... the return trip... which needed to be from suburban Manchester.
Already in possession of a TfW 1st class ticket from Bath to Chirk and back, the two nearest stations to Manchester that are on route for that ticket are in two different directions - they're Wolverhampton and also Shrewsbury, so I needed an additional ticket to take me as far as one of those.
Checking, the on-the-day price for a 1st single to Wolverhampton is nearly £70 and, for Shrewsbury, National Rail were quoting £77. (This is the first class fare via Wolverhampton then Wellington) - so I thought I'd buy a standard ticket to patch that part of the journey.
By now I was on the tram, sailing past what had been Manchester Central's station throat, with about 15 minutes to spare, heading for the TfW 12:30 departure from Picadilly, which Realtimetrains indicated was a loco and coaches, but... I had no ticket.
Firing up TfW's app, 1st class tickets for sale for that service were, for some reason, either not for sale at all or on sale at the 'Via Wolverhampton' price. However, there was a fixed-train-only standard advance ticket at £13-ish so I bought that just as the tram dived dramatically across the road and into the hole in the wall of Piccadilly Station. We need ticket offices, but purchase via an app is also very useful.
Up onto the concourse, the station busy. The TfW train was waiting, and, sure enough, was loco and coaches, so, though the barrier on a phone barcode and with five minutes to go, a quick walk to eyeball the 1st class. Around 4 people in the first class carriage so I asked the first member of staff I saw there about excess fares. As he was catering staff, he quite reasonably didn't know but advised me to take a seat and the
TM‡ would sort it. I needed to know the price though so he pointed me to the train manager two carriages up.
By the time I'd reached the train manager two carriages down via the platform, the member of catering staff was somehow already there, briefing him that there were two people in first class wanting to upgrade - and also 'A chap who has a ticket from Shrewsbury and wants to excess to 1st class from here' at which point I chimed up with:
'And that's meeeeee!'.
A quick conversation ensued - no problem to upgrade but I needed to know:
'Is this at TfW prices or the £77 Crosscountry price?' I think he replied to the effect 'Goodness, I'm not that mean. Do go and sit down and I'll be round to sort it." By now he'd probably realised that I came from 'Penalty fares threatland'.
Now, TfW, reliability-wise, have been having another terrible year, but this was the time that it all fell into place. Loco, carriages, lovely cycle storage in the
DVT‡, not that I needed that but it was well used, buffet counter and kitchen with good sightlines to passengers and to the outside world, the buffet staffed by at least three people.
The train manager sorted the ticket excess, and then one of the catering staff was quickly round collecting tea, coffee and drinks orders from the now five or so in 1st Class - given the reliability issues with the trains and that it wasn't quite straightforward to buy tickets it's not surprising that there was so few. One put his feet on the seats but took his shoes off first, bless.
Then, menus: both the light bites variety and dining and thankfully TfW have thankfully moved on from the immediate post-covid-hitting dining menu, as they were probably getting feedback about it.
https://tfw.wales/ways-to-travel/rail/food-and-drink/food-bar/all-day-biteshttps://tfw.wales/ways-to-travel/rail/food-and-drink/first-class-dining/first-class.
Thanks to the train, its planning, its prep, the signalling, even though some of the signalling was string and board, and particularly the staff, the entire journey (as far as Newport) couldn't have been better. It was also a spectacularly stress-free alternative to the M6/M5, and, being at the same end of the train as the DVT, the only time I head the loco was on the climb away from Hereford.
The Manchester to Shrewsbury leg cost around £28 overall for the ticket and £34 for the food + a couple of glasses.
Now, is Newport the place where the journey fell somewhat apart? Of course it is, but that is something for another post.
Mark