Never a truer word….The irony of that, as ever, is that cartels are generally beneficial for public transport users. The car and the taxi prevent them abusing their position by overcharging.
Never a truer word….The irony of that, as ever, is that cartels are generally beneficial for public transport users. The car and the taxi prevent them abusing their position by overcharging.
The problem with an integrated express bus is that if you live in Tavistock you almost certainly have access to a car.
Although its 4 times the distance geographically Tiverton Parkway is reliably only about 30 mins longer away by road (a30 & M5) vice Plymouth.
Saving 90mins on the rail journey to anywhere East of Exeter from Plymouth and with a more frequent service.
Knocks £20 per person off the price of an example off peak return to Paddington.
Tivvy Parkway parking is 2/3rds the cost of Plymouth.
Tavistock itself has no parking which allows more than 24 hr.
Bit of a no brainer really.
I suspect the biggest sticking point is that despite enthusiasts liking for such schemes the take up would likely be close to nil.I suspect the biggest sticking point is who pays to maintain the data. With the way the rail industry systems are set up at the moment, NR would need to set up the bus links in it's system and then get the bus companies to send NR files to upload. Obviously this has a staffing requirement to build and maintain, as well as software licensing costs etc. In a sensible world, there'd be a point in the process where bus companies could link their systems in directly to the files before they're sent out downstream, but that also has an implementation cost.
It's classic case of 'we all love the idea, but want you to pay for it.' Which goes down about as well as you'd think it would.
The problem is that if you want to go to Plymouth you want to go to Derriford Hospital, the out of town shopping centres along the main road, the employment along the main road, Plymouth Argyle and sports facilities none of which would be served by a non stop bus to the station (or the railway to be fair). So you have an express bus service to the station which only very few niche passengers want to go to.Not if you want to go to Plymouth!
Cornwall and Devon are probably close to unique* within the UK, though, in that a very large proportion of the tourist trade arrives by train, not by car, due to its massive popularity with young Londoners.
* The Isle of Wight is another one, which is how it sustains possibly the best rural bus network in the world, and certainly the best in the UK.
So you have an express bus service to the station which only very few niche passengers want to go to.
See the post on the other thread on this forum about the bus driver who had driven for the 2 major bus providers in England for 7 years, had received plusbus ticket training from both but had never seen a single plusbus ticket.
I agree, I can't for the life of me understand why you'd want to spend £100m on a railway that takes the population of 11k to where they don't want to go. You only have to go just down the A38 to see the moss covered car parks at Ivybridge Parkway and ask where the extensive bus connections that initially ran round every estate Ivybridge had have gone.But it would be rather better to test that with a bus service that has only running costs, rather than a railway that costs £100m+ and running higher costs?
Bude- Plymouth Rail Stn by bus#12 via Launceston = 2h17mNot if you want to go to Plymouth!
As described on the Tavistock thread, yes. It is well used, it is slower than a railway would be, but then it stops a lot. No one has tested a non stop bus Tavistock - Plymouth, integrated to the rail fares system, which would be cheaper to run, cost nothing to ‘build’, and could be done in a couple of months rather than waiting 8 years.
pleasant enough town and still a drinking centre for Young Farmers Clubs and Senior Walkers who mostly arrive in Hondas Id imagine.
I read this and wondered about the truth of it, as a resident of the south west this strikes me as nonsenseCornwall and Devon are probably close to unique* within the UK, though, in that a very large proportion of the tourist trade arrives by train, not by car, due to its massive popularity with young Londoners.
* The Isle of Wight is another one, which is how it sustains possibly the best rural bus network in the world, and certainly the best in the UK.
I used to catch the 28 bus in Taunton every day for work, which goes to Minehead. You can book through tickets exactly as if it were a rail service, and it was very common to see people wave their orange train tickets at the driver.I suspect the biggest sticking point is that despite enthusiasts liking for such schemes the take up would likely be close to nil.
See the post on the other thread on this forum about the bus driver who had driven for the 2 major bus providers in England for 7 years, had received plusbus ticket training from both but had never seen a single plusbus ticket..
I read this and wondered about the truth of it, as a resident of the south west this strikes me as nonsense
It is, 7% of visitors to Cornwall come by train (2018 figure). I'm also dubious about the young Londoners comment, any source for that? It's true of a few trendy places like Rock and Polzeath, but not generally
I think its mainly Porthemmet they come to by train.
Porthemmet is by far one of the busiest stations in Cornwall and I would recomend it to Visitors, by far th ebest palce in Cornwall to stay & also thebest beach
Nobody ever seems to try that sort of thing in the UK, which is a crying shame. Even Trawscymru isn't fully integrated, and as those are tendered there's literally nothing stopping them doing it, it was a deliberate decision not to do so.
Cornwall and Devon are probably close to unique* within the UK, though, in that a very large proportion of the tourist trade arrives by train, not by car, due to its massive popularity with young Londoners.
Most of the tourists though will only go as far as the rail-connected places, such as Newquay and Torbay. Ilfracombe and Tavistock are going to be of niche interest at best, surely?
Perhaps. Bude is the fairly obvious touristy place that isn't accessible by rail, I guess, but there are others.
There's far worse holiday resorts than Ilfracombe, it was rammed when I last went there in the Summer. The whole of north Devon gets extremely busy, vanishingly few of whom will have travelled there by train, as anyone who has ever tried to park in Woolacombe in the Summer will have noticedIlfracombe was once a well served holiday destination, of course. Now it's a dump. I don't know who'd go to Tavistock at all?
Cornwall and Devon are probably close to unique* within the UK, though, in that a very large proportion of the tourist trade arrives by train, not by car, due to its massive popularity with young Londoners.
* The Isle of Wight is another one, which is how it sustains possibly the best rural bus network in the world, and certainly the best in the UK.
There's far worse holiday resorts than Ilfracombe, it was rammed when I last went there in the Summer. The whole of north Devon gets extremely busy, vanishingly few of whom will have travelled there by train, as anyone who has ever tried to park in Woolacombe in the Summer will have noticed
There's far worse holiday resorts than Ilfracombe, it was rammed when I last went there in the Summer. The whole of north Devon gets extremely busy, vanishingly few of whom will have travelled there by train, as anyone who has ever tried to park in Woolacombe in the Summer will have noticed
Relatives who live in Camelford now drive to Okehampton to catch the train there, rather than to Bodmin Parkway as previously, if travelling up to London.
Very true. It was a snide remark at the ludicrous suggestion made on this thread that a large proportion of travellers arrive by train. Which they don'tGiven that most of it is nowhere near a station anymore, that's hardly a surprise.
Very true. It was a snide remark at the ludicrous suggestion made on this thread that a large proportion of travellers arrive by train. Which they don't
Its a reasonable number but as a proportion of the total traffic travelling down Id say its pretty low, going by the traffic on the M5.That said, a reasonable proportion travel to the rail connected resorts in South Devon and Cornwall, so there's nothing to suggest that they wouldn't to the North if the connections were there.
7% by train is a large amount compared to other locations. I’m sure fewer than 7% of tourists arrive in the Cotswolds or Snowdonia by train, for example.I read this and wondered about the truth of it, as a resident of the south west this strikes me as nonsense
It is, 7% of visitors to Cornwall come by train (2018 figure).
But compared to Brighton, Blackpool or Scarborough I suspect 7% isn't that big a proportion. Cornwall is probably more a seaside resort than it is a hillwalking area.7% by train is a large amount compared to other locations. I’m sure fewer than 7% of tourists arrive in the Cotswolds or Snowdonia by train, for example.
Couldn't have put it better myself.Keswick is a wonderful example here. There's an excellent bus service which runs from directly outside the station straight to one of the busiest towns in the Lake District, and even if you have to wait a bit you can sit with a cup of tea in the adjacent McDonald's at any time of day. But if you put it in the NRE journey planner, you just get "no station found". This is literally throwing away money, even if all you did was sell the single bus fare and send it straight to Stagecoach, or even if you just put it in the timetable stating the bus fare has to be paid on the day (as contactless makes this rather easy). Same with Ambleside from Windermere. The railway must lose tens of thousands worth of business each year over this simple matter, because "we're a train, that's a bus, we're different".
That's very interesting; I didn't know this was unique to Devon.Cornwall and Devon are probably close to unique* within the UK, though, in that a very large proportion of the tourist trade arrives by train, not by car,
I take it you haven't driven in Devon after about 8 PM then?Slightly worrying if they leave in them as well !
But compared to Brighton, Blackpool or Scarborough I suspect 7% isn't that big a proportion. Cornwall is probably more a seaside resort than it is a hillwalking area.
Crediton also sees passengers to and from Okehampton.
Couldn't have put it better myself.
That's very interesting; I didn't know this was unique to Devon.
Is it true to any extent of the Chilterns, or am I allowing my own experience to bias me?
I take it you haven't driven in Devon after about 8 PM then?
There's far worse holiday resorts than Ilfracombe, it was rammed when I last went there in the Summer. The whole of north Devon gets extremely busy, vanishingly few of whom will have travelled there by train, as anyone who has ever tried to park in Woolacombe in the Summer will have noticed
That would appear to be a disbenefit of the Okehampton re-opening to the railway and also to the environment, since that means your relatives are driving for more of the journey and using the train for less of the journey. (Presumably a benefit to your relatives though who are getting a better way to get to London).
Not if it's run by Stagecoach. It wouldn't turn up.Anyhow, who's for an Okehampton-Padstow fast bus, calling at the towns only and routed this way?