I appear to be snowed in. We have over a foot of snow, and it's still snowing. I have lost count of the number of times I have cleared our driveway of snow, only for several more inches to fall. Don't get me wrong, I like snow when I'm looking through my canon, but it's starting to get a little boring.
Yesterday, Monday, about 8 inches had fallen overnight. Fast. This kick-started the travel fun. What follows is a list of 'Several things which do not help commuters'. This has been compiled after just two days of rail travel. (I say travel in the loosest sense of the word, as it implies actually going somewhere)
- A website which informs us that there are no problems with the train services, when the trains are quite clearly broken.
- Saying the train is due in 2 minutes. Then moving it back 2 minutes. And again. And again. JUST TELL US THE TRAIN IS CANCELLED SO THAT WE CAN GO HOME!
- After 40 minutes waiting for a train that's apparently 2 minutes away, it does not help to send a train through the station without stopping. I don't care if it's a trans-pennine train, a train is a train; it's going the right way and so I should have been on it. I was not alone in shouting many swear words at said train as it whizzed past. This was the point where I realised that I wasn't getting in to town on Monday.
- "Customer Advisor Representatives" positioned at major train stations. They are not helpful in the slightest if they don't have any answers. "Go to platform 4 and wait on a train" is not a helpful answer.
- Where I live there are two train stations, one to the north of the town and one to the south. It does not help to tell us that the train to the south is cancelled AFTER a train went to the north 3 minutes ago. Then leave us sitting in the cold for an hour and a half before the next one.
- Telling us on a station announcement, and I quote "The trains are running to an, erm, special timetable."
Now I completely understand that the trains suffer as much as everything else, but my plea to ScotRail is TELL US WHAT'S GOING ON! So much hassle could have been avoided if we all knew when to (& not to) turn up at the station. The one part of today's journey which was pleasant was chatting to a lovely woman called Lorna, who shares similar views to myself. Thank you Lorna for making that journey so much more bearable.
One final point, why do so many arseholes drive impossibly close? It's bad enough in dry weather, but when there's a layer of solid ice between the tyres and tarmac? Some people astonish me.
Anyway I was able to requisition a laptop, my employer very cleverly operates a pool of laptops for situations such as this. The only slight problem is that my whole reason for borrowing it was to access network drives, but they don't work from home. Ah well, looks like I'm going to have to make to with what I was able to take a copy of before I dashed from the office to my non-existent train.
Anyway, I'm more than a little pleased that I'll get a lie-in until about 0845 tomorrow. If you're commuting I hope your journey is as painless as possible.