.

But it was a lot closer to capacity, than Northbound buses at about the same time last week.

Journey 3 – Northbound

My third journey started at about four in the afternoon, after I’d been out to take some pictures and buy a few food items in Marks and Spencer.

I had to wait seven minutes for a 141 bus and as there was a 76 bus a couple of minutes in front of it, I took that, with the intention of changing halfway.

I was able to get a seat.

In the end, the 76 bus got stuck in traffic and I walked to my intended change stop and waited there for the 141 bus, which was without a seat, so I stood for three stops to home.

It was one of the slowest journeys, I’d had between my house and Moorgate station.

Day 2 – February 7th – 2023

I arrived at the bus stop and found a lady, who had been waiting for an hour-and-a-quarter.

I had no problem coming home, as I went to Liverpool during the day and got a taxi back from Euston.

Day 3 – February 8th – 2023

Perhaps, they’d heard our pleas, but a bus turned up after a couple of minutes with plenty of spare space.

I even got a seat.

Going home, at about 10, there wasn’t a spare seat.

Revenue per bus, is certainly rising.

Conclusion

On the evidence of the first three day, it appears that there is not enough capacity without the 21 bus.

February 6, 2023 Posted by | Food, Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , , , | 4 Comments