1a Bus Timetable Morecambe

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Zebedeo Konig

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Aug 3, 2024, 4:02:36 PM8/3/24
to klasattehmang

You can expect the journey from Morecambe to Leeds by train to take around 2 hours 10 minutes. If you want to get there as quickly as possible, it can take as little as 2 hours 5 minutes on the fastest services. You'll usually find around 5 trains per day running on this route, which spans 57 miles (92 km). There's no need for any changes along the way, as there are direct trains available to Leeds.

Ready to book? Start your search for cheap train tickets with us today. Keep reading for more information, including money-saving tips, or check our timetable above where you can view live train times.

If you catch this train more than 3 times per week, you could save money with a Season Ticket. With annual, monthly and weekly options available, find out if a season ticket for Morecambe to Leeds is right for you.

This applies to single tickets on eligible routes. The government have extended the 2 bus fare cap until 31st December 2024 to keep travel affordable for passengers. It may be cheaper to utilise this offer for the Autumn Term, if you only need bus travel for college, and only have one trip each way (no connections).

The college annual & termly passes enable you to travel on all Stagecoach buses from 4th Sept-20th June, including weekends. As such, this pass could be cheaper if you also use the bus for part-time work & leisure, and/or if you use connecting services to travel to college. You will need to show your college pass & college ID to the driver. For details of costs and application forms, please see below 'Applying for your Bus Pass'.

Stagecoach Bus Charter
The Bus Charter below sets out the responsibilities of all parties involved & advises on how to report any incidents: Please make sure you read the charter before boarding the Stagecoach services.

The college annual & termly passes enable you to travel on all Stagecoach buses from 4th Sept-20th June, including weekends (see above). You will need to show your college pass & college ID to the driver.

We have worked hard to ensure transport is available to the majority of our students living in Eden and South Lakes. The following services will continue to run in 2024/25, with one-morning service and one-afternoon service. This pass gives Monday to Friday travel from home to college during term time.

The Bus Charter below sets out the responsibilities of all parties involved & advises on how to report any incidents: Please make sure you read the charter before boarding either the KC1 or KC2 service.

From the 4th November 2024, when the timetables switch to the winter timetable, Stagecoach will continue to operate the above journeys to enable a 09:00 to 17:00 college day. The 505 will generally operate every 2 hours during the winter timetable & every hour in the summer timetable, so there are additional opportunities to travel to/from college between these times.

Westmorland & Furness also have a Travel Bursary Fund for 16-19-year-olds. The scheme covers all types of transport, including buses, trains, taxis, fuel costs for private transport, and students who travel by bicycle.

You can pay in full or make a deposit payment followed by two direct debit payments on 5th November 2024 and 5th March 2025. If the latter, please complete the relevant direct debit form below, scan and email it to tran...@kendal.ac.uk or post it to Student Services, Kendal College, Milnthorpe Road, Kendal, LA9 5AY.

Teaching focus is initially on consultation skills and develops to cover a wide range of topics to prepare you for your career as a GP. We run sessions with SCA examiners in the run up to the exam as well as a SCA Practice Exam. The course timetable will give a flavour of the broad range of clinical and non-clinical topics delivered shaped by trainee feedback. We aim to cover the mandatory requirements for revalidation such as child and adult safeguarding and Basic Life Support as well as to give you some insight into practice management and leadership. We run a leadership skills day in Coniston each year which is consistently highly rated. We leave some space for flexibility to address areas of particular interest to an ST3 group.

Having served in the NHS as a nurse for the past eight years, I decided to further my medical career. Having moved to Morecambe I can say there are plenty of opportunities for learning, skill development and career progression.

There are usually 1 daily and 13 weekly sailings between Heysham and Douglas. This ferry route is operated by Steam Packet. Heysham Douglas ferries cost between 115 and 506, depending on ticket details. Prices exclude any service fees. Ferry timetables change seasonally use our Deal Finder to get live pricing and availability for Heysham Douglas ferries.

Heysham Douglas Ferry sail durations on this ferry route can take around 3h 44m. The fastest sailings are approximately 2h 30m. Sailing times can vary, durations often differ between ferry operators and can be impacted by weather conditions.

There are an average of 1 daily sailings and up to 13 weekly ferry sailings from Heysham to Douglas. These sailings are provided by Steam Packet. Please keep in mind that ferry timetables often increase during the high season.

Heysham, a picturesque coastal gem in Lancashire, England, is a must-visit destination for its rich heritage and serene natural beauty. Explore its history at the famous St Peter's Church and Heysham Heritage Centre, or take in the beauty of Half Moon Bay. Heysham ferry port provides easy access to the Isle of Man with regular ferry services. Rail connections from the ferry port to Lancaster city centre, a bustling city rich in culture and history, are available, making it convenient for travellers to explore further. During the festive season, Lancaster's annual Christmas Market is a spectacle to behold, where you can immerse yourself in the joyful holiday atmosphere. So whether you're a history buff, nature lover, or just in search of some peace and tranquillity, Heysham won't disappoint.

Douglas, the capital of the Isle of Man, boasts a rich history and fascinating heritage that's just waiting to be explored. This Victorian seaside resort is a haven for visitors, with attractions like the Manx Museum and the Gaiety Theatre. If you're visiting during the festive season, the Christmas lights switch-on and markets are a must-see. With regular ferries to and from Liverpool, Heysham, Dublin, and Belfast, the Douglas ferry port is a convenient hub for further travel. The Sea Terminal is located in the heart of the city, making it easy to hop on a bus or stroll to your hotel. From the Douglas ferry port, it's also simple to catch a train to explore the rest of the island. Don't miss the chance to enjoy the traditional horse-drawn trams along the promenade either, it's a charming way to soak up the atmosphere of this enchanting city.

North and South: Two Landscapes of Alan Bennett DAPHNE TURNER "A writer is usually in two minds," said Alan Bennett in a lecture he gave on BBC television on December 26th 1992. In his own work, two landscapes occur again and again, each claiming love and loyalty, each celebrated, each mocked, each with its self-satisfied prejudices, each with its own sadness. loneliness and its own version of being cast out of paradise. each with its characteristic languages and characteristic forms of comedy. The landscape of northern England is that of the working class. It is predominantly, to use Bennett's word, "naturalistic ," and its comedy arises from accurate observation of speech and behaviour . The landscape of southern England is that of privilege, of the upper middle classes and aristocracy. It is a world with the money and leisure for grace and play, and its comedy comes from parody and the play of language and ideas. Neither wins his full assent. Bennett is in two minds about the North. It is limited and depressing, yet its trivia are honoured as real and the dull lives of its inhabitants are celebrated. He is also in two minds about the South. The southern landscape is seductive, but exclusive, unjust and deceptive. They are complementary as well as opposed, as they represent the different sides of the geographical, class and value lines along which England is split, seen by a writer who was born into the northern working class and who now lives as a member of the southern professional one. He has created in his plays a full picture of what "England" means and the complex state of his loves and loyalties to it. 1shall deal first with the northern landscape, through an overview of the northern plays, especially of Enjoy (1980), and then with two versions of the southern: the first, affectionate and gently mocking, in Forty Years 011 (1969); the second, much more critical, in The Old Country (1978). The northern landscape belongs mainly to his television plays. They use the northern speech which Bennett grew up with and were shot on location, so they are visibly set in real places. The southern landscape is that of plays written for the stage, which are more highly coloured and dependent on an audiModern Drama, 37 (1994) 551 552 DAPHNE TURNER ence's ability to create a landscape imaginatively. But both are landscapes of the mind with which Bennett associates particular values and feelings. The television plays are set in Lancashire and Yorkshire - Morecambe, Leeds, Halifax, Scarborough. If, as in One Fine Day (1979), a play is set in London, the places we hear about are Acton, Cricklewood, Tottenham and Harlesden, not places where Sir Anthony Blunt or the Headmaster of Forly Years On would be likely to live. In these places the characters live in small, ordinary houses: back-to-back, terraced and semi-detached. Their inhabitants work for the council, in offices and factories. They may be unemployed, pensioners in church halls and social clubs or geriatric homes. They visit launderettes, men's clubs with snooker rooms, the back room of a small shop. They travel by bus. For holidays, they choose a caravan at Skipsea, a boarding house in Morecambe, a bus tour. Education in these plays is offered at the local comprehensive school. Though the headmaster in Illlensive Care (1982) has some comic features in common with the headmaster of Forty Years all, he has no spare staff to fill up gaps on the timetable when a teacher has a family emergency. There is no mention of public schools or Oxbridge. Hopkins in Me, I'm Afraid ofVirginia Woolf(1978) teaches English at the polytechnic ("where they think you teach woodwork," his mother complains of the public).' Health care comes on the NHS, not by way of Harley Street. Hopkins discovers that an "oul-paliellls' {clinic] in Halifax is nol IIze besl place 10 read Virginia Woolf" (71). The hospital in Aftemoon Off (1979) is inadequately staffed and the staff nurse speaks a broad West Indian English that the hero cannot understand. There is nowhere comfortable for the families of patients in Inlensive Care to spend the night...

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