Thursday should have been a typical work day. Worship practice at Wood Green is on Thursdays so Jodi will usually bring Alexa home so they can bake something- and I never complain about that. Last Thursday, however, I wasn't needed at rehearsal so we decided to go to Chipotle in Oxford Street for dinner with the Boundless 8 and a new guy from the International Audit Department, Jonas. After dinner Jodi and I went to Starbucks with Alexa and Cameron where we chatted until about 7:30. We took the Victoria line to Brixton as usual but when we came out of the station, we saw that our bus was already at the stop on the next block. We ran to the bus and got there as the last two people in the queue were boarding. The driver, however, didn't think our sprint was worthy of his time and he closed the door before we could get on. We ended up having to take three buses to get home. Stress.
Friday we decided to have an impromptu family dinner, which ended up actually being most-of-the-family dessert. We stopped at Denmark Hill, where the others live, because some of them wanted to change before heading to our house. The bus ride from Denmark Hill to Upper Norwood is usually about 30 minutes. For some reason, on Friday it was 75. Strike two, London transport. Strike two.
Saturday was both fantastic and awful. We had decided a few months earlier to help out our territory at the Camp America job fair here in London so they had more people to operate the booths and didn't have to send as many from the States. But this meant waking up at 5:30 for me and Jodi. We usually wake up at 5 for work, though, so it wasn't terrible. The commute there was easy, too, so all was well. For a while. The fair itself was a lot of fun- it made me miss working at camp but we were able to find some quality staff members for several camps in the West. After the fair we started home but only made it halfway. Trains to our neighborhood were all cancelled because of a "problem on the tracks". We managed to make it a few more stops on another line but then got stuck in New Cross Gate. I still have no idea where New Cross Gate is. Fortunately, we have apps that tell us what to do in these situations but the bus route it put us on took us right into the heart of the only area in London we were told to never visit at night. And it was definitely after dark. We never actually felt in danger but we've also walked the streets of Tunis with armed military police (as in M16 armed) so we are considerably more seasoned travelers than we used to be. Ha. Yeah right. Anyway, we got on the wrong bus, switched back to the right one, transferred to our homebound bus, and then finally made it home 90 minutes later. Strike three, London transport.
By Sunday transport had already struck out so we were good to go... or not. We got to church fine and after church we had a lovely lunch and chat with some new friends from the corps. They also lived conveniently close to a National Rail Station that could get us all the way home with only one transfer at King's Cross! We made it to King's Cross just fine but when we checked the prompter, there was not a single southbound train leaving the station. Now, King's Cross is not exactly a small station by any standard. There are 27 platforms if you count the international platforms and NONE of them were going south. We live in the south. We decided to take the Victoria line (one of six tube lines through KC) to Brixton again, despite the poor luck we had with it two days before. The bus driver was insanely fast this time, which kind of made up for the whole we-aren't-sending-any-trains-through-Farringdon fiasco.
On Monday we were back to our typical travel schedule. No more weekend random maintenance and closures, no more transport issues. We got to our train station and when we got to the platform noticed that they were still announcing issues with Farringdon. A few minutes later, a Tulse Hill employee came onto the platform to tell us there weren't any trains going into London from our platform. This wasn't the end of the world... there is one other platform that goes into London. When we got to that one, however, the train due to arrive at 5:56 wasn't there yet. It was 6:45. It ended up coming only 5 minutes later so we weren't delayed by much but we still had to walk about a mile to work when we got into the city. Fun times.
Today's travels were normal and only one train was a little late. While these situations were all pretty terrible, they are usually few and far between. I'm just funnier when I'm annoyed at something. This week should be good as far as transport goes but there's snow in the forecast for Thursday which the trains dislike...
We didn't take any photos this week but here's a tube and rail map!