As far as I can recollect, Radio 4 news bulletins referred specifically to Eurotunnel services. This was confirmed by news and images on the TV news of cars stacked on the M20.
Rail strikes
Collapse
X
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostPeople who have more experience of other strikes in the last year or so may be more familiar with what information gets put up on web sites.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View Post
Nostalgia moment: the Dover/Oostende jetfoil. Now there was a comfortable service.
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostAnother nostalgia moment: Hovercraft. Sometimes a very uncomfortable service, and not reliable in rough weather. Quite exciting though.
"I have been dictating these reflections on board a ferry during an averagely rough crossing between Portsmouth and St-Malo, a journey I must admit to having often found frustratingly intermediate in length - neither the hour-long hop to Calais, allowing time merely for a cup of bad coffee, the crossword, and a couple of turns of the deck, nor the day-long full-dress crossing of Newcastle to Gothenburg or Harwich to Bremerhaven, which at least offers a gesture in the direction of a proper sea voyage. Portsmouth-St-Malo does, however, have the benefit of depositing oneself in one of the most satisfactory, or least unsatisfactory, of the French port towns (an admittedly uncompetitive title, given that Calais is unspeakable, that Boulogne has seen the planners finish what the Allied bombardment began, that Dieppe involves an unthinkable departure from Newhaven, that Roscoff is a fishing village and that Ostend is in Belgium)."
Tarquin Winot in 'The Debt to Pleasure', John Lanchester [1996].
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by zola View PostSouth Western Railways always has a banner headline on their web site showing whether there is currently a good service on all lines or, as is more likely, what current disruption there is. Here is the current page regarding the industrial dispute.
https://www.southwesternrailway.com/...ustrial-action
I usually go straight to the National web site - http://www.nationalrail.co.uk/ - which doesn't seemingly always have the information about strikes.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Beef Oven! View PostOver-paid and work-shy. Give the public the service they pay for, need and deserve!
Who says we actually deserve anything? We not actually be paying enough for a service we might expect. Who's to decide? Who is "the public" anyway?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostNote also that it gives details of "intention to strike", but no explanation of why! What's the point of that?
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gradus View PostBut the whole point of the lightning strike was to avoid a vote of all members, otherwise it's just a strike and can be countered by employers.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by vinteuil View Post.
given that Calais is unspeakable
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Alain Maréchal View PostClearly spoken by somebody who has not lunched at La Buissonnière, refreshed himself Au Calice, or dined at the Cafe de Paris. Other (many other) establishments are available. I have never understood why the British speed through Calais without exploring it (although I know very well why I sped through Newhaven, Dover, Folkestone or Harwich.)
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostI don't have the "down" on Calais that others seem to have - though often we go to Boulogne and then to Wimereux instead.
Tarquin Winot in The Debt to Pleasure is of course an unreliable narrator and far from the voice of sanity, altho' I agree with him in many things.
Few of the English ports have much to recommend them, tho' Folkestone has some nice things and Portsmouth its moments. On the French side I have come to love in their different ways Dieppe, Cherbourg, le Havre, and Boulogne. Have yet to be persuaded of the virtues of Calais, tho' I note the advocacy of M le Maréchal ...
.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Dave2002 View PostA slight annoyance as we'd already paid to park our car, and had to drive to another station where the car park charges were higher, but where the Southern trains were unaffected. In the grand scheme of things it's not such a big deal - we did get to the concert - and at £24 each the loss would have been greater if we hadn't, and we'd have missed out on a good experience - even if not outstanding.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by Eine Alpensinfonie View PostA strike by its very nature intends to cause inconvenience. Otherwise there would be no point in striking.
Comment
-
-
Originally posted by gradus View PostDepends on who is striking and in which organisation. Strikes continue to be used tactically as threats - the union movt had the ultimate weapon of the Miners strike until that idiot Scargill destroyed what he espoused - and the sub-set of lightning strikes ie with no prior warning were used very effectively to put the knife to the throat of recalcitrant employers before the Tebbitt/Thatcher reforms stopped all that.
Comment
-
Comment