I had no specific planned train back out to Woking; I HAD checked to Basingstoke and knew it was 2 trains an hour with Clapham Junction connections. For Woking, local and Portsmouth line trains too.
Into Victoria at 21:14 and a look at "next fastest train" for Clapham Junction; 21:16 platform 15. OK - that's one of the offset bays and it then turns out to be the front train in the platform - dash and just catch it; turns out to be headed to Littlehampton via Gatwick Airport. Crowded rear coach as we jump in, moved forward to next coach and it was more comfortable, not that it mattered for the few minute ride to Clapham Junction.
There is a whole different philosophy of travel on services that are so frequent that you turn up and go, and that applied right through - Woking, Waterloo, Bank, Curry Sark, Lewisham, Victoria, Clapham Juction, Woking, and all for the princely sum of £14.50 ... no timetable, just an idea of how long the journey will take.
I was happy with the fare at £2.07 per leg once I had negotiated the correct ticket with the chap in the ticket office at Woking - an evening travel card with senior railcard. I wonder how well known such a ticket and timing option is; someone else I spoke to that evening had tried to buy one from a
TVM▸ at a smaller station nearby and had failed, and had settled for a more expensive off peak rather than evening ticket - and that's a rail campaigner "upsold" by a TVM.
The travel card is a wonderful product an thank goodness - and with a little help from Campaign for Better Transport oiling the wheels, I understand, it has been saved. Even at an increased price the utter convenience is something to write home (or on this blog) about - no faffing about with tapping in and tapping out as I saw lots of people doing and milling around to get to the columns at places like Cutty Sark.
Back to my journey - "Mind the gap" announcements but, really, overdone - didn't seem to be much if anything of a gap. I suspect it's because I was at a centre door in a carriage on the inside of a curve. Come to thinks of it, I think the carriages didn't have end doors on this train, so why have the announcement at all at that platform?
"Footbridge to other platforms" says the sign at Clapham Junction but I ignored that and like many others wen down into the subway - quick walk through and I knew roughy where I has headed. Electronic signs at the bottom of the steps to each platform and I found a Salisbury train showing for platform 9 and due in a coule of minutes. Short pause to ensure it was going to be calling at Woking - wathing the scrolled calling places.
Busy platform, with a couple of members of staff - one regular displatcher and one with a white jacket,
"Security and Safety" I think is the label (
correction - Trespass and Welfare) . And so, in rolls the train - just a 3 car 159. And as it rolls in, I could see it full and standing up the aisles. Doors open and the lobbies are full too. And crowds around each door. And so a decision - let that one go and await the next train; 2 miutes behind, destination showing as Alton which surely is going to call at Woking. Dispathcer confirms that, though suggests there may also be a stopper leaving even ealier (which were it the case would have been overtaken). And so I let the absudly short Salisbury train go.
On later thought, that Salisbury train was the one that the online journey palnner had offered me when planning my trip the day before, except it had me leaving Victoria 8 minutes earlier, probably to give better interchange time at Clapham Junction; at that planning stage I was looking at using Basingstoke as my park and ride - fewer trains so I HAD looked it up.
Anyway - 8 carriage Alton train pulls in just a couple of minutes after the 3 car Salisbury has left; about a third of the seats taken, and one has to ask (I know the answer) "why the imbalance" - 5 cars to each destination would be sensible - ah, the cost of not electrifying to Salisbury. My friend on the platform let it slip that the Salibury train is often just 3 carriages and overcrowded; I do get the feeing that "thems" who run
SWR» consider any line that's not electric to be only worthy of short (and often much less frequent) services.
Clapham Junction - cross to platform line for Surbiton - West Byfleet and and Woking. Slow approach to Woking and I'm pretty sure that we were behind a stopper. Barrier accepted by ticket but did not spit is back (I wonder why not - still valid within London for a couple of hours had I gone back up).
This was the first time I have parked at Woking and will probably be the last. A painful drive in - it felt really slow, a long drive out thought 'burbs and a car park at Oriental Road which felt like it was half way to the orient. All the spaces nearer to the station marked "Season ticket holders only" and I felt very much second class citizen - a long walk back to the car, pouring rain and blowing wind, between high walls along passageway which whilst I did not feel in danger may give others the creeps. A couple of WebTIS display screens like we used to have at Melksham telling us that there was an information failure adding to the general feeling of a setup in need of a little bit of
TLC▸ to make it more welcoming.
We had been hearing in the evening - the opening talk - from a couple of young consultants who have been auditing all 2500 stations for access for all - 750 audit points on each station to get a consistent approach across "the
UK▸ " though ther regional map did not include Northern Ireland. But more seriously, no inclusin of consideration - at least in what they said - of people with heavy luggage, chidren in push chairs, or ticketing access / ticket offices. Good work - but access for all should mean for ALL. And I realy hope that all the hard work is used to get better results and not to set more consulting hurdles before any work is done on the ground. The whole evening and the office hosting that we walked though brought home to me what a huge consulting industry we have and I wish we had a system in which obvious cases could be progressed under
JFDI▸ principles.
Back to Woking - and a drive home from there in my private car, so outside forum topics. I had met up from a lady from Frome at the event; she was staying with friends at Muswell Hill; a wise decision perhaps based on incoming storm Cieran. I had played with the idea of taking the 21:31 off Paddington (but that would have been a race from Victoria) before I knew I had the Gatwick run to do in the mornning.
Driving through the storm was "interesting". Standing water across the road in place, spray on the motorway, and I was perhaps lucky not to come across any blockages. A sedate pace even along the motorway, a stop at Fleet services where every single food outlet was closed; WH Smith open (they have been since 1792, they claim) with a self service coffee machine. An a sandwich and a flapjack; yeah, I was hungry with the nibbles provide by a host earlier had been "fashioably" small.
Home after midnight. And asleep within a few minutes. Not sure whether I should have been happy that everyone was asleep even before I got home. I take it as a complement / knowledge that I was on my way and can look after myself out there, and a knowledge that I would have stopped if concerned about the safety of the journey if concerned about safety through weather, road conditions of tiredness.
Edit - typo conceptions. Looks like I spelled checked the original the posted the pre-check version - sorry!