TheGrandWazoo
Veteran Member
Some good info at this blogI remember in 1993 some of the 28s (?) extended beyond Lewes to Ringmer and still others headed all the way to Tunbridge Wells (possibly as the 728) so presumably that was the left-over of that service.
I'd guess that pre-deregulation, Southdown used the 100-199 range for routes east of Brighton - except long-distance express services which were 7xx.
Interesting trip, I do recall seeing an M+D 5 many years later (1996) at Hawkhurst, though it was a single-decker, not a VR. No idea whether it went all the way to Chatham but presumably that was the same route.
Did the Wanderbus allow unlimited travel for a day across all NBC companies, or just your local company and its immediate neighbours (so if it was Southdown, you could have used M+D, H+D, Alder Valley and London Country, for instance)? Or was it regional, so you'd be restricted to the South?

THE NATIONAL WANDERBUS TICKET
For those of us whose lust for buses was equalled with a lust for a day out this surely was the ultimate product, the ‘National Wanderbus’ ticket, launched by the state owned National B…
For those of us whose lust for buses was equalled with a lust for a day out this surely was the ultimate product, the ‘National Wanderbus’ ticket, launched by the state owned National Bus Company in 1978. Many of the individual NBC companies offered similar products such as London Country’s ‘Golden Rovers’ or Southdown’s ‘Busranger’ tickets but these were generally only available for use on those operator’s services. The ‘National Wanderbus’ allowed you to cross the boundaries from one operator’s territory into another. With some careful planning using the NBC’s excellent ‘Principle Bus Links’ map a good day out on the buses was guaranteed for a mere £2.97. Living in Crawley where I was largely restricted to London Country, the ‘Wanderbus’ could now give me easy access to Southdown, Maidstone & District, East Kent and Alder Valley. For the first time I could travel for miles in any direction on one ticket.
https://junctionten.files.wordpress.com/2016/04/img_4239-crop.jpg
‘Wanderbus’ tickets were issued as a pre-printed card available from enquiry offices who would stamp the date of validity on them meaning that you could buy them in advance, useful if you wanted an early start the following day, there being no time restriction on the use of the tickets. You could also buy them on the bus, although not all operators offered this option. Many older ticket machines in use at the time could only issue tickets to the maximum value of 99p, so the driver simply issued three ’99p’ tickets, hence the price tag of £2.97.
The later NBC Explorer ticket was seemingly available on every subsidiary irrespective of who issued it, though subject to individual rules for each firm (e.g. use between Malton and Scarborough was only allowed on paying of a surcharge, whilst journeys wholly within Tyne and Wear were not allowed)
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