LA public transportation
I had my first-ever experience with Los Angeles public transportation. I'd been thinking of taking my bike to school and then taking the train home -- or vice versa. It was too cold (for me) even to take the bike to the station this morning, but I still wanted to see if I could navigate the public transportation system. I'd been putting it off for weeks and decided that today's the day. I had a meeting at school at 10 and used that as a target.
I left my house at 8:45 and drove to the MetroRail stop. (This is a test to see if I can put a link into a post in Blogger and have it come out as a link on Google+.) LA has two main public transportation systems: MetroRail, the light rail system, and MetroLink, which is heavier.
When I got to the station if found that they were paving the parking area. Half of it was closed off; the other half as full. No alternatives were provided. It took me 20 minutes to find a parking place and get back to the station.
I have a senior pass. (Getting it is another story!) For $1.80 I can ride all day on any train.
The train itself was amazingly slow. It never seemed to go faster than 35 miles/hour. It also seemed to stop at traffic lights as well as the dozen and a half stops between my stop and downtown. We did finally get to the other end of the line. Google had told me to switch to the Silver Line (a bus line) for the rest of the trip. Unfortunately it didn't tell me exactly where to find the bus stop. That took another 15 minutes. Eventually I got the bus and arrived at school only 45 minutes late. I could have made the entire trip by bike in less time.
The trip home was better. I caught every connection with no waiting. Even so, it took about an hour from the school station to my station. I would have taken about 1 1/2 hours by bike and 35 minutes by car.
I was particuarly disappointed in the technology. Most train systems now have ways for the train to know where it is and to display its location somewhere in the car. This one doesn't. All it shows is an old-fashioned map. There is also an audio announcement (if you can make it out) telling you which stop is next. Same thing at the stations. There is a crawl sign, but all it tells you is what the time is and not to walk on the track. Unlike most train systems these days it doesn't tell you how long it will be until the next train.
This was very disappointing. The Metrorail system is new. Yet the cars looked like the came from the 1980s and the technology matched.
Monday, March 11, 2013
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2 comments:
Lovely blog. Thanks for sharing with us.
bout your comment to Brinny's post
Blogger Russ Abbott said...
You have so many good ideas. But (and you knew there would be a but), they tend to get lost in all the words.
You just don't get it. The more wordy your missive, the easier to hide true meaning of it. ;)
That Is Deliberate!
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