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Globaliser

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Everything posted by Globaliser

  1. I'd be pretty annoyed if I had to pay as much as £25 to get a black cab from St Pancras to the far (Waterloo) end of Westminster Bridge, especially during the day. And especially as there are many bus lanes that black cabs are allowed to use. I reckon that the slowest part of the journey is likely to be just getting out of the southern end of Midland Road at its junction with Euston Road.
  2. There's still a chicken-and-egg situation here. How do you know which company is your train operator? The answer is to start at nationalrail.co.uk. Thinking off the top of my head, one possible workaround is to see whether any of the other train operating companies will allow you to create an account and buy a ticket. In most cases, the fare will be the same whichever train operating company you buy from - but it is worth checking this before you actually buy the ticket. You can find a list of train operating companies here on the nationalrail.co.uk website.
  3. How do you expect a visitor to work out which Train Operating Company operates on the route they need, especially when every TOC will sell tickets for every other TOC's services? Even Londoners often need to do some research if they want to find out whether their South London service is operated by South Western, Southern or Southeastern. For everyone else: nationalrail.co.uk is a website that's jointly run by the TOCs (together with other parts of the railway system) - so it's official. It's unusual for a TOC's lowest fare not to be visible on nationalrail.co.uk, or to be available only on the TOC's own website. This is why nationalrail.co.uk is always the best first place to start researching, not least because it will then tell you which TOC is operating on the route that you're looking at. In any case, nationalrail.co.uk doesn't sell tickets, so when it sends you to the relevant TOC to buy tickets (as it's set up to do), you will then get a chance to see whether the TOC has any lower fares that it didn't display on nationalrail.co.uk. But if you're going to do this, make sure that you go to nationalrail.co.uk, not anywhere else.
  4. No. These are fundamentally commuter trains, on which there are no reservations. If you have a ticket and you can physically get onto the train, you can travel on it. You may want to remember that Stonehenge is not in Salisbury - it's about 10 miles away.
  5. Thank you for letting us know what happened. I'm sorry that it happened to you, but it's a salutary lesson for all of us.
  6. The AA website says that for 80,000 miles, you get a U class seat - which is the booking class for a standard business class award.
  7. I agree. IME, confirmed award tickets are booked into confirmed space. I've had experience of booking a partner award using AA miles when the initial booking has been on request, and AA has had to wait for the operating airline to confirm the space. But that was made clear in communications, and the ticket wasn't issued until the space was confirmed. It's also odd to have the operating airline demand an additional payment for the reservation and the ticket when the booking was made by and charged by the frequent flyer scheme. The only thing that I can think of that might be a plausible scenario that is QF wasn't charging for either the reservation or the ticket, but only for seat pre-allocation - which is something typically paid directly to the operating airline. I wonder if there's been some confusion here between a reservation and a ticket for the flight on the one hand, and a seat allocation on the other.
  8. This is all very well in theory, but if only it was that straightforward. You try flying from London to Dublin as a British citizen. You still have to prove that you're a British citizen and entitled to the benefit of the CTA. That's all very well for those who happen to have a driving licence stating that they were born in the UK - Irish immigration will usually accept that. But if you weren't born in the UK, then the way of proving that you're entitled to the benefit of the passport-free travel area is ... to produce a British citizen passport.
  9. It doesn't seem particularly odd if the cruise also goes to a foreign country (ie Ireland for those with UK nationality, or the UK for those with Irish nationality). If nothing else, it wouldn't surprise me if the ship must prove to the immigration authorities that those passengers who have declared themselves to be British or Irish have told the truth, and that it can really only do so by presenting those passengers' passports.
  10. The intra-airport transfer should also be free if you touch in and touch out with an Oyster card or a contactless payment card/device. Personally, I would be a bit contrary with this and suggest taking the Tube (Underground) rather than the HEX or the Elizabeth Line. This is because the Tube station in the Central Terminal Area is closer to T2 than the HEX/Elizabeth Line station, so it's a shorter walk after you get off the train. (This is not a big deal - we're talking about saving three or four minutes of walking, which is only likely to be important unless you have a lot of luggage with you - in which case taking any sort of train for the transfer is probably not a good idea.) If you're arriving at T4, the Tube is also more frequent: 6 tph on the Tube as opposed to 4 tph for the Elizabeth Line (as there's no Heathrow Express at T4).
  11. Even in the Savoy, you can sometimes feel like you've had to walk into an adjacent postcode just to navigate your way through the building. The Clermont Victoria probably also has added complications from its part in Victoria station's slightly mind-boggling history.
  12. The Piccadilly Line is not much slower than the Elizabeth Line, which can also be very crowded at peak times (although they are much nicer trains). Any speed advantage of the Elizabeth Line can quickly be eaten up by the time it takes to change to a Tube line (compared to the cross-platform change at Barons Court) or to get a taxi (because the taxi queue at Paddington can be long). Whether the Elizabeth Line makes sense is very journey dependent. It's a bit like taking the National Express coach from Heathrow to Central London. Unless you're changing to another coach or you have some good reason to stay right next to Victoria Coach Station, it seldom makes sense.
  13. From memory, I think that the HEX / EL platforms can only be "a much closer walk" than the Tube if you happen to arrive at T3. The Tube station is closer to T2. And there are plenty of Tube stations where it's easy to get a taxi. Again from memory, the taxi queue at Paddington can be a very long one (which is one of the reasons why it's been a very long time since I've done HEX + taxi). By the time you've waited in that queue for 15 minutes and then taken a taxi into central London, you might already have reached your destination by some other route.
  14. If going to Victoria (as the OP is), there's no point using the Elizabeth Line.
  15. The OP is on a roll call for the 12 July 2023 Copenhagen --> Southampton sailing of Island Princess: https://boards.cruisecritic.com/profile/856697-snorkeler-gal/content/ That was the source of my guesses that the flying dates would be about 10 July 2023 for Chicago --> Copenhagen and about 26 July 2003 for London --> Chicago. I don't think that Chicago --> Copenhagen (or the reverse) can be done non-stop.
  16. One-way long-haul tickets have traditionally always been crazily expensive. On the assumption that you want to fly from Chicago to Copenhagen on 10 July 2023, and then London to Chicago on 26 July 2023, a quick and dirty search on ITA Matrix showed flights for less than $1,350 for ORD-HEL-CPH // LHR-ORD. If you can defer flying from London to Chicago until 27 July 2023, it'll be cheaper than that.
  17. And the relative merits of these routes depend on where exactly you are staying. Victoria Coach Station is about half a mile from Victoria Tube (especially if you're using the District Line), which is underneath the northern end of London Victoria mainline railway station. So if your hotel is (for example) the Clermont Victoria, which is actually in Victoria station, taking the National Express coach isn't the best route, because it leaves you with a long walk that would be entirely avoidable if you take the Tube. And the Tube is cheaper (even if you don't pay £5 extra to National Express for Change and Go). And you don't have to worry about picking a time.
  18. Does that mean that flying on Monday is out of the question? You don't say where you're heading, so it's difficult to know whether there truly are no decent alternative routings on Sunday.
  19. If the airline cancels a flight mid-travel and the travel is within the scope of Regulation 261/2004, it comes into play regardless of whether compensation is payable. 261/2004 is not only about paying compensation. It's actually principally about more important things than that, including an obligation to get you to your destination (if you still want to go there), and to make sure that you're fed, watered and housed in the interim. Too many people think that 261/2004 is just about paying out lottery wins.
  20. I suspect that what you see is Tottenham Court Road. Tottenham is a suburb of London about 6½ miles away from the British Museum, and the suburb has a reputation for being somewhere that you don't want to find yourself in by accident. Only using half of a road name can be risky.
  21. Buy separate tickets for a different Vancouver to Chicago flight, and throw away the NCL ticket.
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