Far more relaxing than doing the driving yourself. Great quality video footage, shot on a lovely day in London. The exterior to Victoria Station has improved a great deal from when I last saw it.
Very good, amazing driving skills from the bus drivers, squeezing through such bottle necks. I would be getting out constantly checking for clearances.
Great, again. Thank you. At 26.50 is that green shed in the middle of the street a rest stop for taxi drivers? It reminds me of crew change shelters we had for our Melbourne tram crews.
Really enjoying vicariously travelling streets of one of my favourite cities in the world through your channel. But the questions been nagging me about the bus stops themselves. I noted on the top of the bus stop pulled there is a red roundel with usually a white letter or two. What is the purpose for meaning for this roundel? For the life of me I can’t discover a pattern. Thank you
😊 Hello, Kevin! Those red roundels are linked to a local area route map and which services stop there. They help travellers to follow their journeys more clearly.
@@sirmeowthelibrarycat Doug the Cat says thanks...is there a pattern with the letters they contain? Or, how can they tell which service stops there since the letters change every stop? And, by local area route map do you mean the bus route map or multi-mode transport area maps? yes, too many questions...Thanks...
@@kvncrw 😊 Hello, Kevin! The red roundels appear on a map at the bus stop. The map shows a certain area in the district with every stop indicated. The locations are listed at one side of the map with the roundels for the route as well. Example: City Airport C F J R (in red). Where a lot of roundels appear some have two letters, eg DF (in red). Example: City Hospital FG, H L M S. I should add that many newer bus shelters have the location name printed on the side of the roof. Plus there are on-board auditory and visual announcements naming the service and the destination. And each stop is named separately. Listen and look out for that next time you watch one of these videos. The whole system is most efficient. A similar system operates on the railways as well. PS. When buses had drivers who drove and conductors who conducted passengers, most of the above was done by said conductors. I remember those days well 😊!
@@sirmeowthelibrarycat Thank you so much, Sir. That helps a lot. Memories of our last visit to London... we stayed near Blackwall terminus and took the 15(?) to Trafalgar Square...always from the top front of the DD, of course. Love this channel and the folks who watch it... ta.
I noticed how as you move away from the centre of town to the outer parts, the areas look more and more deprived and badly maintained . Litter and street clutter is an ever increasing problem.
Not necessarily. In this video, his trip ended at Willesdon. Willesdon, and its next Harlesdon, have had the reputation of being ghettos. In fact, long ago, among worst parts of London. However even there, the high streets (main shopping streets) appear somewhat littered. The residential streets are actually in good shape. There are many areas far away from central London that are quite wealthy and well-maintained.
Great video. Thanks for sharing 👍😀
Far more relaxing than doing the driving yourself. Great quality video footage, shot on a lovely day in London. The exterior to Victoria Station has improved a great deal from when I last saw it.
Thoroughly enjoyed the ride. Thank you so much for sharing😎
Great for relaxing. I find public buses footage are a great way to calm down =)
Thank you very much
Enjoy hearing the differing tunes at the very start of your videos. Very in keeping with the video.
Waw...amazing , beautiful
Awesome experience for me to watch this beautiful video
What a wonderful video footage double bus ride. Awesome and excellent beautiful sunny day London England. 🌞 🇬🇧 🚌
these videos make me feel so calm i love them
Fantastic video ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ I love the red buses and taxis Fantastic buildings .
Very good, amazing driving skills from the bus drivers, squeezing through such bottle necks. I would be getting out constantly checking for clearances.
Thank you! 💜
Good morning London happy Friday
Wonderfull
Beautiful video 👌
Incredible and amazing and so very enjoyable. Great job! :)
26:47 What a gorgeous little corner with the church and stuff!
I enjoyed your video 🤩 awesome..👍
Greetings from Spain ❤💛❤
Beautiful
Nice ride. Keep up the goood work 👍
Wonderul area covered by Wanderizm! Perfect!!!
Fab tour 🤩
How does bus icon move on the map? Is this option available on Google map? Thanks
Good morning 😊
Great route 👍
Great, again. Thank you.
At 26.50 is that green shed in the middle of the street a rest stop for taxi drivers? It reminds me of crew change shelters we had for our Melbourne tram crews.
😊 Yes, you are correct about the cab shelters.
🇬🇧 Thank you for the videos 🇺🇲
Dear Wanderizm! What type of camera do you record this amazing video with?
Really enjoying vicariously travelling streets of one of my favourite cities in the world through your channel. But the questions been nagging me about the bus stops themselves. I noted on the top of the bus stop pulled there is a red roundel with usually a white letter or two. What is the purpose for meaning for this roundel? For the life of me I can’t discover a pattern. Thank you
😊 Hello, Kevin! Those red roundels are linked to a local area route map and which services stop there. They help travellers to follow their journeys more clearly.
@@sirmeowthelibrarycat Doug the Cat says thanks...is there a pattern with the letters they contain? Or, how can they tell which service stops there since the letters change every stop? And, by local area route map do you mean the bus route map or multi-mode transport area maps? yes, too many questions...Thanks...
@@kvncrw 😊 Hello, Kevin! The red roundels appear on a map at the bus stop. The map shows a certain area in the district with every stop indicated. The locations are listed at one side of the map with the roundels for the route as well. Example: City Airport C F J R (in red). Where a lot of roundels appear some have two letters, eg DF (in red). Example: City Hospital FG, H L M S. I should add that many newer bus shelters have the location name printed on the side of the roof. Plus there are on-board auditory and visual announcements naming the service and the destination. And each stop is named separately. Listen and look out for that next time you watch one of these videos. The whole system is most efficient. A similar system operates on the railways as well.
PS. When buses had drivers who drove and conductors who conducted passengers, most of the above was done by said conductors. I remember those days well 😊!
@@sirmeowthelibrarycat Thank you so much, Sir. That helps a lot. Memories of our last visit to London... we stayed near Blackwall terminus and took the 15(?) to Trafalgar Square...always from the top front of the DD, of course. Love this channel and the folks who watch it... ta.
It's almost as good as doing it yourself but I like to lick the windows and wave.
The 52 must have 13m Man Lion's City DDs operated by Metroline! 🇬🇧
Nice video, I use this route all the time - from Kensington Church Street all the way thru to Sainsbury on Ladbroke Grove
I noticed how as you move away from the centre of town to the outer parts, the areas look more and more deprived and badly maintained . Litter and street clutter is an ever increasing problem.
Not necessarily. In this video, his trip ended at Willesdon. Willesdon, and its next Harlesdon, have had the reputation of being ghettos. In fact, long ago, among worst parts of London. However even there, the high streets (main shopping streets) appear somewhat littered. The residential streets are actually in good shape. There are many areas far away from central London that are quite wealthy and well-maintained.
@@JohnDoe-mt7ws still looks dumpy to me....glad I left...
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