In "normal times", have you ever walked along a carriage looking for an unreserved seat - faced with a sea of labels, red lights or little text messages shouting "don't sit here" at you, even if the seat they are indicating is unoccupied? That is the intent of the system - to have you leave a seat open for someone who has gone to the trouble to 'leave their towel on the deckchair before breakfast'.
But have you looked back along the carriage later and seen just how many of those reservations have not been taken up - some due to no doubt genuine changes of plans on open tickets, but others because of a booking system which asks which train you want and (almost) forces you to make a reservation, even though you really don't know over a period of a few hour which half-hourly train you'll be on.
I'm not sure how this is working with "reservation only" trains at present - whether a train with (say) 100 places all reserved actually carries 100 people - but I do note that Longleat, even with a 50p booking fee to charity, is finding up to 25% no-shows for a limited resource.
From
Somerset LiveLongleat has announced changes to its reservation process to clamp down on people booking and not turning up.
The park confirmed reopened to visitors from June 15 under government advice, and has implemented a system where guests need to reserve their visit in advance.
The re-opening began with the Safari Park and has since been extended across the park to include attractions like the Jungle Cruise, Koala Creek, Jungle Kingdom and Monkey Temple.
The reservation system was intended to allow as many people as possible to get into the park, but Longleat has said the system is being undermined by long-term ticket holders not honouring bookings.