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London Bridge - Paddington by cab
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London Bridge - Paddington by cab
On 24 Feb., 20:55, Chris Read wrote:
The Jubilee platforms at London Bridge are a bit 'journey to the centre of the earth', and the headways are generally dire, at any time of day, if the trains are running at all. 12 months of commuting to Canary Wharf (2007) put me off the Jubilee for life, but maybe things are better now. I guess if everything is running well, your contention might be correct. .... only the two may be correlated, as in if the Tube is in disarray that may be the cause of more people using the alternatives rather than an unfortunate case of two catastrophes striking simultaneously. |
London Bridge - Paddington by cab
In article ,
(Richard) wrote: On Sun, 04 Mar 2012 17:38:17 -0600, wrote: In article , (Phil) wrote: Often have 2 or 3 booking numbers as its usually cheaper to buy separate tickets for parts of the journey than through tickets. Like they use to do at the cinema. No need. You can add multiple ticket purchases to the same purchase basket. At least you can on Webtis sites like East Coast. You might still get a booking reference for each. Certainly not. -- Colin Rosenstiel |
London Bridge - Paddington by cab
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London Bridge - Paddington by cab
In message , at 09:37:00 on Tue, 17 Apr
2012, Roland Perry remarked: Often have 2 or 3 booking numbers as its usually cheaper to buy separate tickets for parts of the journey than through tickets. Like they use to do at the cinema. No need. You can add multiple ticket purchases to the same purchase basket. At least you can on Webtis sites like East Coast. You might still get a booking reference for each. Certainly not. East Coast gives you one booking reference, East Midlands gives you multiple. (Or to be pedantic multiple "Collection reference numbers", the "booking reference" for EMT is a completely different number. I'm fairly sure the ToD machine uses yet a third name for it - I'll check later today). The dedicated ticket collection machine asked for my "Reference Number", which is a reasonable abbreviation for 'Collection Reference Number' but the ticket machines ask for "Booking Reference", which completely wrong, given their earlier email: Thank you for buying your train ticket(s) with EastMidlandsTrains - your first stop for train tickets. Your booking reference is 1403452999. {And collection reference number the more familiar Alpha-numerics} -- Roland Perry |
London Bridge - Paddington by cab
On 2月27日, 下午7時36分, "Paul Rigg" wrote:
I cant see the beginning of this thread for some reason but what's wrong with carrying on to Charing Cross (or changing at London Bridge into a Charing Cross train) and then using the Bakerloo *(or the Circle from Embankment) to reach Paddington? I am highly impressed by the way that this option is mentioned twice and gets coldly ignored. Perhaps the *Brownies* are too crumbled beyond any discussion value? |
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