How icky is Greyhound?

Old Nov 11th, 2008, 07:39 PM
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How icky is Greyhound?

We are having many travel snafus revolving around Thanksgiving, long drives in multiple cars, football games that must be attended, people wanting to branch off to different far-off destinations after dinner, sold-out flights and rental cars, bla bla bla. BUT there is an overnight Greyhound that seems to solve our most pressing problem. And it would be my son who takes it, LOL. It sounds tortuous to me, anybody have recent overnight experience on a bus (9PM to 6AM.)
(And yes, I remember the recent beheading on a Canadian Greyhound, yikes.)

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Old Nov 11th, 2008, 08:05 PM
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Not recently, but I have taken overnight buses a few times when I was younger (and poorer). Let's just say that 9 hours on the bus overnight is probably the only thing that can be worse than 9 hours riding a bus during daytime.
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Old Nov 11th, 2008, 08:11 PM
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Another thing you have to remember ( I learned this from many greyhound travels in my college years) the schedule is only a very loose guideling, actually guideline isn't even the word, its a lie. 9PM-6AM means only that he will be leaving no earlier than 9 PM and could arrive within a few hours of 6 AM, or a day or two later, or be rerouted entirely. You would be better off having him hitchhike to his destination.
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Old Nov 11th, 2008, 09:34 PM
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In most cities in America, it would be a good move to just go and visit the mere Greyhound station on your end... and if you can stand the crowd/people there, then the bus will prooooooobably be slightly better than the surroundings at the station.

In truth, it depends on which area of the country you're in as to whether the ride should be expected to go on time and without a hitch.

Unfortunately with the price of gas and the aggravation of air travel these days, Greyhound has taken on more of the dregs of the dregs. And surely THAT is who your son would be sitting beside.

On a positive note, that crazy thing in Canada was truly an isolated incident and shouldn't be feared.

Consider it at least...

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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 03:12 AM
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Our son took an overnight Greyhound about 6 or 8 years ago coming from the south and ending up at Boston's South Station around 5am. He was supposed to change buses there for the final trip home but we drove down to "rescue" him. We figured we could survive driving into Boston at that hour of the day. He wasn't happy about the trip. It was long and tedious and not as easy as flying. But, the time it took about 14 hours to fly home thanks to ice storms was worse for him, I think, because he didn't know if he was ever going to get home. It was almost midnight on Dec 23. He had been willing to take any flight that ended up someplace in New England.
Your son will survive. Maybe he'll learn something from the trip. Maybe an entertaining story he can tell his friends later on. I recently took a 2 hour bus trip filled mostly with commuters. Very surprised that cell phones weren't allowed. The bus driver reprimanded someone who used their phone. You might want to tell your son to check.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 03:46 AM
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suppposedly having bought a ticket for a bus does not guarantee you a seat fro that bus, at lest that is what happended a few years ago on my only experience.

i had a ticket, and a seat, but at one of the stops, some people outside of chicago were not going to be let on the bus, because suddenly they were overbooked.

no seat, but they had bought tickets for that bus. they were told to wait for the next bus instead.

since one was going to the airport and going to miss a flight, he STOOD UP the next 2 hours all the way to chicago.

check it out. not sure if it is the same policy now or not.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 04:51 AM
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In my limited experience are only able to keep a passenger roster of those that purchase a ticket in advance... so in the event of an "incident" they have no real passenger list.

I would not entrust my child to their care.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 04:52 AM
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Give us your dates and destinations and maybe someone will think of something else. Anything else.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 05:16 AM
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My rather soft 21-year-old nephew recently took a bus trip, though not overnight. I believe it was Boston - Buffalo with a change. Not sure if Greyhound (sorry for the vagueness).

He said the other passengers were "interesting", the stations not to his cleanliness standards, the bus ran late, and it was boring. But he survived just fine.

Since then he did some hosteling in Europe and made some of the same comments.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 05:20 AM
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If your son is a college student, have him check the ride boards at his school. There may be someone going roughly the same direction looking for passengers.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 05:33 AM
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Just a thought... when I lived on the TX/OK border, I used to take the bus back to my hometown pretty regularly.
There was a huge military post nearby and the bus was always full of teenage soldiers visiting home for the weekend.
I made lots of penpals on those trips and it made me want to join the military... which made me visit the Army recruiting station, which is when/where I met my husband.
So maybe those bus trips were my destiny
I got on near that post and got off before the big city, so I only stopped at rural stations, which were mostly gas stations.
It really depends on your start and stop point.
Also, is it near a military installation? If so, there will be soldiers in transit, I can guarantee it!
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 05:42 AM
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I've done this at least 2-3 times in the past, but not recently. This was in the early 1990s and I traveled alone from Boston to Toronto (and back).

I survived all the trips, though not something I'd do again since I can afford flying now.

The major things I didn't like were:
1) clientele
2) impossible to sleep
3) using the bathroom on the bus

One time I was taking Greyhound with a friend from Toronto to Boston. It was pouring rain and suddenly the ceiling "exit chute" started leaking and dumped a huge amount of water onto the pax in front of us. The bus was full so there was no space to move him.

Having said that, if I survived this multiple times (I'm female and I was 18-19 at that time), I'm pretty sure your son will survive it too. Can't promise he'll like it.

I doubt Greyhound is any more "icky" now than it was 17 years ago.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 06:00 AM
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For the past couple of years, my daughter would take the Greyhound bus from college to home for the holidays (6-hour trip). I can't remember any time when the bus was late, so reliablity was not a problem on her route. She talked to a few interesting people, but mostly she said it was just boring. (However, she enjoys reading and got a lot of reading done on those trips.)
Also, as someone previously suggested, if you give us the city of origin and destination, we might have some good alternate methods of transportation.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 07:28 AM
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I have ridden the Dog but it has been some years ago. I found some of the people very colourful. I once sat next to an older gentleman that could barely speak English. He had a shopping bag full of food, wine, cheese, crackers and goodies of that nature. He shared and we talked for many hours, me about America, life and things and he talked about the same and Italy. I almost hated to see the trip end when I finally got off the bus in Washington DC and he continued on to Boston.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 07:42 AM
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I agree, the route makes a big difference. On the east coast, public transit is used by a broader segment of the population than in less-populated areas where people use cars whenever possible. On a trip from Boston to NYC via Greyhound last winter, there was nobody on the bus that I wouldn't want to sit next to.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 08:28 AM
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I would never take a greyhound alone, night or day. If somebody's by him/herself, it means any psycho can share the seat.

If 2 people traveling, it's a bit safer, try to seat as close to the front of the bus as you can.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 08:52 AM
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Well, here's my excuse to repeat my tip that appeared in one of Fodors' travel guides: If you're traveling alone, get to the bus stop early, but get in line after about half the passengers have arrived in line. All the people ahead of you who are traveling alone will choose window seats (probably starting from the front, as Faina suggests), and then you can choose which one to sit next to. You can even scope them out while you wait in line.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 09:25 AM
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Faina - Lots of people take the Greyhound alone everyday. Yes, there are psychos out there, but the possibility of sitting next to one on a Greyhound is slim. At least, not enough of a concern for me NOT to take Greyhound by myself.

Apart from the few long-distance Greyhound trips I have taken alone between Boston and Toronto, I also have taken MANY Greyhound trips between Boston and NYC. Probably at least a dozen, in the early 1990s as well. Alone.

Now, I take the Megabus. (Boston-NYC)
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 10:18 AM
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I had taken an overnight bus in Spain which was quite pleasant, so when my flight from Atlanta to New Orleans was cancelled I thought I was smart to catch an overnight Grayhound bus. I will not be doing that again! I made the mistake of sitting in the back of the bus where it seems the hooligans like to sit. I got to listen to someone talk about how she was better than her mom because her mom smoked crack but she only smoked weed (her sweet 6 yr old daughter was sitting next to her). Also there was a dude whose feet smelled so bad that people had to spray cologne on him. We stopped at one place that was so frightening even the hardened bus folk were yelling at the driver to "get the f*** outta here!". And at the end of the trip.... my bags weren't on the bus! They did turn up 6 hours later, but that was the last straw.

Lesson learned: European buses are nice, buses in the American southeast - not so much.
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Old Nov 12th, 2008, 10:34 AM
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sorry if I missed it, but how old is your son?

my advice is to take febreeze,lysol, and earplugs.
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