Chris from Nailsea
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« on: October 28, 2009, 20:38:35 » |
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From the Guardian: Taking your bike on a train pits common sense against brain dead bureaucracy. Two battle-worn commuters compare tales of woe
Yesterday Chris Peck, the policy coordinator for cycling organisation CTC, lamented the experience of taking your bike on the train in the UK▸ . Today, two seasoned cycle-train commuters share their rail tales.
Adharanand Finn
When I moved to Devon in January I had a neat plan for getting to work in London cheaply and in an environmentally responsible way. I'd buy a bike, cycle the five miles from my house to the train station, stick the bike on the train, and then cycle the rest of the way to the office once I got to London. It was a simple plan. Executing it, however, has been a weekly trial through labyrinthine train company systems that usually leave my head fried.
Although there are only five bike spaces on a train for around 650 passengers, space is usually not the problem. The difficulty is booking a space, which you have to do at least four hours in advance ^ don't think you can just turn up with your bike.
I usually book my train tickets online, but you can't book a bike slot at the same time, even though you can book everything else from a seat near the toilet to a plug socket. No, you either have to make a special trip to the station the day before or ring the train company directly. Both involve waiting in painfully slow queues. Then when you do get through, their "systems" are invariably down. Often, weighing everything up, its easier just to leave the bike behind. It's almost as though they're making it difficult on purpose.
Ben Thomas
"I bought a ticket to the world, but now I've come back again." That was 1983, before I'd ever taken a bike on a train. But a quarter of a century on, I'm in a position to challenge the cosmopolitan Tony Hadley, because I've bought a lots of tickets, if not to the wuh-huh-hurld, at least to Paddington, via Slough ^ and come back again. Yes, on First Great Western trains, on the Thames Valley line, as far as Oxford, travelling off-peak, with a bike, I'm something of an expert.
And I know this much is true: ^ Angry writing scrawled in every guard's van tells you it costs ^3 to put your bike in there, and you need to have a reservation for it. It doesn't and you don't ^ If you put a non-folding bike anywhere other than in the guard's van, hassled staff will always fight you (verbally) until you get it off ^ If they lose, the transport police get to have a go (physically). They've got sticks ^ If you put a new bike in the guard's van, someone will put a very heavy one next to it without putting a chock under the wheel and it will fall on yours and dent it (or if it's carbon, smash it) ^ If you don't look like you're running fast enough to get your bike aboard before the final whistle, you'll be told how much it allegedly costs the train company to be late leaving (^600 a minute, as if you care). ^ Guards often seem to come and go on any given route, but catering trolley staff stick around. Some, like Neil on First Great Western, know everything about the trains and the service ^ Standing on the pedal of your bike and pushing it along with your other foot at 3mph is cycling. No arguments please. It is ^ "Cycling" in a station gets you shouted at, hooted at by train drivers, and regaled with grisly stories by police officers. Unless you're on a BMX, in which case you can burn rubber down the slope to the main entrance, through the concourse, along platform eight and up the ramp to London Street without anyone in authority apparently noticing
But this is all just part of life's rich tapestry. Taken together, I love my daily commute, and that's not something many people can say. Putting this alongside Adharanand's account, it's clear that the bike/rail system in this country has the potential to be uniformly excellent. It's just a case of someone having the will and the resources to apply current good practice across the country. If only.
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William Huskisson MP▸ was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830. Many more have died in the same way since then. Don't take a chance: stop, look, listen.
"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner." Discuss.
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devon_metro
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« Reply #1 on: October 28, 2009, 22:14:38 » |
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At the of the day, bikes cause delays. Is people asked where to stand and were told correct information all of the time there would be few problems. As for the comment about being shouted at for loading a bike in the wrong place, rightly so - they cause congestion and present a risk in the event of evacuation. If you ask me, it's know it all commuters having a rant. Must be a slow news day.
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Mookiemoo
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« Reply #2 on: October 28, 2009, 23:00:14 » |
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At the of the day, bikes cause delays. Is people asked where to stand and were told correct information all of the time there would be few problems. As for the comment about being shouted at for loading a bike in the wrong place, rightly so - they cause congestion and present a risk in the event of evacuation. If you ask me, it's know it all commuters having a rant. Must be a slow news day.
I have one of these or very similar..........they fold in half http://www.wiggle.co.uk/p/cycle/7/Dahon_Cadenza_2009/5360042685/It fits into the disabled space in carriage G. In four years I have gotten off - once at charlbury and once at Morton when a disabled person actually wanted to use the space - which is fair enough - thats what I expect. I am fortunate enough to be able to afford first and therefore have that luxury However I do remember two years ago when the cotswolds was under water..........I was taking the bike down to London and got on at Newport............. TM‡ comes along and asks me if its mine, I say yes - gives me laldy about how it cannot be there its not diabled. I explained that I commute with it daily on the cotswolds line and if there is a person who need to use that space getting on at ANY Station, even if not pre booked, I will get off. Not good enough - at Bristol Parkway I was made to get off with the bike and push it to the Guards van at the rear - if he'd have wanted to be vaguely reasonable he could have let me put it in the front power car but no........ The day before I had been hiking - I had blisters all over my feet - I hobbled to the back of the train whilst he'd following me yelling at me about delaying the train. By the time I got to B I lost it and turned and basically told him to stop being a knob, he was making me do this and I was going as fast as I could. As I'm loading it into the guards van, the platform staff are muttering about "I bet she doesn't have a first class ticket anyway " - at which point I turned around and shoved about ^1500 of tickets under their noses and told them to can it. He still works for FGW▸ - I see him at Paddington fairly frequently......I avoid his trains. That was an example of someone who just seems to hate bikes!
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Ditched former sig - now I need to think of something amusing - brain hurts -I'll steal from the master himself - Einstein:
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the the universe."
"Gravitation is not responsible for people falling in love"
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JayMac
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« Reply #3 on: October 28, 2009, 23:22:00 » |
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At the of the day, bikes cause delays. Is people asked where to stand and were told correct information all of the time there would be few problems. As for the comment about being shouted at for loading a bike in the wrong place, rightly so - they cause congestion and present a risk in the event of evacuation. If you ask me, it's know it all commuters having a rant. Must be a slow news day.
I have one of these or very similar..........they fold in half http://www.wiggle.co.uk/p/cycle/7/Dahon_Cadenza_2009/5360042685/It fits into the disabled space in carriage G. In four years I have gotten off - once at charlbury and once at Morton when a disabled person actually wanted to use the space - which is fair enough - thats what I expect. I am fortunate enough to be able to afford first and therefore have that luxury However I do remember two years ago when the cotswolds was under water..........I was taking the bike down to London and got on at Newport............. TM‡ comes along and asks me if its mine, I say yes - gives me laldy about how it cannot be there its not diabled. I explained that I commute with it daily on the cotswolds line and if there is a person who need to use that space getting on at ANY Station, even if not pre booked, I will get off. Not good enough - at Bristol Parkway I was made to get off with the bike and push it to the Guards van at the rear - if he'd have wanted to be vaguely reasonable he could have let me put it in the front power car but no........ The day before I had been hiking - I had blisters all over my feet - I hobbled to the back of the train whilst he'd following me yelling at me about delaying the train. By the time I got to B I lost it and turned and basically told him to stop being a knob, he was making me do this and I was going as fast as I could. As I'm loading it into the guards van, the platform staff are muttering about "I bet she doesn't have a first class ticket anyway " - at which point I turned around and shoved about ^1500 of tickets under their noses and told them to can it. He still works for FGW▸ - I see him at Paddington fairly frequently......I avoid his trains. That was an example of someone who just seems to hate bikes! Oh dear, oh dear, oh dear. There are some days when you just want to be able to give your fellow man/woman a dry slap without any comeback. Sometimes, even counting to ten or biting your tongue just isn't enough. But always move on and don't let the b*****ds grind you down. Vent your spleen on an anonymous forum (I think I know of one....) and never ever take out your frustrations on your nearest and dearest. Here endeth the lesson.
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"A clear conscience laughs at a false accusation." "Treat everyone the same until you find out they're an idiot." "Moral indignation is a technique used to endow the idiot with dignity."
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Henry
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« Reply #4 on: October 29, 2009, 09:02:42 » |
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Totnes has quite a sizeable cycle ride commuter, which really as far as I am aware does not cause extreme delays. By the time the bikes are loaded, on an HST▸ , the Train Manager is still nonchalantly walking from the front to the back of the train.
My biggest 'gripe' is the new breed of oversize pushchairs and their 'take no prisoners' pilots !
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ReWind
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« Reply #5 on: October 29, 2009, 10:13:30 » |
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There was 6 bikes and at least 5 pushchairs that got on the 16.53 Bri - Tau yesterday.
A 2 car 158, needless to say it was dangerously overcrowded. So much so, paying passengers were turned away at Bristol.
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Here, there and Everywhere!!
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Timmer
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« Reply #6 on: October 29, 2009, 21:23:38 » |
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There was 6 bikes and at least 5 pushchairs that got on the 16.53 Bri - Tau yesterday.
A 2 car 158, needless to say it was dangerously overcrowded. So much so, paying passengers were turned away at Bristol.
Was never a problem when you had a guards van on a loco and coaches set. Even the old BR▸ DMUs▸ had a decent guards area for storing luggage, bikes etc. Modern DMUs just aren't designed to carry many bikes.
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Chris from Nailsea
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« Reply #7 on: October 29, 2009, 21:35:19 » |
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Actually, I'd venture to suggest that 'modern' DMUs▸ were designed specifically not to carry many bikes: you can generally fit in another three seats, in the space that an adult bike takes up.
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William Huskisson MP▸ was the first person to be killed by a train while crossing the tracks, in 1830. Many more have died in the same way since then. Don't take a chance: stop, look, listen.
"Level crossings are safe, unless they are used in an unsafe manner." Discuss.
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willc
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« Reply #8 on: October 30, 2009, 00:58:47 » |
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The space on old DMUs▸ , while handy for bikes, etc, was really there for mailbags - far more lucrative than passengers - but by the mid-80s Royal Mail was switching to the roads for much of its transport, so beyond the ability to lock up a bit of one coach, usually with some tip-up seats, just in case a train did carry mail, the designers of the Class 15X trains logically filled them with seats.
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inspector_blakey
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« Reply #9 on: October 30, 2009, 03:10:31 » |
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The guard's area/cage takes up a lot of space on the older DMU▸ units - about 1/3 of a car that could be used for seating (although it's impressive how many people a two- or three-car heritage DMU will swallow - I've got first-hand experience from working a Long Marston open day a couple of years back!).
There's a philosophical debate here about whether space should be utilized to allow a few to stow their bikes or many to sit down, but I ain't getting involved...
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Btline
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« Reply #10 on: October 30, 2009, 10:05:06 » |
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If people asked where to stand and were told correct information all of the time there would be few problems.
In theory yes, but I once asked where I should stand, and I received a rather rude reply (the member of staff did not know). So now I don't bother asking. It was - quite frankly - out of order. Luckily I (can) usually know/work out which way the train will be, but I assumed platform staff would have been informed by the previous station of a reverse formation. Obviously not...
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Henry
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« Reply #11 on: October 30, 2009, 12:48:37 » |
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brompton rail
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« Reply #12 on: October 30, 2009, 14:41:51 » |
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Or try this one http://www.northernrail.org/community/cycling/travelling_with_bikesMost of the commitments for 2007 have been achieved, except the last - Pacer replacement. Fat chance of that, I am afraid. The changes on refurbishment are restricted to removing the 'internal wall' on 158's so that bikes can fit more easily in the space that was the 'cupboard'. Limited finance has meant that only a few have had this done. The Northern Rail Cycling Strategy, launched in 2007, as you can see from the commitment is due to be updated in 2010. The Strategy was reached in discussions between the company, local authorities, cyclists representatives and other via Northern Rail's Cycle Users Forum (I am part of the volunteer Secretariat) which meets several times a year. Northern are, to my knowledge, the only TOC▸ with a Cycle Strategy and one of the few TOCs who have a Forum.
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JayMac
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« Reply #13 on: October 30, 2009, 14:56:42 » |
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Or try this one http://www.northernrail.org/community/cycling/travelling_with_bikesMost of the commitments for 2007 have been achieved, except the last - Pacer replacement. Fat chance of that, I am afraid. The changes on refurbishment are restricted to removing the 'internal wall' on 158's so that bikes can fit more easily in the space that was the 'cupboard'. Limited finance has meant that only a few have had this done. The Northern Rail Cycling Strategy, launched in 2007, as you can see from the commitment is due to be updated in 2010. The Strategy was reached in discussions between the company, local authorities, cyclists representatives and other via Northern Rail's Cycle Users Forum (I am part of the volunteer Secretariat) which meets several times a year. Northern are, to my knowledge, the only TOC▸ with a Cycle Strategy and one of the few TOCs who have a Forum. Ah....brompton rail, is any of this relevant to you? Your name suggests ownership of a certain folding means of transport.... (edited to change You're to Your. Spurious apostrophe. I'm not a greengrocer....)
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« Last Edit: October 30, 2009, 15:43:11 by bignosemac »
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"A clear conscience laughs at a false accusation." "Treat everyone the same until you find out they're an idiot." "Moral indignation is a technique used to endow the idiot with dignity."
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brompton rail
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« Reply #14 on: October 30, 2009, 15:12:43 » |
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I do indeed fold.
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