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A bit of banter on the buses | Letters

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Readers recall moments of spontaneous humour between passengers and staff on public transportOn the subject of getting trains to Speke and buses to Jump (Letters, 10 June), I remember an alarming experience when, as a child, I was allowed to catch a train home through East Anglia on my own for the first time. Realising too late that I had boarded the wrong train, I asked the conductor what to do, and was informed that I wouldn’t be able to get off until March. This happened in November and I...

Readers recall moments of spontaneous humour between passengers and staff on public transport

On the subject of getting trains to Speke and buses to Jump (Letters, 10 June), I remember an alarming experience when, as a child, I was allowed to catch a train home through East Anglia on my own for the first time. Realising too late that I had boarded the wrong train, I asked the conductor what to do, and was informed that I wouldn’t be able to get off until March. This happened in November and I only had a packed lunch with me.
Ben Howison
Limpley Stoke, Wiltshire

• As a bus driver in Belfast during the 1970s, I was always grateful for the opportunity, when asked “Does this bus go over the Albert Bridge?”, to be able to reply “Well, if it doesn’t there’ll be a hell of a splash.”
Dugald McCullough
Newcastle, County Down

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Speke (ORG) East Anglia (LOCATION) Ben Howison Limpley Stoke (PERSON) Belfast (LOCATION) the Albert Bridge (LOCATION) McCulloughNewcastle (LOCATION)
Originally published by The Guardian UK Read original →