Things to thank the world for No. 4: Buena Vista Social Club! If you haven't seen them... Do! ...
Things to thank the world for No. 4: Buena Vista Social Club! If you haven't seen them... Do!
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People who drive automatically assume that travelling by public transport is HORRID. It takes longer, it's probably more expensive, you have to sit with (get spoken at by) people you don't know and, very quickly, don't like, it's inconvenient…it has, in short, nothing to recommend it.
Those of us who don't drive are intrinsically more tolerant of all of the above. We have to be. That doesn’t mean that we aren't fair-minded and capable of writing a critical review when we get rubbish service. In this instance it is fair-mindedness that inspires me to write a review about un-rubbish service. Looking up National Express coaches on the site, I discover that they are not exactly flavour of the month.
My experience of them has always been pretty good – with the exception of the one case where I was just going down with the Kathmandu quickstep & the on-board WC wasn't available (that was a few years back – we won't go there). Accordingly, let me redress the balance a little.
General: this particular review is based on an airport connection route. It is a route I have used numerous times alighting variously at Stansted, Heathrow & Gatwick. Current route number 727.
Price: prices change all the time, so check the latest website information or call into your local bus station. My latest excursion was £34 Norwich-Heathrow (single) – compared with the equivalent journey
coming back (off-peak) by rail, which was £56.
Booking: tickets can be booked: On-line at www.nationalexpress.com By calling 08717 818181 (£1 booking fee applies, and for an extra 50p you can have your ticket sent to your mobile phone) Or at any National Express outlet.
I find the last option the easiest: going into the local bus station and purchasing at the counter. It gives you more options on how to pay, and the interaction with a real live human being does give you the chance of picking up on any current special offers. It also gives you more options on how to pay, if you still use cheques or cash.
This Experience: Saturday, 31st January 2009 and I'm off to Cambodia. Excited as ever by the whole trip, I am (equally as ever) less enthralled by the first leg of the journey: getting to the airport.
On this occasion, I'm looking at the 13:40 departure National Express 727 (previously known as Jetlink) which serves Stansted, Heathrow, & Gatwick. This is something of a luxury. Normally, I find myself standing in the bus station at midnight waiting for the 01:40 departure.
There are any number of things to take into account when planning your airport connection: how far away is it, what time do you need to be there, how much luggage will you have, how many people are travelling with you, if you're planning to drive, what are the parking arrangements, are you returning to the same airport as you depart from (& again at what time etc), how much is it all going to cost? Each element can affect the overall calculation significantly, so it is worth doing it from scratch each time you travel.
All other things being equal my preference is to take the coach. I live in Norwich, with equally easy access to both bus and rail station, so connections at this end are not an issue.
Price is. Depending upon the time of day of travel, the equivalent rail fare can be two to three times the coach fare. It may not be significant in the overall cost of the holiday, but it will buy a few more indulgences in the local market once you get there.
Time isn't an issue. Not least because on this occasion I discovered fully just how much of an illusion timetables can be. The 13:40 left Norwich promptly and arrived at Heathrow bang on time at 17:35.
Four hours might seem a long time to get from Norwich to Heathrow. By train it would be 2 hours to London Liverpool Street, plus (say) 20 minutes to Paddington, plus 15 minutes on the Heathrow Express to the airport: approximately 3hours allowing for changes. Right! Coming home took me over two hours from clearing customs at Heathrow to get to Liverpool Street.
The major benefit of being on the coach is that you do not have to change. Every change introduces an indefinable into the equation.
Of course there may be road-works, accidents, unforeseen hold-ups – but these apply equally to train travel and to driving yourself.
The Hassle Factor: changing trains is an inconvenience. If you have luggage, it is a downright pain. To get from Norwich to Heathrow or Gatwick, at best there are three trains to contend with (including the Underground). We cannot get direct to Stansted – that involves at least two trains (via either Ely or Cambridge). Knowing I can get on the bus in Norwich and stay there right through to the airport is a big plus. As is knowing that I have a seat. The coaches do not generally allow standing, so when you buy your ticket you buy your seat on that departure. I'll spare you my long & varied experiences of having to stand on trains!
It is not surprising then that I am a fan of what used to be endearingly called the Jetlink service: now the 727 National Express.
That doesn't mean I'm going to put up with shoddy service, however. From the second I close my front door, I'm on holiday and I want to be looked after. National Express do.
On this occasion, as well as being spot-on timewise, the coach itself was modern, clean and quiet. It was a bit too warm for the first half of the journey as the driver over-compensated for a freezing January day, but that was resolved later. The WC was in full working order – not that I needed it, but I know what it's like when you do!
Window curtains were available to deal with low-level-sun-in-the-eyes. Overhead vents & reading lights, all fully operational and perfectly adequate to the job in hand.
The display clock at the front of the coach was equally in full working order, and keeping good time. It's just a pity that it was set 4 hours ahead of GMT. I'm all for setting my watch to "destination time" the second the plane undercarriage is lifted, but doing so on the coach from home is a recipe for disaster.
The radio was on: quiet enough to be unobtrusive to those of us wishing to read, loud enough to actually be heard if you wanted to listen.
We had a change of drivers at Stansted Airport – both were quietly efficient and polite. Both insisted that seatbelts be worn by gently reminding us that it is the law. Their driving was faultless, insofar as this is evident to a passenger. No apparent speeding, sudden breaking, or any of the other attributes that make you wonder if they actual passed a driving test never mind got their PSV licence.
As it happened, even my fellow passengers were utterly inoffensive.
Previous Experience: this journey is not untypical. I have been using the service for nearly ten years. WC's apart – and they have been an issue on more than one journey in the past – I have never had a problem travelling National Express to and from any of the airports mentioned. (STN, LHR, LGW).
Staff have always been friendly and polite. Coaches have always been clean, and checked at each stop. Journeys have run to more-or-less to time, certainly no delays of significance.
Timetable: If I do have an issue with the service it is the timetable. The service is approximately a two-hourly service, which is generally fine although it does depend upon your flight timing. Personally I'm happy to be there early, rather than stress about possibly missing the plane. However, there are exceptions. There is nothing from Heathrow between the 2300 departure and the 0325 (which itself involves a further change & half-hour wait at Stansted). A similar change is required on the 0525 departure. The first through service doesn't leave until 0715.
They can get away with this, because you've no hope of getting a train during those hours anyway, so there is no competition. It's not as if there aren't any planes landing during those hours. Having arrived at Heathrow at 2330 & waited for the 0325 in the central bus station, it's not an experience I'd recommend. Your only other option is taxis and hotels. £££ouch!
Less excusable perhaps, is the bizarre omission of any service between the 1910 departure from Heathrow and the 2300, which was the reason for my return journey being by train on this occasion.
Outward bound from Norwich, similar gaps also apply.
Rating: having to deduct one for unfortunate timetabling, and trusting that they've now updated the rolling stock and fixed the loos, I'm confident in giving the service 4-star rating.
As a driver, and being the only driver, I love the luxury of being driven for a change, and like to use trains often for that very reason. We have used NE for getting my partners children to places as they live a long way away, and if we, for instance, have to attend a wedding at point C, then we can get there from point A, and them from point B, in relative ease! Nice review!
Coloneljohn 29.03.2009 12:40
Nice one. I do not drive myself now so have to rely on public transport whenever I want to go anywhere. It's a good way to meet different people I find. John
catsholiday 22.03.2009 18:39
You would think they would run 24 hours though wouldn't you - Sue
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Review of National express
Advantages: Can be an inexpensive way to see the country, frequent service, free wifi on board Disadvantages: Overcrowding, old trains, journey times slower than 25 years ago