The good thing about Europe is that public transportation is mostly good. I have visited both Chester and Edinburgh and it was easy to get from a hotel in the town center (walking distance from train station) to the zoo by bus. I believe there is also a hotel right next to Edinburgh Zoo.
Well I live in USA which is very car-centric and I find the public transportation in UK very decent. I suppose it depends how far you are going and whether or not you need to visit outlying areas. I have rented a car a couple times for one day only to get to Highlands Wildlife Park (Scotland) and to Howlett's Animal Park (England). Small rental cars in UK and other European countries are manual transmission, which I had not driven in a couple decades. Add this to the shock of sitting on the opposite side of the car and shifting with the opposite hand and trying to remember to drive on the opposite side of the road, all the while trying not to get lost, and it becomes quite the adventure!There is me avoiding public transport in the UK because I think its rubbish.
Well I live in USA which is very car-centric and I find the public transportation in UK very decent. I suppose it depends how far you are going and whether or not you need to visit outlying areas. I have rented a car a couple times for one day only to get to Highlands Wildlife Park (Scotland) and to Howlett's Animal Park (England). Small rental cars in UK and other European countries are manual transmission, which I had not driven in a couple decades. Add this to the shock of sitting on the opposite side of the car and shifting with the opposite hand and trying to remember to drive on the opposite side of the road, all the while trying not to get lost, and it becomes quite the adventure!
All rental cars in the United States (except for sports cars) are automatic transmission. No one here is expected to know how to drive a manual transmission, though a lot of people do know. The driver's licenses (regardless of which state issues them) make absolutely no notation of this. Interestingly, every car I have rented in Europe was a manual transmission, so it is clearly a cultural difference. (Which begs the question, how do you drive if you have a broken arm or are missing an arm?). I have rented manual cars in the following: England, Scotland, Spain, France.
You can request an automatic, often at work they ask when getting a hire car if we are ok with automatics, doesn't bother me but prefer to drive a manual.
When I was younger, I would have agreed. But, modern automatics are much more forgiving and excellent to drive. My last two cars (both Jeeps, so American of course) have been automatic; and all round, and especially in modern heavy traffic and/or over long distances, they are much better than manuals. I personally would not go back to a 'stick-shift', but here in the UK it is still the norm.
Thanks for the info. Do you know the name of the hotel outside the
Edinburg Zoo so that I can make a reservation?
Thank you for the recommendation. Another question. Do the London, Chester or Edinburgh zoos have reciprocal entry with any AZA zoos. I also belong AAZK, the Bartlett Society and Zoo GrapevineThis is the one next door to the zoo Holiday Inn Edinburgh
Alternatively I can highly recommend another hotel in Haymarket (a mile or so from Edinburgh City Centre) that is likely to be cheaper. If you were to stay in the one in Haymarket then the bus stop to the zoo is less than 5 minutes walk away. The bus drops you on the road opposite the zoo entrance. It picks up from the entrance (zoo side of the road) when returning to the city. Travelodge | Edinburgh Haymarket hotel - Edinburgh Haymarket hotels
Yeah, shouldn't be anywhere near four hours, probably between one and two.I am booking a train back from Edinburgh to London. Will I have enough time to get to Heathrow from Kings Cross station if my train arrives 4 hours before my flight back to the states?
You can't get to the airport at the departure time though. He would need to be there about three hours before an international flight, especially somewhere like Heathrow.Yeah, shouldn't be anywhere near four hours, probably between one and two.![]()
You can't get to the airport at the departure time though. He would need to be there about three hours before an international flight, especially somewhere like Heathrow.
There is me avoiding public transport in the UK because I think its rubbish.
Edinburgh does indeed have a hotel next to the zoo but there is also a bus that stops right outside (I drove as it was 3/4 changes from where I was staying).
Chester there is bus option from the centre its self but easy enough if you are driving.
In most of the US, public transportation is either terrible or nonexistent, so it really doesn't take much to impress an American in this area.