I've been driving to work recently, now that I found out I have somewhere safe park. Do like my reserved spot?
Actually, no, I haven't been given a huge bonus (this photo was taken in Switzerland, not London). Instead, the company who manage the office at work have announced that there are two parking bays in the car park reserved and free for use just for bikes - the motorbike kind, not the pedal kind.
This is a bit of a surprise as I'm sure we asked a year or two back and were told we'd have to pay.
Anyway, now that summer is finally here and I can leave my bike safe in the knowledge it will be there when I return, I can arrive and leave at times that suit me and save a bit of money too, rather than relying on the trains all the time.
EDIT: I wrote the above last night and was thinking about it again while riding in this morning: I realised that, if anything, driving is actually more expensive than the train. A weekly train ticket costs something like £92 - call it a round £19 a day. Driving costs £13 a day in petrol, tyres add maybe £8 a day (really! A pair costs nearly £300 and will last possibly 4000 miles, which is about 35 daily commutes), while general servicing and wear and tear add even more. Who would've thought the train would be the cheaper option?
Actually, no, I haven't been given a huge bonus (this photo was taken in Switzerland, not London). Instead, the company who manage the office at work have announced that there are two parking bays in the car park reserved and free for use just for bikes - the motorbike kind, not the pedal kind.
This is a bit of a surprise as I'm sure we asked a year or two back and were told we'd have to pay.
Anyway, now that summer is finally here and I can leave my bike safe in the knowledge it will be there when I return, I can arrive and leave at times that suit me and save a bit of money too, rather than relying on the trains all the time.
EDIT: I wrote the above last night and was thinking about it again while riding in this morning: I realised that, if anything, driving is actually more expensive than the train. A weekly train ticket costs something like £92 - call it a round £19 a day. Driving costs £13 a day in petrol, tyres add maybe £8 a day (really! A pair costs nearly £300 and will last possibly 4000 miles, which is about 35 daily commutes), while general servicing and wear and tear add even more. Who would've thought the train would be the cheaper option?
5 comments:
~Allocution Dave Licence~
It seems my comment in the article below is just as suitable for this article. Clearly an alternative transportation and energy source is required.
Who wouldda thunk? Long time no hear, Dave. Miss ya. Keep in touch mate.
Howdy old friend?
Were they waiting for me to quit before allowing motorbike parking at CP? sigh!
Are you riding the golden chariot (!!) or your super bike to work these days?
£13 a day? Are you about 50 miles away from Central London?!
by the way - did you guys execute the ride-across-Europe project?
k
SB - hiya! Not seen you on Skype for ages! You not using it anymore?
KK! Hello. The Golden Steed is gone - sold for export to Poland as I wasn't using it much. So it's the GSX-R now. 110 miles a day is £13 petrol at the current prices.
D
I would have thought that a motorbike would be cheaper than the train, not a car though.
It is getting more expensive for motorbikes now that the city of westminster is charging £1.50 for their motorcycle parking spaces.
Shola
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