
New night routes and earlier starts for Bristol's buses
The M1 metrobus operates between Cribbs Causeway and Hengrove Park.The 39 and 1 will run overnight services from Monday to Saturday, with the 2/2a, 4, 5, 6, 73 and 74 operating overnight on Fridays and Saturdays.
Among the routes being extended are the 16, which will now run from Fishponds to Whitchurch via Temple Meads creating a new link between the south and east of the city, and the 43, which is being rerouted to include Temple Meads Station.The 1, 24, 41, 72, 73 and 74 will start earlier on week days, First Bus said, to better serve those working early shifts.
George Burton, head of network for First Bus in the West of England, said: "These changes are designed to support people who live, work and study in the city and to keep pace with the needs of our vibrant night-time economy."He thanked Bristol City Council and the West of England Combined Authority for their support for the improvements.Passengers are advised to check time tables before travelling when the changes come into force.More information about changes to services can be found on the First Bus website.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


The Guardian
a minute ago
- The Guardian
Triumphant Lionesses squad to be honoured at Downing Street
England's triumphant women's football team will be honoured with a reception at 10 Downing Street on Monday afternoon, in celebration of the successful defence of their European title. The Lionesses became the first senior England football team to win a major trophy on foreign soil and the first to win back-to-back titles when they defeated Spain on penalties in Basel on Sunday. The team then returned to their hotel base in Zurich on Sunday night to celebrate with their families and friends. They fly back from Switzerland on Monday and their reception at No 10 will be hosted by the deputy prime minister, Angela Rayner, and the sports minister, Stephanie Peacock, with players, coaches and representatives from the Football Association invited. The prime minister, Keir Starmer, said: 'The Lionesses have once again captured the hearts of the nation. Their victory is not only a remarkable sporting achievement but an inspiration for young people across the country. It stands as a testament to the determination, resilience and unity that define this outstanding team. 'I'm delighted that the squad will be welcomed into Downing Street as the whole country marks this historic win and the lasting impact they are creating for the future of the game.' Rayner said: 'Our Lionesses are absolute champions and they proved that again last night. Not only are they bringing it home for England again, but they're inspiring the next generation of champions too. It'll be a privilege to celebrate this amazing win with them in Downing Street.' The squad, who had been contesting their third consecutive major final in three years, will then have a free, public celebration with fans along the Mall on Tuesday, which will be broadcast live on the BBC, ITV and Sky. The captain, Leah Williamson, became the first England captain to lift a major trophy twice, and the right-back Lucy Bronze set a record for the most appearances for the Lionesses at major tournaments. Bronze revealed after the game that she had played the whole tournament with a fractured tibia. Sign up to Moving the Goalposts No topic is too small or too big for us to cover as we deliver a twice-weekly roundup of the wonderful world of women's football after newsletter promotion The striker Alessia Russo scored England's equaliser against Spain in a match that finished 1-1 after extra time, and Hannah Hampton was England's heroine in the penalty shootout, saving two penalties before Chloe Kelly's winning spot-kick clinched the victory.


BBC News
31 minutes ago
- BBC News
Henley-Twyford branch line closes for five days for track work
A railway branch line is closing for five days for work to repair and replace sections of Rail said the line between Twyford in Berkshire and Henley-on-Thames in Oxfordshire would be shut until first thing on Saturday the branch line was closed in 2023 for work between Wargrave and buses, which do not follow the train route and have a different timetable, will run between Twyford and Shiplake via Henley. Network Rail said 100m of track, sleepers and ballast would be replaced while surveys and other maintenance would also be carried director Jason Pankhurst said: "Our engineers will be working around the clock to complete this important work which will keep trains running smoothly for passengers for years to come."Great Western Railway said it would accept season tickets on the branch line between Marlow and said valid rail tickets could also be used on the number 850 Carousel bus service between Henley and Twyford via Wargrave. You can follow BBC Berkshire on Facebook, X (Twitter), or Instagram.


Times
3 hours ago
- Times
Fantastic low and no-alcohol fizz
In April I took my 16-year-old stepdaughter south to see the cherry trees bloom. Not so far south — just to Mei Ume, the Japanese restaurant at the Four Seasons Hotel in London. Handcrafted paper cherry blossoms sprouted from the light fixtures in the elegant, high-ceilinged room, with its Chinese and Japanese art on the walls to match the blend of those two countries' cuisines on the menu. For Cherry Blossom Season, the head chef Peter Ho had concocted a series of delicious small plates, matched to cocktails based on Saicho Sparkling Tea. Mine contained Saicho Hojicha (a green tea made smoky by roasting over charcoal), as well as Hennessy XO and Grand Marnier. Nora, being slightly younger, had a mocktail with Saicho Jasmine, green apple puree and vanilla. Mine was good but hers, with the bite of that apple and the perfumed NoLo fizz, was better — and I don't even much like vanilla. • This article contains affiliate links that will earn us revenue This was a revelation. I already knew I liked the Saicho drinks (£17.99, — adding bubbles to the delicate aromas and structured tannins of good tea is a brilliant idea. A recent dinner with the teens involved us all sharing a magnum of Fortnum & Mason's Sparkling Tea (£45, Its lemon-peel and thyme flavours were a great complement to one-pot Basque chicken and, especially, an orange, fennel and radish salad. And pouring a magnum for four is a lot more fun than sharing a bottle between two while the young people dissolve their teeth in sugar-loaded soda pop. I am not giving up alcohol any time soon. But there is, as Maggie Frerejean-Taittinger points out, a pleasure balance. She is the co-creator of French Bloom, one of the best non-alcoholic sparkling wines on the market. She has made canny use of fine chardonnay grapes from Limoux in the Languedoc and of the Champagne expertise available via her husband, Rodolphe Frerejean-Taittinger, who heads Champagne Frerejean Frères. There is even, now, a vintage French Bloom, La Cuvée 2022 (£95, Frerejean-Taittinger has made it her mission to create a sparkling no-alcohol drink from grape juice that is as pleasurable as a champagne. She doesn't think they are quite there yet. 'We hope, in five to seven years, to be able to share a bottle with as much complexity as a wine,' she said at Women in the World of Wine, a conference on the future of wine (alcoholic and otherwise), held last autumn at the sumptuous Royal Champagne & Spa hotel. I'm sure she will get there. But my assumption has always been that for real complexity, alcohol helps. That Saicho experience made me think again. I experimented with a mocktail of my own: a version of one of my favourite cocktails, the kir royale, champagne and crème de cassis. A slug of Jukes 6 — The Dark Red (£43 for 9x30ml bottles, a savoury black-fruit cordial that is part of the Jukes Cordialities range, topped up with French Bloom's Le Rosé. It was lovely, softly floral with just a touch of blackberry acidity. After all, the only necessary beverage is water. Everything else is a luxury, intended to elicit the same sensations of delight as gazing at the ephemeral loveliness of cherry blossom. Pleasure is meant to be temporary. It's the memory that lasts — or at least, it does when the drink is alcohol-free.