Jump to content

I'm mostly over it now... (commute this morning)


Moos

Recommended Posts

...but what a Godawful commute this morning.


Anyone else try to get the 7.51 (cancelled due to 'passenger illness on a previous train' - eh??) and then have to squeeze onto the late 8.05 along with 50,000 other rain-sodden wage slaves?


And my heart went out to the poor woman who dropped her iPod onto the track and had to watch it glinting unattainably only 4 feet away.


Thanks for listening.


P.S. Not just posting this to annoy our new pal LuvSnailz.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not sure that they were, although they pop up in a lot of pre-historic, fur-bikini-wearing movies, so perhaps I'm wrong..


I usually get an earlier and more civilised train, on which I can sit down and for a few minutes read my book. Today I was late out of bed because of the evil influence of People Who Know Who They Are.


But I have to say that I'd rather get even a horrible crowded train than cycle. I don't have a means to shower and change at work and even if I did, how do you stop your suit and shirt getting crumpled in your bag? Crucially, however, cycling is fine for the fit and confident but for the unfit and wobbly it's terrifying, and I'd probably end up with a broken head.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I really don't think it's for me. Quite apart from logistical things like no shower at the office and how do I stop my clothes getting crumpled, cycling is just too frightening for the unfit and wobbly. I'd be bound to end up under a bus, and then how guilty would you feel, MM and PR?


I usually get an earlier train which is a lot more civilised, but due to the influence of some Forumites who Know Who They Are got up late today.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Colleagues of mine leave a whole wardrobe in the office. Need some hangers mind.


Suppose they commute once a week :)


Moos Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Not sure that they were, although they pop up in a

> lot of pre-historic, fur-bikini-wearing movies, so

> perhaps I'm wrong..

>

> I usually get an earlier and more civilised train,

> on which I can sit down and for a few minutes read

> my book. Today I was late out of bed because of

> the evil influence of People Who Know Who They

> Are.

>

> But I have to say that I'd rather get even a

> horrible crowded train than cycle. I don't have a

> means to shower and change at work and even if I

> did, how do you stop your suit and shirt getting

> crumpled in your bag? Crucially, however, cycling

> is fine for the fit and confident but for the

> unfit and wobbly it's terrifying, and I'd probably

> end up with a broken head.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

When I moved to ED at the turn of the century, I was looking forward to having just an 11 minute journey. And I did the train for about a year. I used to look at people getting on the bus at ED station and think "why????". I used to get a seat on the train but what stopped me was a combination of:


Train cancellations

4 carriages instead of 8 turning up

The journey TO the station wasn't inconsiderable

11 minutes is no time for reading and then I had to get from London Bridge to where I was going anyway


In the end I settled for the bus of for a number of reasons: 40 bus is pretty empty when I get on early in the morning. Door to door takes about 45 minutes if I stay on the bus all the way to town but I've gotten in to the habit of walking from E&C...


On the rare occassions when traffic is doing something weird I now know that it's just an extra couple of hundred yards to walk - amount of stress = zero. Ever


I like the idea of cycling generally but for many of the reasons already outlined by Moos and others I think "naaah"

As for Moo's horrible experience yesterday. I would normally commiserate a lot more if I wasn't implicated ;-)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I woke up this morning. I walked down the stairs and into the kitchen. Made some piping hot coffee and went and picked myself some fresh figs for breakfast.


Being on holiday in Spain is great.


I agree with MMan - riding is the only way. You may start off wobbly but give it two months. You?ll be beating people at the lights.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

djfitz Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Is that two mornings in a row you've got up late

> now? Sounds like it's time to play "Change The

> Day".


Was that for me? No. Normal time today - 6.


Tempted by SeanMac's 'take the bus' theory but that would mean getting up earlier, and for me 6 is a kind of watershed. Anything earlier than that (except for a plane) is just bleugh.


And CambyOz I'd really like to be one of those fit, steel-bottomed people. I just don't think I'd survive the first 2 months... :)

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Another vote for commuting by bike (not just because I have a vested interest!) - as long as you assume everyone else on the road is deliberately ignoring you, I always found it much less stressful. There are all sorts of other debates about stopping at lights, riding on the pavement and sundry other law-breaking activities, but just pootling along the myriad cycle paths linking East Dulwich with most of the middle of London can be a much more enjoyable experience than standing in a packed tube train with your nose in someone else's armpit.


Now's a good time to take up cycle commuting, while the weather's still not too bad. It does get colder and soggier at times (although your main enemy is not hills, traffic or cold weather, but wind!) but you can always spend some of the money you save on nicer waterproof clothing.


JohnL, I know quite a few people who get the train in on Mondays with a change of clothes and a couple of shirts then cycle in from Tuesday to Thursday (not needing to carry extra clothing on the bike ride) and commute by train with the bag home on Fridays. Seems to work for them.


Also, as long as the journey isn't too long or arduous (and you don't become a Competitive Commuter), you can usually afford to take it relatively easy on the ride in so you won't need a shower when you get there and if you're super-keen you can hender it home at the end of the day and shower then...



: P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

On BBC London this morning they were promoting next week's leave a car at home day


Predictably some people contacted them to say things like "If I drive it takes half an hour and costs a fiver - if I take the bus it takes 2 hours and costs ?8"


What idiot pays ?8 for a day's bus journey(s) - my weekly pass costs about ?14 - so that's my travel for the week pegged at ?2 a day - bargain


I accept that most journeys will be quicker by car but it's a lost battle if car drivers delude themselves with costings like that

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I accept that most journeys will be quicker by car but it's a lost battle if car drivers delude themselves with costings like that


I've had to drive into the middle of London a few times recently during rush hour and each time it's taken me longer than it would have done by bus, train or bike, and it's been more frustrating and tiring inching through traffic at a crawl. Of course, I wouldn't have been able to take a portable workshop-load of equipment by any of the other methods, but I'm working on a cycle trailer for it!


Also, car drivers delude themselves that they're only paying the cost of petrol and the Congestion Charge - annual VED ("road tax"), insurance, servicing and breakdown cover seems to get conveniently forgotten when many people try to justify the costs of driving. Don't get me wrong, to quote someone else, I'm not anti-car, I'm pro-bike.



: P

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Anyone living in Southwark is entitled to a FREE 2 hour session on bike training: how to take the safest position on the road etc. Great for boosting confidence if you are a nervous cyclist.


Pierre's advice of imagining no other road user is aware of you is good.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • I also strongly agree. My third daughter was lucky enough to get a place and it’s been the  most wonderful experience. The staff are simply amazing and truly care and love the children. I wish my older two children had been lucky enough to attend. 
    • Halfmoon Montessori is simply amazing. Staff are so loving and nurturing. My daughter loves it there. They usually close at 3pm as they work with the local schools in the area but now offer wrap around care on some days. 
    • Frank Field -  a decent politician.   Frank Field, Baron Field of Birkenhead - Wikipedia
    • The alternative would be to let them free, to be predated on and without parents to teach them the necessities of survival. Clearly this is an unhelpful model of instruction, but, given the ducklings have been born and will not survive without parental care (unless they are hand reared in the school - which I doubt has the capacity of skill for this) then gassing them is the most 'humane' action. The school should perhaps have thought through what is the likely outcome for ducklings which are not being reared by either skilled farmers or ducks. I suspect that the duckings would not be saleable to farmers having been initially born and raised in circumstances which were not sterile for introduction into larger flocks. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...