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Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
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Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
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Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
On 24/10/2012 15:26, Barry Salter wrote: On 24/10/2012 15:08, d wrote: Unless its going to happen in the small hours how do they plan on keeping normal commuters off the platforms for the moments the train goes through? It's scheduled for Sunday 13th January 2013, with rumours of a repeat the following Sunday. 2013 will also see, amongst other things, the return of Steam on the Met over the Late Spring Bank Holiday weekend (25th to 27th May) and an Open Day at Neasden Depot (31st August). Good stuff - thanks for the info. Seems like the fragmented nature of LU under the infracos was to blame for the previous end of Steam on the Met. |
Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
Mizter T wrote:
On 24/10/2012 15:26, Barry Salter wrote: On 24/10/2012 15:08, d wrote: Unless its going to happen in the small hours how do they plan on keeping normal commuters off the platforms for the moments the train goes through? It's scheduled for Sunday 13th January 2013, with rumours of a repeat the following Sunday. 2013 will also see, amongst other things, the return of Steam on the Met over the Late Spring Bank Holiday weekend (25th to 27th May) and an Open Day at Neasden Depot (31st August). Good stuff - thanks for the info. Seems like the fragmented nature of LU under the infracos was to blame for the previous end of Steam on the Met. Yes, I think that's right: there was nothing in it for Metronet. |
Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
In message , at 15:18:11 on Wed, 24 Oct
2012, Mizter T remarked: So, like the Olympics, no real chance to buy one. What a surprise, a negative comment from Roland Perry. I was right royally screwed by the Olympics ticket ballot, and I'm sure I wasn't he only one. -- Roland Perry |
Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
On 24/10/2012 17:00, Roland Perry wrote: In message , at 15:18:11 on Wed, 24 Oct 2012, Mizter T remarked: So, like the Olympics, no real chance to buy one. What a surprise, a negative comment from Roland Perry. I was right royally screwed by the Olympics ticket ballot, and I'm sure I wasn't he only one. Did you get up at six in the morning along with half of the rest of the country when further tickets went on sale to those who weren;t successful in the initial ballot? Did you not take advantage of any of the further ticket sale releases, of which there were several? Also, IIRC, you didn't consider any of the 75% of tickets that were to events outside the Olympic Park to be proper Olympics tickets, unlike all the folk who went along and enjoyed these events. And did you consider tickets to the Paralympics instead, which was also a fantastic spectacle? A friend of mine also decided he had a chip on his shoulder when he didn't get any tickets in the initial ballot, and despite the fact I flagged up the subsequent sales to him he remained in a grump and didn't chase any of them up - when the Games got under way, he was rather gutted that he'd adopted such an intransigent attitude beforehand. Anyhow, a ballot is a ballot - not everyone gets what they want, that's the whole point, but grown ups don't then throw their toys out of the pram and adopt a status of victimhood. (And yes, part of that tone of irritation is an echo of that which I shared with my aforementioned friend.) |
Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
In message , at 17:37:48 on Wed, 24 Oct
2012, Mizter T remarked: I was right royally screwed by the Olympics ticket ballot, and I'm sure I wasn't he only one. Did you get up at six in the morning along with half of the rest of the country when further tickets went on sale to those who weren;t successful in the initial ballot? Did you not take advantage of any of the further ticket sale releases, of which there were several? I'd made other plans by then. And the timing of the extra ticket sales wasn't that obvious to me (even if it might have been to half of the rest of the population). Also, IIRC, you didn't consider any of the 75% of tickets that were to events outside the Olympic Park to be proper Olympics tickets, unlike all the folk who went along and enjoyed these events. The majority of the "outside the park" tickets were for football, so no thanks. And did you consider tickets to the Paralympics instead, which was also a fantastic spectacle? With hindsight, perhaps I could have done. But at the time of the original ticket ballot the Paralympics had a very low profile. Anyhow, a ballot is a ballot - not everyone gets what they want, that's the whole point Having applied for about six events, chosen over a range of days and prices, none of which were things like the 100m finals, I was a bit miffed not to get any at all. The ballot should have spread the tickets more evenly (for example, putting people at the back of the queue once they've got one set of tickets). -- Roland Perry |
Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
On Wed, 24 Oct 2012 17:37:48 +0100
Mizter T wrote: And did you consider tickets to the Paralympics instead, which was also a fantastic spectacle? You're joking , right? The paralympics were a slightly sad, slightly comical me-too event. The only people who took it seriously were the participants and the right-on media. And the viewing figures pretty much bear that out. A lot of the midly disabled atheletes who you can compared to the able bodied - for example there was a cyclist with a deformed hand - were barely of club level ability and shouldn't have been let anywhere near an olympic flame. The only reason there were there was because of their disability, not their ability. B2003 |
Steaming from Olympia to Moorgate
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