To the continent by train and jetfoil
In the early 1980s I used to visit Brugge (Bruges) in Belgium from time to time on ecumenical business. Most people involved in the link between the dioceses of Lincoln and Brugge used to take their cars by ferry, one or two Belgians preferred to fly, but I used my preferred form of transport, the train (I did not own a car then anyway). This was years before the Channel Tunnel, of course, but there were international train services between British and continental stations using a variety of means to cross the Channel, and although it was, naturally, a lot slower than it is now, in some ways it was very much simpler.
The first time I went to Belgium I was just a student at Lincoln Theological College and once my trip was arranged I consulted my British Rail Timetable and its International Section then walked down to Lincoln Central station and visited the booking office to buy my tickets. I simply asked for a return ticket for myself and a colleague to Brugge on the dates and times we wanted: the clerk consulted a great big manual, took a book of vouchers and a ballpoint pen and wrote out my tickets, telephoning to ensure that Jetfoil seats were available and reserving them for us. No fuss or complexity: there was a voucher for a journey each way between Lincoln and Dover Western Docks, for the Jetfoil and for between Oostende and Brugge, with times for each. I cannot understand why this cannot be done today, given how much simpler it is to know what seats are available on what service and that a bar-coded ticket can be simply printed without the need for the ballpoint pen!
On the day of departure we went down to Lincoln St Marks and travelled up to London, crossing to Victoria by Underground for our train to the continent. At Victoria there was a Continental Departures board with four different departures shown, all for the same time. This was, of course, a single "boat train" which connected with three sailings and a jetfoil flight at Dover for different continental destinations. Jetfoil passengers were requested to check in at the Jetfoil Lounge and wait there to be shown to the train. At busy times baggage was taken and loaded into a luggage van and stowed onboard the jetfoil separately like on an aircraft, but we were not travelling on such a day and took our luggage with us as normal on British trains.
Illustration from the front of the onboard menu |
The concourse at Oostende |
We were met at the station and had a brilliant visit making new friends and cementing an ecumenical partnership which continues to this day. I became secretary to the English organising committee and made several further visits, usually taking others with me, including eventually my wife and (the) two children to stay with the family that accommodated me on that first visit. By then we lived in Cirencester in Gloucestershire and the only difficulty we had on the entire trip was in getting to and from the station (at Kemble) for which we needed a friend to take us in his car - ridiculous that a town that size had no station reachable without a car. All the international bits went smoothly.
Heading out to sea from Dover Western Docks |