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Wasn't impressed with £12.00 entry and really wasn't impressed with the woman shouting and balling at the paying public to get in line outside the payboxs. This was on Saturday. It gave a very poor impression, the more she shouted the more people ignored her.
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Given that all the punters who entered the car park will have come in through the same gate that they were heading for to get out, they will have known that on he way out they will have been confronted with the choice of turning left or turning right. Now given that it is conventional in all known parts of the world with any form of traffic rules that to turn right you go in the right lane, to turn left you go in the left, It seems that your arguing that the punters were too stupid to work that out for themselves. If so I fail to see how signs will help. You cannot argue with ignorance. What you are really saying is that there were a load of pricks in the wrong lane, either because they were to stupid, or because they thought they would overtake everyone and push to the front. Sadly thats life .
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If the traffic is starting the back up on the main road towards Shrewsbury then I'd personally always turn left out of the gate and cut round. Any of the left hand turns in Ford (village just down the hill from the showground) will get you across to the B4386, or else you could follow the more official alternative and carry on the 6 miles to Halfway House before turning left to Westbury and join the B4386 there, then turn left and return to Shrewsbury at the next traffic island along on the dual carriageway. It might well be further distance, but I dare say it'll be quicker than shuffling in a queue along the A458. Quote:
(...but if visitors were already starting to queue to get in on Saturday, then no wonder tempers were wearing thin and the queue was huge by the time the gate opened on Sunday) With tact and diplomacy like that I'm sure you could go far with a job in the Foreign Office... |
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Much has been said, but I hope I might add a few words as a fair-paying punter:
The ticketting might be improved for having a look at it. I know there are (in theory) advance tickets, but assume such website funtionality is removed by common anti-spyware script blockers. Maybe a low tech solution to the website might improve advance ticket sales. Alternatively, a simple form that can be printed by post would work if it had to. When there are very large queues outside, there is a need for more stewards there than inside. If that means nothing can move for an hour or so, I don't see a problem if it improves the welcoming face of the show. Given them money belts and they can at least sell programmes in advance. If the punters have something to fiddle with it's better than nothing. The current system of paper tickets to walk 30 feet on entry slows the queues too much. Could there also be preferencial treatment for 'exact fares' to reduce the time fiddling with money and tickets? We had a real emergency on the Monday, though thankfully not a serious one. The toilet door lock failed and the missus was left stuck in there whilst I called for assistance. Given that there was a risk of an expensive bill if a crow bar was applied to the aluminium doorframe, I wanted some official approval before breaking down the door. In addition to calming the missus, I had to keep a pair of autistic kids calm too. There is a real need for a clearer steward's uniform as it took a disconcerting amount of time to find a 'suitable someone' in a yellow jacket. Enginemen had them. Fairground folk had them. It seemed everyone had one. Something distinctive that can been seen from a few feet away would help reduce the confusion in a greater emergency than ours. The problem with the exit gate lanes isn't signage. It's the application of said signage As we drove out on Monday, I saw a pile of yellow signs in the corner of the field. If they had been nailed to the posts the one-off visitors would have a fighting chance with interpreting the 3 lanes as having changed from 2-in and 1-out in the morning to 2-out and 1-in later in the day. Finally, despite battling the Birmingham traffic on the M1 & M6, the Shrewsbury traffic, ticket queues, the loo issue and damp weather on Monday, we'll be back. It's a highlight of the year and we're looking forward to coming back in 2015 already. Simon. |
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Hopefully despite the problems of tracking down the right person, the problem got sorted and you were all reunited again before too long. |
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We had no real problem, but it got me thinking about the number of official-looking non-officials on site. I headed towards the office and found folk before too long but was surprised how many hi-vis jackets I passed. I hadn't seen anything like as many at other rallies.
The lock needed more than just 'releasing' - there was a fair sized chunk missing from the door frame when the door opened... Simon. |
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All the ticket set up needs is a walk through ticket tent with 4 lanes. The present system is a complete balls up. 4 widows at the end of long queues. Tell me this, where do you expect the people who have paid in the inner two rows to go, just vanish into thin air ?. No they have to fight there way out in front of the people who are trying to pay, result big delays and a total grid lock. Compound this with a rather over enthusiastic steward hounding people into 4 lanes at the top of her voice then getting mad when the queues don't move ( well they wont if they cant get out when they have paid ). Come on this is simple stuff done at other rallies with very little fuss stop trying to reinvent the wheel.
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Really enjoyed the event.
I left with the engine just after 6.00pm on the Monday and got straight out... As regards to the High Vis patrol. I went home on the Sunday (as the family came that day) to return on the Monday (wearing my writs band) to be told I could not take the car on the field (as I could not produce my caravan pass). After a short (friendly) discussion I was allowed on. The only thing I did find strange was that nobody was allowed in the beer tent without a wristband???????????? Cheers, Brian |
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