Sunday 12 July 2015

Underground...Overground....(Wombling Free)

So today Beth (CowHeartGirl) and I went on a walk around central London. The main reason for this is as training for the 26 mile Trekathon mum and me are undertaking in September. This Trekathon will be in aid of the Children’s Society (here) and in memory of my brother Kieran, who was tragically taken from us just under two years ago. As many of you who know me will understand, I’m not one to go into my emotions in public, and this is one of the few times I have/will openly talk about this.

Kieran was swimming (not really the right word, as only waist deep), in the sea with my dad whilst they, mum and sister were on holiday on the French Atlantic coast. They were about to come back to shore, when Kieran was taken by a rip current, and despite the best efforts of the French coastguard, police and lifeguards, he was only found three days later.  I was at home, as Beth was undergoing heart surgery at the time, and all I remember is being torn in two, needing and wanting to support Beth and be by her side, whilst also having the natural urge to go to an airport and get on a plane.

We decided at the time of Kieran’s funeral that the Children’s Society was the right charity for donations to go to as it represented his values of Bravery, Ambition, Trust & Supportiveness. Kieran always wanted to help others and we felt at the time, as we do now, that this charity, which helps children, summed up his attitude towards life. Mum and I have decided to do the London Trekathon this September to raise money for this great charity. If you can, please donate here.

So essentially I realised that I needed to go from less than a mile a day to 26 miles in a day in the space of 3 months. My training started this week, with me getting off the Circle line a stop early on Tuesday and walking from Mansion House to Southwark rather than just my usual walk across Blackfriars Bridge. Wednesday saw me get off at Canon Street and then also walk from Southwark back to Liverpool Street in the evening to avoid the crowds caused by the Tube strike.  However I realised that the pace needed to be upped otherwise it’d take me until next year to get up to the required level.

My inspiration came from a book a recently read by Mark Mason, called Walking the Lines: The London Underground, Overground. Mark had challenged himself to walk all of the London Underground lines, as the name suggests, overground. Well Mark had started off at a much higher level of physical fitness than myself and started with the Victoria line, but today Beth and I got on the train and headed into town to walk the ‘runt of the litter’ the Waterloo & City line.

This line was opened in 1898 enabling a connection from the London & South Western Railway (now Southwest Trains) terminal at Waterloo into the City of London. Operated from the outset by LSWR and its successors it was transferred to London Underground in 1994, with the trains remaining the in  the blue and white Network SouthEast livery until 2006.

So the plan today was to set off from Liverpool Street, walk to Bank and then continue following the rough geographical location of the line to Waterloo. This lead us down Old Broad Street and Threadneedle Street to Bank, where there is a monument to James Henry Greathead, the Chief Engineer of the City and South London Railway (now part of the Northern line) and the designer of the Travelling Shield, forerunner to today’s Tunnel Boring Machines.



We continued down Queen Victoria Street past Mansion House, the Millennium Bridge and Old Fish Street Hill (nothing of note, we just liked the name), and turned left at Blackfriars to cross the river. This route led us to the junction of Blackfriars Bridge Road and Stamford Street, at which there is a building designed to look as though it is upside down. Continuing down Stamford Street we passed the London Nautical School, established in 1915 as a consequence into the report into the loss of the Titanic. At the end of Stamford Street we reached the Waterloo Imax and Waterloo Station, the end of today’s ‘official’ walk.

We decided that as we were feeling okay, we’d carry on back towards Southwark station to grab a bite to eat and then take the route I had walked on Wednesday evening back to Liverpool Street. This route took us past Borough Market, across the ‘third’ London Bridge (the replacement for the one sold to American Robert McCulloch) and past the Monument (the point of which, if lain down pointing east, would reach the site where the Great Fire of London started in 1966.

Finally heading up Gracechurch Street and Bishopsgate, we arrived at Liverpool Street station for the second time today, having walked 5.31 miles at an average speed of 3.15mph (excluding the lunch break but including water breaks).

Although time won’t allow a walk next weekend, the aim is to walk from Kentish Town to Elephant & Castle and back to Liverpool Street the weekend after. This would cover the central section of Thameslink (not LU but an intermediate distance) and Tower Bridge on the way back.

Monday 11 May 2015

"It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried"

"It has been said that democracy is the worst form of government except all the others that have been tried" Winston Churchill

Since Thursday, there has been a lot of discussion of politics and on the whole, I have kept out of it. I have decided to do this one post as a vent and share the link. If people want to read it then great, if not then they either won't have got this far or you can choose to leave now. I am going to TRY and keep my personal opinions out of this as much as possible and the majority of this post will be facts and the dispelling of myths. I will however tell you how I voted. I obviously don't have to but I feel to try and make this post as open as possible I should. I am expecting for this post to have and cause debate, however I would appreciate it if we can keep said debate good natured.

In both the General Election and the Broxbourne local elections I voted Conservative. In the general it was essentially because I felt that David Cameron would be a better leader than Ed Miliband,  and I was concerned about a potential coalition with the SNP. In the local elections it was simply this....No other party bothered to tell me that they exist or that they had a candidate.

Right that's my personal bit over.

Since the results became clear (and for a long time before) there has been a debate over the voting system in this country. It is obvious that First Past the Post only really works in a 2 Party system, and that one of the many proportional methods would be better. The BBC has an article about the different methods here. The article is from just after the 2010 election but it does show how each of the different systems work.

On the topic of proportional representation, I've seen a lot of 'if we'd have had PR the result would have been different'. Firstly it's worth pointing out that the same voting public (well about 2/3rds) that voted in this election voted against a form of proportional representation in 2011 by more that a 2:1 ratio.

My main point is this though. ..Yes, the result would have been different.  What I'll let you decide is whether 'different' would have been 'better' based on the below. A word of warning, I don't know the source of the below graphic apart from it was on a friend's Facebook and it's on imgur,  so I'm taking it with a pinch of salt.

GRAPHIC

This shows that the Conservatives wouldn't have a majority but would still be the largest party. By being the largest party and also being the incumbent, David Cameron would have the right to try and form a coalition first, according to cabinet office rules

The first party David Cameron would probably look at going into coalition with in this instance would be UKIP as they are also a conservative (little c) party. From my calculations this would give a total of 324 seats (242 CON + 82 UKIP). Although this wouldn't reach the theoretical majority of 326, it would reach the working majority of 324 (assuming 4 SF seats). If you add 4 DUP MPs to the figure it would create a coalition with 328 seats and a very slim majority of 2 seats.

If Ed Miliband had attempted to form a coalition based on these n0umbers then he'd probably start with the Lib Dems. This would give a total of 249 (198 LAB + 51 LIB). Next would be the SNP (despite what he promised during the election) and Greens bringing the total number of MPs to 304. Even if you throw in Plaid, TUSC, Alliance and 'others' then a Labour led coalition would still only have 315, 9 short of a working majority. There are 7 seats missing from the graphic which I am assuming 4 SF and 3 UUP.

Therefore under this scenario (obviously other forms of PR may have has different results) we would have ended up with a Conservative led coalition supported by UKIP and the DUP.

The second thing that keeps cropping up is THIS photo and allegations that this was on Friday/Saturday.  To clarify the photo was taken in 2004 prior to the Blair administration's reelection. To ensure a fair and balanced point, I must note that there has been a Champagne delivery to Downing Street over the past few days, but as The i points out "it’s Bollinger rather than Moet".

Another thing I keep seeing is "The Conservatives got a majority when 75% of the voting public didn't vote for them, what mandate do they have?". This is correct, however more of the population voted for them than anyone else, therefore they have more of a mandate than any other party. If we list the parties in order of percentage that DIDN'T vote for them we get this

Conservative - 74.99%
Labour - 79.38%
UKIP - 91.44%
Lib Dems - 94.67%
SNP - 96.79%
Green - 97.45%

The last election to have a party form a government after gaining MORE than 50% if the vote was in 1935 when the Conservative party won 53.5% of the vote. Even then turnout was only 71.1% so they got the vote of 11.76 million out of approximately 30.92 million registered voters. In other words 61.97% DIDN'T vote for them.

Unfortunately not everyone is, was or will ever be happy with whatever result a general election throws at us. We can't choose how other people vote, what we can choose is to respect everyone's right to vote, everyone's freedom to speech and everyone's right to a private life. So however you voted, remember that person who voted the other way is a person too, not an animal.

N.B. If you want to know where any of my numbers/stats came from then please just ask.

Saturday 11 April 2015

Stand on the Right! Please!

So once again I'm blogging whilst travelling on a train. I don't know why it's my blogging place, prehaps because there's nothing else to do for 2 hours. Anyway, as you know I tend to blog about's what's on my mind and unfortunately what's been on my mind are inconsiderate commuters! There are only 5 very simple rules to follow, which are very unlikely to delay you and possibly even get you there sooner!

1) Let people off the train first! You'd think this was obvious, but clearly not. If you don't let people off the train there isn't any chance of you getting on it (especially during rush hour). Therefore standing six wide infront of the doors trying to get on first is not helpful!

2) Walk on the left/stand on the right! If everyone drove on which ever side of the road they fancied it would cause aboslute chaos! So what happens if you walk on the right when most people are walking on the left....aboslute chaos! This applies to walking around stations and on escaltors. Follow the rules and everyone moves around much quicker!

3) Move down the platform! If you stop as soon as you enter the platform then about 5 people will be able to get onto the next train. Okay moving down the platform may mean you're not right next to the exit at your station but you might actually get on the first train as opposed to having to wait for four to come and go!

4) Don't run for a train! Firstly for safety! There are way too many incidents of people running into closed doors etc. Secondly the next train (on the underground atleast) is probably within 90 seconds! Waiting for 90 seconds isn't going to delay you much and it might save your face (and dignity!)

5) Mind the doors! The 'beeps' are NOT a starting gun! Once again safety is an issue here, getting body parts trapped in doors can result in a trip to hospital (with 4 hours waits at A&E, it's quicker to wait for the next train). Also you forcing yourself through the doors delays everyone else on that train, and every train behind you.

Okay, rant over! I promise it's not hard to follow these and by doing so you might well get home sooner! Also remember you may well be stuck on the train delayed in a tunnel because someone at the station ahead has held the doors!

Tuesday 3 February 2015

"Shift work dulls your brain"

Okay so if the quote above is correct, it explains a lot! I've been doing shift work since I turned 18 and late finishes since I was 16. As I am currently sitting on the lovely Greater Anglia train (please not high levels of sarcasm - but that's a different story) on my commute in to work, I thought that I'd give you my thoughts on shift work.

So it's 5.45 in the morning and i've already been up for nearly 2 hours (oh the joys that alarm clock brings!). I've got to say that on the whole I don't mind NOT doing 9-5, in fact there are quite a few benefits....

Firstly is that with shift times of 6-2, 2-10 and 10-6, I am never commuting during rush hour (actually we'll go with 'peak time' because at best I think rush hour lasts for 3 hours these days). This means I can always get a seat and (especially important when in uniform) I am less likely to get glares from unhappy commuters.

Secondly, 2/3rds of the time I am able to have a lie in! I have never been a morning person, so I've got to admit that the earlies are a bit horrible, however not having to be up until 11 when I'm on lates is bliss!

Finally is that my rest days are not necessarily weekends. Okay this can be a bit of a double edged sword, especially with us doing SK events some weekends, however it can be extremely beneficial. It allows me to sort things out like going to the bank or phoning the council. Simple tasks admittedly, but I'm sure that you'll agree, a pain to do when you work 9-5.

So there's my opinion on shifts and i'll write a post in a couple of days regarding what i've been up to (I know it's been ages...sorry!)

Oh and if anyone is interested the title quote comes from the following BBC article.
http://m.bbc.co.uk/news/health-29879521