As someone who is visiting high wycombe from Birmingham moor street, for a theatre show in June, what are the chances there will be disruption as duo lipo will be performing in Wembley the same weekend?
You'll be fine, concerts are generally a bit more relaxed in terms of arrangements with just extra Wembley calls in existing schedules typically.
Agree. The thing with this was that there would be very high demand *specifically from Birmingham* because City were playing. Concerts tend to draw from a much more spread-out area.
People moan about bustitution, but this is another level. the industry clearly has precedent now for any service to be summarily abandoned all day without substitution anywhere in the country at short notice due to an event in another part of the country concerned with a sport or entertainment I have no interest or involvement with, and to cap it all they don't even have to announce it on the national rail website. If the practice becomes more widespread, rail effectively becomes unusable at weekends.
A strike can as easily do that. Indeed I know of one (1) case of that being done for sport - this one - whereas there have been a lot of strikes over the years and usually on weekends too, plus unreliable voluntary Sunday services.
I don't think it was at short notice, was it? We just didn't get it reported here until quite late.
I don't, on balance, agree with the approach that was taken, but I think this can be overtalked in terms of its actual significance.
In times bygone, I believe this is where BR would have laid on a "footex". You'd have thought a charter operator could fill in this void quite nicely but, of course, no one wants to foot the bill.
Avanti and LNER have both laid on "footexes" in the past. There are two key differences between those two and Chiltern, though. One is that Chiltern is not a "long trains" operator and has a relatively limited number of short DMUs to play with, while LNER and Avanti have lots of very long trains (the 11 car Pendolino being the longest non-Sleeper domestic passenger train). Plus LNER and Avanti (particularly the former) have quite expensive walk-up fares and fake compulsory reservations so have the ability to price people around and off completely as well as putting up "sold out" as a dissuader, so can control how many are likely to show up, whereas Chiltern have low walk-up fares, no reservations and very few Advances, so they don't have that ability.