Jump to content

Recommended Posts



True, but I tend to find the more changes I make on a journey the more prone to going downhill it is


Narnia, I sympathise. I don't think there is any easy way to get to or from hammesrmith. What about the overground from Clapham Junction to Shep Bush and then a walk/bus hop to hammersmith?

Narnia Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Is there a quicker way to get there by public

> transport apart from going into Victoria anyone,

> please?


narnia - I needed to know the answer to this exact question for last Friday morning for my brother and I was told by an old ED-ite that the quickest way by public transport would be via 185 to Victoria then tube.


He ended up getting the train to London Bridge from ED then tube and made it in enough time for a 9.30 meeting, after leaving the house (nr the CPT) at 8.15.

SeanMacGabhann Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> I see your friends take the same attitude to

> punctuality that you do Katie. ;-)


Sean, first, I laughed :)) but now I am :-$


yes, narnia, it is probably advisable to leave the house earlier than that to get to Hammersmith (yes, it was my fault he didn't have enough time to get the 185)

I used to get the District Line to work in Chelsea and never found a quicker way than walk and bus to Peckham Rye (30 mins from my part of ED), train to Victoria (15 minutes) tube to Sloane Square, walk to work. Door to door 55 mins. So I'd add another 10 minutes on if I were going to Hammersmith.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • PCSOs may not need specific qualifications, but they go through a reasonably rigorous recruitment process. Or at least they used to. It may have changed.
    • The ones I've dropped into may be organised by PCSOs in the SNT but regular PCs have attended. They have actually been a cuppa with a copper, but not necessarily loads of them. 
    • @Pereira Neves "Cuppa with a Coppa" is a misrepresentation as PCSOs are not real police.   They have no more powers of arrest that any public citizen. They may have the "authority" to advise the regular police of a crime - just like Joe Public. One exception is that they can issue fixed penalty notices to people who cycle on a footpath. We see people cycling on the footpath every day but have never seen a PCSO issue a fixed penalty notice to anybody. No  qualifications are needed to become a PCSO.  At best, all they do is reassure and advise the public with platitudes.      
    • Right.  Already too many people saying “labour pushed for longer and more stringent lockdowns” which if nothing else, does seem to give credence the notion that yes people can be brainwashed    Nothing ...  Nothing Labour pushed for was about longer lockdowns.  Explicitly, and very clearly they said “lock down early OR we will be locking down for longer “   ie they were trying to prevent the longer lockdowns we had   But “positive thinking” and “nothing to see here” from Johnson led to bigger problems    as for the hand-wavery about the economic inheritance and markets being spooked by labour budget - look - things did get really really and under last government and they tried to hide it.  So when someone tries to address it, no one is going to be happy.  But pretending all was tickety boo is a child’s response 
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...