Jump to content

Recommended Posts

if you're in the upper east side you've got a couple of alternatives, could get 12 to Peckham Rye and then train to London Bridge (their more frequent from there) or could go via Forest Hill/Honor Oak (on same line and also have more trains to LB than ED) and get to New Cross then East London/jubilee line from there

Starting from the southern end of Underhill Road I take the P4 or the 185 to Lewisham, then DLR. Total journey time about 45 minutes once the bus has arrived. Mind you my current favourite if I'm not taking the car is to cycle to Elverson Road and catch the DLR from there. (This is where a Brompton comes in very handy)


Underhill Road to New Cross by bus seemed to take for ever - I'm not doing that again! Forest Hill Station to New Cross is OK, but you've got to get to Forest Hill first.


Ruth

For me (near-ish the Library), the quickest route is to drive to Canada Water, park for free by the cinema, and get the tube the one last stop... 30 minutes on a good day. However, I try not to use the car more than I have to, so usually do the regular train & jubilee line, which takes about 50 mins.
I have to say I drive there as it is by far the quickest way and I tend to have to be there pretty early so usually can get there within 20 mins that way especially at the moment as seems much quieter on roads withe everyone on holiday. However, when I do get the train I do the London Bridge route which is fine depending on how the jubilee line decides to behave that day....I have also done the 185 to Lewisham before but it did seem to take a lot longer than London Bridge.

Agree that the 185 to Lewisham is tortuous - it takes a VERY round-the-houses route.


I have trained it from Peckham to Lewisham and then changed before. Much quicker. Im in the Upper East Side too but tend to walk to Peckham Rye (unless, you know, a bus just HAPPENS by)

ghostdog Wrote:

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

> Another option would be to consider cycling. I

> cycle everday and takes 25 mins regardless of the

> traffic. (ED - Greenwich - foot tunnel - Cabot

> Sq). Keeps you fit and great for stress relief.


How reliable is the lift? The only couple of times I've been to look it's not been working, and I'm not really fit enough to haul a bike, even a brommie, up and down all those stairs.


Ruth

  • 2 weeks later...
Yes I have. Bus to Forest Hill, then train to New Cross Gate, then tube..blah blah blah. I found that after a while what often happened was that somewhere along the line something would breakdown. The usual thing is train late, then a wait for another tube at NCG, cancelations, points failures etc etc. I also found that if I got the timing wrong on the way back it would take twice as long to get home so I've simplified my journey by taking either P4 or 185 to Lewisham and then the DLR to Canary Wharf. Much easier and takes about 45-50 min and still Zone 2-3.(tu)

Another possibility is to take No 40 from ED station to London Bridge, if you want to avoid BRail that is, then the riverboat from London Bridge Pier to Canary Wharf Pier. All the details you will need are at www.thamesclippers.com

If you have a travelcard (not pay as you go) you get 1/3 off the fare.

It is a bit toppy if you buy individual tickets but is more reasonable if you buy season tickets.

It is, however, nowhere as cheap as using buses as previously mentioned above but an amazing way to get to work on the odd occasion perhaps (or in an emergency)

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 don’t think Reform will withstand the heat of any election.  Finding enough people to stand will be bad enough. Finding credible ones quite a bid tougher  I think yes this government is lacking in a long term plan and has not had a good first year. Today the least.   but the speed with which this was dealt with is a notable shift compared to last 14 years where months would drag by and we would constantly be told to draw a line under  if Labour called an election tomorrow, there is not a single party that could present a better alternative with any credibility. And that’s a low bar Reform are dangerous lunatics but more worrying is the descent of the Tories into the same swamp i also worry that England voters have contracted some melodrama virus after the Tories where we had 5 PMs in almost as many years  it’s ok for governments to be unpopular without needing to have an election every 1-2 years      
    • Well, I made £50 out of it and Alice owes me another bullseye, so I had a good day Clearly the thread has moved on, but just a final few words on Rayner (from me, at least). If she hadn't gone like this (with a chance to revive her career at some point in the future) there's plenty of other stuff loaded up and ready to be fired at her about the motivation, finances and machinations of her move down South. It's not pretty reading. Tawdry doesn't come close. I was born in Ashton Hospital and grew up in Tameside, I've got a lot of friends and family who weren't as lucky as me and didn't make it out, some close to her constituency party, and there's been a lot of bad feeling around 'Our Ange' for a long time. My favourite quote was: 'She should fuck off back to Stockport.' And that was from a party member. The writing was on the wall for her. Moving from Ashton (majority c6.5k, large Pakistani minority, but predominantly white working class and targeted by both the Independent Alliance and Reform) to Hove (majority c20k, neither of these issues with the electorate) was a pretty cynical move, and she's fucked it royally. 'The Honourable Member for Hove and Portslade' will be sleeping a lot easier in their bed tonight. This thread was never supposed to about Labour bashing, and I'm not sure it is. It's definitely descended into 'Whataboutery', and that seems to be the problem, in my mind at least, with British politics. It's playground stuff, he said/she said, blame-game bollocks. Watch PMQs and ask yourself if you'd accept this sort of behaviour amongst toddlers, let alone in an elected parliament. One thing that does stand out is the opposition to Reform across the board, and yet we seem to be sleepwalking towards a likely scenario where Farage could head up a minority Reform government. I've 'followed' politics since the late Seventies - mainly because the BBC News came on right after 'Roobard and Custard' or 'The Magic Roundabout' - and I can't remember an era where both major parties are so bereft of leadership, direction or ideas. There's a certain irony that we'll all be getting a test text on Sunday to warn us of an impending 'National Emergency'. Seems quite prescient.
    • But not old enough to remember the highest unemployment rate, inflation and interest rates in history in the early eighties under the Tories? A rather selective memory you have. There has never been a four-day week: it was a three-day week imposed by the Conservative government under the Blasted Heath.
    • I see that there was a government consultation started in July 2024, a response, and then a revision to the National Planning Policy Framework, and then to the Green Belt guidance in February 2025, https://www.gov.uk/guidance/green-belt .  It includes the updates but doesn't give the nescient much clue of what was materially changed. There will probably be some good, and less good, summaries to be found. 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

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