First time posting in this section, so I hope this report is of interest.
Wiltshire Day Rover
A couple of weeks ago I decided to mop up several things on my bus ‘wanted list’ around northern Wiltshire, using a Wiltshire Day Rover.
I started from an estate at the edge of Chippenham on one of the town services which Faresaver run under contract to Wiltshire Council. The journey was operated by one of ten Volvo B8 eVoRa buses on the fleet. The driver, like all those I have met when buying and using a Wiltshire Day Rover, knew about the ticket, but excelled by knowing the Ticketer key sequence to issue it without hesitation. Normally drivers have to search the menu(s), which isn’t a problem, and indeed often opens a conversation with them. It is good to see that the ticket is being used and that’s how drivers know about it, even though there seems to little advertising. I could have caught a Stagecoach 55 to reach my first objective but, as most of my journeys would be with Faresaver, it seemed appropriate to give them my £11 and get an extra ride in too.
Chippenham Bus Station is a bustling place, but showing signs of neglect with failing road surface, weeds and litter. But each bay had a clear departure list timetable, there was a poster for the Government funded additional weekend journeys to the tourist village of Castle Combe at the appropriate gate.

A route 55 branded Stagecoach Gold bus arrived from the railway station on time to continue to Calne (my destination) and Swindon. Gold is an interesting brand, it looked good initially, and while now superseded, many of its features are now looking care worn. Perhaps that’s the problem with a premium brand, years of daily use and abuse by passengers is more obvious on the fittings than similar wear would be on a more basic interior. Anyway, the trip to Calne was quick with great views of Wiltshire from the upper deck.
In Calne the main route is the 55 between Chippenham and Swindon, and to serve the town centre stops the bus does a double run along New Road. It’s the practise that passengers alight outside Bank House and the bus then runs down to Station Road roundabout to turn and then comes back and picks up at the Town Hall opposite its previous stop. It might seem a little odd, but it’s what people do, and it probably dates back to pre-deregulation days when Calne – Chippenham was served by a bus to Bath and Calne – Swindon was a separate service. At least that’s the only explanation I can come up with. This does mean that buses in both directions stop at the same stop making the full destination displays on the rear of many Stagecoach buses especially useful here.
As I arrived in Calne a Wiltshire Council officer was just getting back into her electric van having put up posters notifying passengers of a road closure this Saturday and the associated bus stop closures. It’s good to see the local authority doing this even though the majority of journeys at the stop are commercial.

The first ‘tick’ off my wish list was the once a day (Monday – Friday) X76 Marlborough to Bath which covers a section of road which no other bus does. Swindon’s Bus Company’s Enviro200 number 107 arrived promptly with 10 passengers on. One alighted in Calne, while one other boarded with me in Calne. The small bus was very hot with no one wanting to open a window and I was at the very back without an opening window alongside me, but with the heat of the engine below. It was also noticeable that although I’m in my mid-50s I was probably 15 years younger than any of the other passengers! The driver pulled over at the next stop which has a good-sized lay-by and is a better place to lose a bit of time before the next part of the run which would seem to be a little generous with its time. The run via Derry Hill and Sandy Lane failed to provide any more passengers, and it was Bromham before anyone else boarded. The village centre bus shelter in Bromham is an ornate brick affair, with a large noticeboard on the back wall where village events and community group notices share space with an A3 sized bus departure list in the standard Wiltshire style. Some might argue that the timetable should be in a dedicated case, but its inclusion on the village notice board suggests the bus is important to the community. It’s a shame I was on the wrong side of the bus to get a photo.
Beyond Bromham the X76 strikes out onto unique road via Sandridge to Melksham. Dropping down from Sandridge, even a single deck bus, offers great views across Wiltshire, as far as the northern edge of Salisbury Plain. The little bus performed well across country, albeit with the trademark ADL rattles. Bath was as congested as I remember it, and the X76 made slow progress to its city centre set-down at The Abbey.

My next ‘tick’ on my list was the X32 “fast and direct” as the destination says between Bath and Chippenham. For this Faresaver provided the appropriately registered Volvo Gemini X31BUS. Having commuted between Chippenham and Bath a few decades ago via all the twists and turns of the standard route, it was good to try a more direct version. Again, the top deck of a bus offered great views across the countryside, once we were free of Bath’s slow traffic. During this journey we passed both of the ex-Bournemouth Gemini’s which I believe have both been off the road for a while and a type I’d like to compare with the earlier versions.

And so it was that I was back at Chippenham bus station. By now it was around midday and a number of drivers were taking their breaks with buses filling the parking area and on the least used departure bays. One of the parked eVoRa’s was having its Ticketer machine changed which then pulled on to the bay screened for an X34, which was my next journey. This caught me a little by surprise and I was the last to board. Only when I sat down and saw the time on the next stop information screen (not working other than the company logo and time) did I realise that this was the bus ahead of the one I’d planned to catch and was 7 minutes late due to the Ticketer swap. Having done many Wayfarer 3 swaps in a past life I know how long these things can take.
This eVoRa was like the rest of its type, being very lively in its performance yet offering a good ride. Sitting “upstairs” – those rear seats are high up! – the view can be a bit limited ahead, so I only got a glimpse of a Faresaver Gemini heading the other way on a suspended tow. But such things are all part and parcel of running a fleet of vehicles.
My next goal was a trip on the 271 which runs across Kingsdown, but only the only trip each day which is worked by a double deck. Sure, it wasn’t the best of scheduling on my part as the X76 also goes across Kingsdown, but it was getting things off the ‘to-do’ list despite covering the same road twice in one day which is a bit excessive given my only other time going that way by bus was on a Roe bodied Olympian, in the dark, on diversion when the A4 was closed by an accident, many years ago.
Melksham Market Place, newly refurbished, was a pleasant place to spend my lunch break. The bus shelters here both have Papercast style real time passenger information displays, which have an audible announcement at the push of a button. These are complimented by Wiltshire Council produced printed departure lists.
The north – south X34s pass each other in Melksham, at the same time as the east – west 271/2 also pass each other offering interchange opportunities, although I doubt that they offer any journey combinations which many people would use. I was pleased to note that the inward 271 journey was being operated by one of the aforementioned ex-Bournemouth Geminis which I photographed before it departed on its tour of Melksham housing estates ahead of starting the journey I wanted.

These buses are nicely fitted out internally, offering a nice ride. The route via Whitley includes some narrow roads, and plenty of low trees bashing the bodywork, but the driver had clearly driven this plenty of times before and was master of the task. We were soon at Kingsdown, and whilst I wanted to see the views from a double deck, trees block most of the best ones descending towards Bathampton. Never mind, another “tick” on the list.
Back at Bath the enclosed bus station waiting area was very oppressive in the heat and not a pleasant place to be. I did pick up some UK Government funded WestBus leaflets a Norton/Radstock bus guide and a network map. Hmmm, nice idea, very poorly implemented and really not the thing to encourage bus use. An opportunity missed.
My next target was also a UK Government funded initiative, First’s D1x which [sort of] enhances the hourly D1 between Bath and Trowbridge. The D1 is only hourly, but due to a low bridge and a lack of spare single decks at First the D1x is an extension of the Bath city London Road service which ignores the usual terminals at Elmhurst and Bathford and continues via Sally-in-the-Wood to Bradford-on-Avon where it joins the D1 route. It is very much a schedules driven solution which risks annoying Bath suburban passengers by not taking them all the way home, fails to serve Winsley and Limpley Stoke but does avoid some of the resource cost of a half-hourly D1 as the London Road section is effectively “free”.
Loadings were reasonable, although whether this is at the expense of D1, or are additional passengers I don’t know, while views from the double deck were wonderful. Not in the same class as the top scenic routes, but great, nonetheless.

Trowbridge has suffered somewhat from recent road closures for Government Future High Streets funding works and bus operators finding some of the alternatives more attractive resulting in stops spread far and wide in the central area. For my change from the D1x to an X34 I opted for Trinity Church someway short of the centre, but a single stop served by both buses. The real time display was reassuringly counting down the approach of the X34, although the D1x had long since departed before the display removed it as being “due”.
From the other passengers waiting at the stop, it was clear that I’d hit school finishing time, and sure enough when the Faresaver X34 arrived it was well loaded with young people, and more boarded with me. I ended up with a seat over the box for the door gear which once operated the centre exit doors, a reminder of the Gemini’s early life. The mix of uniforms suggested pupils from three different schools and whilst the journey was loud, I’ve been on much worse. The X34 takes quite a twisty route out of Trowbridge and most young passengers had alighted by the time we reached the countryside.
By now the day had become very hot and muggy and I was starting to feel tired as we made our way over the Kennet & Avon canal on a humpback bridge and shortly after through a Bus Gate back to Melksham. Leaving Melksham I spotted a stop labelled “This stop for the railway station” on the side facing approaching buses and with pedestrian directions on the reverse. I’d spotted a couple of similarly designed signs pointing towards bus stops and the railway station in Bradford-on-Avon earlier, suggesting that this is a Wiltshire initiative to link public transport modes. I also spotted a few bus stop flags to a similar design, which could be an emerging brand for buses in Wiltshire.

Talking of bus stop flags there are a mix of Faresaver, Stagecoach, Stagecoach Gold, Discover from First, and older style Wiltshire across the area that I spotted, so quite a mix, and many now obsolete brands. A single, all-encompassing brand, would bring the various offerings together.
Back at Chippenham again, my plan was for a Stagecoach 55 back to my starting point, but a few minutes after the 55 should have appeared a Faresaver 33 pulled on to the stand, which would do me just as well. This Optare Solo had strange looking backs which reminded me of Lego, but it was comfortable enough and took me where I needed to go.
All in all, an interesting day out, even if a bit repetitive for some tastes. Nine buses, one each from three of the big groups and the rest from a significant sized family-owned bus company. Buses were all clean and well presented, drivers friendly and professional and everything ran pretty much to time. I wouldn’t say that loads were exceptional, but they were certainly acceptable, especially when things like the X31 is a recent supplement to the 231 and the D1x supplements the D1. Indeed, even the X34 and 271/272 now run half hourly when back in my day their equivalents were only hourly so when loadings look similar to those times the frequency has doubled. Overall, there seems a lot of doom and gloom about local buses generally, with just a few often quoted bright spots. I’d say that Wiltshire is doing well, with good stuff going on, but is an area which no one notices. If you’re within striking distance give a Wiltshire Day Rover a go, the buses are good, as is the scenery; you might be pleasantly surprised.