Great to relive my bus journey from where I worked, the pharmacy where the bus stop is, to where I lived, off Gloucester Rd. I was there from 1987 to 89, on a working holiday from New Zealand. The bus route was No. 74 then and it went on to Baker Street. Thanks for the memory. Barry😅 Ps. It was actually quicker to get the tube to Hammersmith and then a 72 to Roehampton, but the 74 have me time to read the paper.
No, I think it's quite universal. Tram drivers, truck/lorry drivers, and other professional drivers wave to each other or flash their lights. Professional courtesy to greet a colleague on the road. Ordinary road users do it as well to say thank you if you stop to let them cross your line to get them out of the traffic.
Good time of day, suited the camera and nicely captured the changing suburbs. But the first 10 mins was a bit of a white knuckle ride with pedestrians making some dodgy decisions and frankly near-suicidal motorbike delivery riders.
It's a good video but who enjoys waiting in traffic? It is as frustrating for the viewer as it is in reality. Stopping filming at bus stops of which there are many, and traffic lights, then resuming when the bus moves off gets rid of the problem. It is easy and makes a big difference.
From your comment, one could easily assume you never use the buses or roads. Bus stops, traffic lights and delays are an inseparable part of bus travel. These are opportunities to look at life outside the bus window. Be thankful you're not the driver.
Then there wouldn't be much left of the ride. Utilize the stops and pauses to observe the ambiance and life on the street, the pedestrians, cars, and buildings and maybe discover this week's bargain offer in one of the shops. There are lots of things to look at when the bus isn't moving. Don't be a wet blanket!
Oh I agree, travelling by bus anywhere in London is impossible. It really is quicker to walk. It's all deliberate, the traffic lights are designed to make driving as slow as possible. And even though they all have these Oyster cards and gizmos these days it boarding seems to take longer than ever
Always your videos are so wonderful. Great content
Great to relive my bus journey from where I worked, the pharmacy where the bus stop is, to where I lived, off Gloucester Rd. I was there from 1987 to 89, on a working holiday from New Zealand. The bus route was No. 74 then and it went on to Baker Street. Thanks for the memory.
Barry😅
Ps. It was actually quicker to get the tube to Hammersmith and then a 72 to Roehampton, but the 74 have me time to read the paper.
Finally a trip from the outskirts of a big city! Wonderful green neighbourhoods! ❤
Nice bus ride 😎
Thank for the awesome ride 😎 🙌
This brig back memory, know the route well as I used to work around the Putney area - not much has changed around the Danebury Avenue area
Thx for sharing video
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️
رحلة تجول بالحافلة روعة جدآ مناظر شوارع طبيعة انا استمتعت بهذا الفيديو شكرآ جزيلآ 🌝🌹✨
Can not wait
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️💯💯👑👑
Putney high street changed so much since I worked in putney in the seventies. Pubs all gone😢
👍👍👍👍
nice ride!
Great bus ride. There is something about London at dusk. Thank you. 🥰
You mean sunset
Wonderful journey! Can you please do one last journey on the 11 (Fulham-bound) before it changes on Saturday? That would be awesome:)
What a generous way to share your memories with us! Thank you for recording this journey!
Beautiful journey! Can you please do route 20? It is in the far Northeast of London.
Bus drivers greet each other. I thought that such a phenomenon was common only among Ukrainian drivers of commercial minibuses.
No, I think it's quite universal. Tram drivers, truck/lorry drivers, and other professional drivers wave to each other or flash their lights. Professional courtesy to greet a colleague on the road. Ordinary road users do it as well to say thank you if you stop to let them cross your line to get them out of the traffic.
Another cracking recording. Thank you as always for your work.
🚍🇬🇧❤️
What camera are you using? Thank you
Good time of day, suited the camera and nicely captured the changing suburbs. But the first 10 mins was a bit of a white knuckle ride with pedestrians making some dodgy decisions and frankly near-suicidal motorbike delivery riders.
Lethal moped learner rider at 8.05. Should forward this to the Police before he causes serious injury or death.
It's a good video but who enjoys waiting in traffic? It is as frustrating for the viewer as it is in reality. Stopping filming at bus stops of which there are many, and traffic lights, then resuming when the bus moves off gets rid of the problem. It is easy and makes a big difference.
From your comment, one could easily assume you never use the buses or roads. Bus stops, traffic lights and delays are an inseparable part of bus travel. These are opportunities to look at life outside the bus window. Be thankful you're not the driver.
@@brucewilliams8714 I am thankful you are not Wanderizm
Then there wouldn't be much left of the ride. Utilize the stops and pauses to observe the ambiance and life on the street, the pedestrians, cars, and buildings and maybe discover this week's bargain offer in one of the shops. There are lots of things to look at when the bus isn't moving. Don't be a wet blanket!
Oh I agree, travelling by bus anywhere in London is impossible. It really is quicker to walk. It's all deliberate, the traffic lights are designed to make driving as slow as possible. And even though they all have these Oyster cards and gizmos these days it boarding seems to take longer than ever
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️👑👑👑👑🔔🔔🔔🔔🔔🔔🤩🤩🤩🤩♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️🤩🤩