trainman74
Conductor
Heh, jis got his trip report posted before I managed to finish writing this one, even though my trip was before his...
Toward the beginning of this year, I noticed that the dollar-to-pound exchange rate was a lot better than it was the last time I went to the U.K. Although I traveled to a lot of places in Scotland on a trip with friends in 2014, the only places I'd been in England are London and the National Railway Museum in York, and I'd never been to Wales. So I already had the idea of a trip around England and Wales in the back of my mind - and then in February, I saw on Twitter that United was having a one-day sale on tickets to London, so I picked a week at the end of the valid dates, made my flight reservations for May 6th through 14th, and started planning.
I decided to make a clockwise loop of the country, spending one night in Cardiff, two nights in Liverpool (with a Beatles tour as the main activity), two nights in Leeds (primarily to ride the Settle-Carlisle Line), and two nights in London (primarily to experience Mail Rail).
With the aid of a spreadsheet, given all the trains I planned on riding, I figured out that my best option was to get a BritRail pass for unlimited travel. (Buying Advance tickets for individual trains might have been cheaper, but I didn't want to be locked in to specific departures, and the BritRail pass was definitely cheaper than buying individual Anytime or Off-Peak tickets would have been.)
I discovered somewhere that it was possible to book seat reservations online for any operator's trains via the GWR website, so I made reservations for a few trains that I thought I might take.
Shortly before my trip, it was announced that there would be rail strikes on May 12th and 13th, so I had to switch my plans a bit (more on this below).
Sunday, May 7th
My flight arrived into Heathrow Terminal 2 about 30 minutes early, at 6:55 A.M. After a long walk to immigration, about 10 minutes in line for the automated gates there, and then a long walk to the Terminals 2 & 3 train station, I made it onto Heathrow Express at 8:02 A.M. -- included in the BritRail pass.
The Heathrow Express arrived at Paddington Station about 20 minutes later, and the GWR 8:33 A.M. departure for points west was a few platforms over. I actually had a seat reservation on the 10:43 A.M. train, but this one had plenty of vacant seats.
The train arrived in Cardiff pretty much on time, and I was able to check into my hotel at about 11:00 A.M. I spent the afternoon at Cardiff Castle and at the nearby National Museum of Wales where there was a special exhibit on the BBC's 100th anniversary of service to Wales. For dinner, I went to several places looking for a traditional Sunday roast, but they were either too crowded or were sold out of their roasts, so I gave up and had traditional pub food.
Escalator at Heathrow Terminal 2 - it's a long underground walk from here to the actual train station
GWR trains at Paddington (with Heathrow Express in background)
Very specific bilingual warning sign at Cardiff Central Station
Cardiff Central Station
Toward the beginning of this year, I noticed that the dollar-to-pound exchange rate was a lot better than it was the last time I went to the U.K. Although I traveled to a lot of places in Scotland on a trip with friends in 2014, the only places I'd been in England are London and the National Railway Museum in York, and I'd never been to Wales. So I already had the idea of a trip around England and Wales in the back of my mind - and then in February, I saw on Twitter that United was having a one-day sale on tickets to London, so I picked a week at the end of the valid dates, made my flight reservations for May 6th through 14th, and started planning.
I decided to make a clockwise loop of the country, spending one night in Cardiff, two nights in Liverpool (with a Beatles tour as the main activity), two nights in Leeds (primarily to ride the Settle-Carlisle Line), and two nights in London (primarily to experience Mail Rail).
With the aid of a spreadsheet, given all the trains I planned on riding, I figured out that my best option was to get a BritRail pass for unlimited travel. (Buying Advance tickets for individual trains might have been cheaper, but I didn't want to be locked in to specific departures, and the BritRail pass was definitely cheaper than buying individual Anytime or Off-Peak tickets would have been.)
I discovered somewhere that it was possible to book seat reservations online for any operator's trains via the GWR website, so I made reservations for a few trains that I thought I might take.
Shortly before my trip, it was announced that there would be rail strikes on May 12th and 13th, so I had to switch my plans a bit (more on this below).
Sunday, May 7th
My flight arrived into Heathrow Terminal 2 about 30 minutes early, at 6:55 A.M. After a long walk to immigration, about 10 minutes in line for the automated gates there, and then a long walk to the Terminals 2 & 3 train station, I made it onto Heathrow Express at 8:02 A.M. -- included in the BritRail pass.
The Heathrow Express arrived at Paddington Station about 20 minutes later, and the GWR 8:33 A.M. departure for points west was a few platforms over. I actually had a seat reservation on the 10:43 A.M. train, but this one had plenty of vacant seats.
The train arrived in Cardiff pretty much on time, and I was able to check into my hotel at about 11:00 A.M. I spent the afternoon at Cardiff Castle and at the nearby National Museum of Wales where there was a special exhibit on the BBC's 100th anniversary of service to Wales. For dinner, I went to several places looking for a traditional Sunday roast, but they were either too crowded or were sold out of their roasts, so I gave up and had traditional pub food.
Escalator at Heathrow Terminal 2 - it's a long underground walk from here to the actual train station
GWR trains at Paddington (with Heathrow Express in background)
Very specific bilingual warning sign at Cardiff Central Station
Cardiff Central Station