MossCommuter
Guru
- Location
- Salford
What happens if you turn up for a train (with your bicycle) only to find a replacement bus service in operation?
Just wondering
Just wondering
Well if the train had specific bike storage facilities, then a bus should too. The alternative should always have the same facilities and features that the normal service would have (i.e. disabled facilities mainly).
I'm guessing it will be too far for MossyI seem to remember someone I know telling me that she and a friend got stranded when this happened once but they both had bike reservations, and she made such a terrible fuss the station manager called a people-carrier cab for them both and their bikes to honour their tickets. Sometimes the journey is too long for people to cycle; it does depend what they've already done that day and what distances they're used to doing.
Scotrail is different, they even operate a bike recovery service in conjunction with ETADepends on what type of bus is doing the replacement service I think. I was waiting for a train at a small station a couple of years ago, when a bus pulled up. Driver asked if I was waiting for a train, and then told me they were not running. I put my bike in the boot, and off we went. No-one ever asked me for a ticket, and I didn't have one as I had cycled from home to the place I was picked up! (Before anyone gets overly concerned about my fraud, it was an unmanned station and the bus driver didn't have the facility to sell tickets).
On the odd occasion I have had to use a replacement bus and I have had my bike, I haven't had a problem getting the bike on the bus. Maybe I have just been lucky, or maybe Scotrail stipulate that any company tendering for the contract must be able to transport bikes too?