The Anonymous Widower

I Don’t Believe It!

I’ve just checked the trains for Saturday to see if I can get to Ipswich for the Millwall game. And there are no buses, but a train all the way there and back.

Does this mean they’ve finished the upgrading of the catenary?

When I checked earlier in the year, this match was still down as one with buses.

Or did they take what I said seriously and feel that Millwall and Ipswich Town fans on buses together wouldn’t be a good thing.

After all, Greater Anglia are still saying here on their web site, that there is engineering work over the weekend.  But none during the day on Saturday.  Let’s hope they don’t drop a few spanners and bring back the dreaded buses.

December 4, 2012 Posted by | Sport, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

The New Overground Line To Clapham Junction

I took these pictures today, whilst walking from Surrey Quays station to SELCHP.

Note.

  1. How the track for the new branch, runs between SELCHP and the fence along the route I walked.
  2. A couple of trains have been seen travelling along the line. One may have passed me, but I’m not sure.
  3. It would appear that the new bridge over Surrey Canal Road, has been designed to be incorporated into any proposed Surrey Canal Road station. I actually met a guy with his dalmatian by the station and he and/or a neighbour could remember Surrey Canal Road as the Grand Surrey Canal. The neighbour could also remember troop trains going by over the old line, that was dismantled in the 1960s or 1970s.
  4. The proximity of the New Den to the proposed station.
  5. The new line has an out of station interchange at Clapham High Street station with Clapham North station on the Northern line. It would make it easy for anybody in my area to get to the Tooting area, although I think that Clapham North station is not the best.

One thing that would appear to be certain, s that opening the line this year, is not an outrageous boast.

September 23, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , | 1 Comment

Thoughts on Transport to the Den

As I can’t drive, I rely heavily on three things, trains, buses and good old-fashioned walking.

On Tuesday night, I went to Canary Wharf for supper and for many places it is a good place to start an evening trip in London. The parking may be a bit expensive, but you can always get a couple of hours free, if you spend over £10 in  one of the shops there.  I used to buy something I needed like wine in Waitrose to get the token.  Incidentally, is there a more up-market supermarket anywhere in the UK, than this one?

The first step to your evening entertainment, after a meal in one of the many restaurants, is to take the Jubilee Line from Canary Wharf Station, that makes all other Metro stations in the world, look ordinary. I once took a C into the station on the escalator from the surface and asked her to close her eyes, once she was safely on the moving staircase.  I then told her to open her eyes a few metres down.  The look on her face summed it all up.

As I was going to the Den on Tuesday, I just took one station on the Jubilee Line to Canada Water.  From upstairs, I took a P12 bus, which stopped outside the ground.  what could have been simpler?

One of the problems at the Den, is that it is an area with very few pubs, restaurants and cafes.  My mate, Ian, chose to drive and he had quite a bit of difficulty parking and then finding anything to eat. I got the better deal by going to Canary Wharf.

There are plans to build a new station at Surrey Canal Road on the new East London Line extension to Clapham Junction.

This will make travelling to the Den easier, but it will probably do nothing for the quality of the hostelries in the area! I’m afraid at my age and with my medical conditions, greasy burgers, fish and chips and pints of gassy lager are not for me!

But it will give you more choices of getting to the ground, as  it will then be directly connected to many other areas with lots of easily accessible places to eat and drink.  For example, Ipswich fans coming in to Liverpool Street, might use the Spitalfields or Brick Lane areas, before going to the match from Shoreditch High Street.

Obviously Canary Wharf makes a good starting point for anything in the West End of London, but with just one simple interchange at Canada Water or Shadwell, it is also a good place to start for anything in South London, if you live north of the river. Crystal Palace, which used to be one of the more difficult grounds to reach is now a lot easier.  It’s just a pity that the interchange at Shadwell from the Docklands Light Railway to the East London Line isn’t better.

September 23, 2010 Posted by | Food, Sport, Transport/Travel | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Into the Lion’s Den

Millwall used to play at the Cold Blow Lane, which like Portsmouth was an Archibald Leitch-designed stadium, but moved to the New Den in 1993.  I never went to the old ground and this was my first visit to the new one.

The New Den

I arrived at the ground on a P12 bus from Canada Water after having an early supper at Carluccio’s in Canary Wharf. It was an easy way to get to the ground.

Millwall supporters have in the past not been noted for giving a warm reception to their visitors, but I found eveverybody friendly, even if you can see from the photograph, tha the crowd was a bit sparse.

The game wasn’t the best in terms of football, but the result was right, in that Ipswich won.

It was a struggle afterwards to get back to Liverpool Street for my train home, as I took the train to London Bridge and then used the Underground.  But I made my desired train with a few minutes to spare.

September 23, 2010 Posted by | Sport | , , | Leave a comment

Towards the Match

I was mainly gpoing to London to see Ipswich play at Millwall.

I didn’t take a direct route, as I had time to spare and wanted to do one or two things before the match.

So from Tottenham Hale, I took a couple of stops on the Victoria Line to Highbury and Islington, where I took the North London Line to Canonbury.

A house I am interested in, lies betwwen there and Dalston Junction and I wanted to see which was the nearest station.  The first leg took eleven minutes and the second ten, so Dalston Junction is closer and will be a couple of minutes so, when they complete the station. It’s also downhill from Canonbury and flat to Dalston Junction, which means that it is an easy walk to Dalston to travel away and another easy one to get home from Canonbury.  In some ways it won’t matter too much, as from May 2011, the two stations will just be two stops apart on the East London Line.

FRom Dalston Junction, I took the East London Line south to Rotherhithe, with the aim of seeing the Brunel Museum; which is one of the many museums on the line. I took this photo of the brickwork on the entrance to the station.

Brickwork at Rotherhithe Station

I’ve always liked good brickwork and in my life, I’ve designed and had built several important brick features including a traditional crinkle-crankle wall at Debach and my round office here. Are we training bricklayers to be able to do the difficult stuff? Ralph who did the wall, used to work in rubber gloves to save his hands and spent his holidays looking at buildig techniques all over the world. His colleagues used to laugh at him, but he certainly knew how to lay bricks.

September 22, 2010 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment