Bus routes and fares
#1
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Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 2,768
Bus routes and fares
Feeling chuffed with myself. Found the bus routes and fares information I need to know about to head into Miskolc on the internet without any help from anyone.
https://www.volanbusz.hu/en/timetable
As I still haven't got a car I might head out to the hills with my ukele.
https://www.volanbusz.hu/en/timetable
As I still haven't got a car I might head out to the hills with my ukele.
Last edited by FenTiger; Sep 2nd 2020 at 12:03 pm.
#2
Re: Bus routes and fares
Feeling chuffed with myself. Found the bus routes and fares information I need to know about to head into Miskolc on the internet without any help from anyone.
https://www.volanbusz.hu/en/timetable
As I still haven't got a car I might head out to the hills with my ukele.
https://www.volanbusz.hu/en/timetable
As I still haven't got a car I might head out to the hills with my ukele.
Rosemary
#4
Banned
Joined: Jul 2014
Location: Hawley
Posts: 958
Re: Bus routes and fares
Now I know why my dogs have been barking all afternoon.
#5
Re: Bus routes and fares
My wife and I were only saying the other day that we should watch Deliverance again.
Many years ago we were holidaying here and spent many hours in the local kocsma on a regular basis. This pub was in the middle of nowhere, with only weekend houses around it and the locals were all single, alcoholic men. As we visited often when we came on holiday we got to know most of the regulars. One afternoon we got chatting to 2 guys and ended up drinking together. When the bar closed (at 6pm) they invited us back to one of their houses. In the Southern States these guys would be real hillbillies, living very basic lives and making pálinka. My memories of that evening are vague to say the least. We were plied with glass after glass of házi pálinka, singing songs and generally having a real good time. Our host even introduced us to his pride and joy.....a huge pig. My wife got nervous though when we were invited to stay the night, by which time my legs had given up on me and I was wheeled downhill in a wheelbarrow by an equally inebriated redneck, only to end up falling out of the barrow into someone's garden when it inevitably tipped up. We found out not long after that our host died a few months later and one of the other regulars was eaten by his neighbour's dogs on the way home from the pub one evening.
Unfortunately, a few months after we moved here I helped to demolish the little bar as a new development was planned on the site. 12 years later it's still not finished but I have all the wooden tables and benches from the old place in my garden as a memento.
Many years ago we were holidaying here and spent many hours in the local kocsma on a regular basis. This pub was in the middle of nowhere, with only weekend houses around it and the locals were all single, alcoholic men. As we visited often when we came on holiday we got to know most of the regulars. One afternoon we got chatting to 2 guys and ended up drinking together. When the bar closed (at 6pm) they invited us back to one of their houses. In the Southern States these guys would be real hillbillies, living very basic lives and making pálinka. My memories of that evening are vague to say the least. We were plied with glass after glass of házi pálinka, singing songs and generally having a real good time. Our host even introduced us to his pride and joy.....a huge pig. My wife got nervous though when we were invited to stay the night, by which time my legs had given up on me and I was wheeled downhill in a wheelbarrow by an equally inebriated redneck, only to end up falling out of the barrow into someone's garden when it inevitably tipped up. We found out not long after that our host died a few months later and one of the other regulars was eaten by his neighbour's dogs on the way home from the pub one evening.
Unfortunately, a few months after we moved here I helped to demolish the little bar as a new development was planned on the site. 12 years later it's still not finished but I have all the wooden tables and benches from the old place in my garden as a memento.
#7
Re: Bus routes and fares
My wife and I were only saying the other day that we should watch Deliverance again.
Many years ago we were holidaying here and spent many hours in the local kocsma on a regular basis. This pub was in the middle of nowhere, with only weekend houses around it and the locals were all single, alcoholic men. As we visited often when we came on holiday we got to know most of the regulars. One afternoon we got chatting to 2 guys and ended up drinking together. When the bar closed (at 6pm) they invited us back to one of their houses. In the Southern States these guys would be real hillbillies, living very basic lives and making pálinka. My memories of that evening are vague to say the least. We were plied with glass after glass of házi pálinka, singing songs and generally having a real good time. Our host even introduced us to his pride and joy.....a huge pig. My wife got nervous though when we were invited to stay the night, by which time my legs had given up on me and I was wheeled downhill in a wheelbarrow by an equally inebriated redneck, only to end up falling out of the barrow into someone's garden when it inevitably tipped up. We found out not long after that our host died a few months later and one of the other regulars was eaten by his neighbour's dogs on the way home from the pub one evening.
Unfortunately, a few months after we moved here I helped to demolish the little bar as a new development was planned on the site. 12 years later it's still not finished but I have all the wooden tables and benches from the old place in my garden as a memento.
Many years ago we were holidaying here and spent many hours in the local kocsma on a regular basis. This pub was in the middle of nowhere, with only weekend houses around it and the locals were all single, alcoholic men. As we visited often when we came on holiday we got to know most of the regulars. One afternoon we got chatting to 2 guys and ended up drinking together. When the bar closed (at 6pm) they invited us back to one of their houses. In the Southern States these guys would be real hillbillies, living very basic lives and making pálinka. My memories of that evening are vague to say the least. We were plied with glass after glass of házi pálinka, singing songs and generally having a real good time. Our host even introduced us to his pride and joy.....a huge pig. My wife got nervous though when we were invited to stay the night, by which time my legs had given up on me and I was wheeled downhill in a wheelbarrow by an equally inebriated redneck, only to end up falling out of the barrow into someone's garden when it inevitably tipped up. We found out not long after that our host died a few months later and one of the other regulars was eaten by his neighbour's dogs on the way home from the pub one evening.
Unfortunately, a few months after we moved here I helped to demolish the little bar as a new development was planned on the site. 12 years later it's still not finished but I have all the wooden tables and benches from the old place in my garden as a memento.
But seriously, "eaten by dogs"?!?!?
#8
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Joined: Dec 2009
Posts: 2,768
Re: Bus routes and fares
PaulinEger - great story
#9
Re: Bus routes and fares
One of the regulars was walking home in February 2008. His neighbour had moved out and left his 4 dogs with no one to feed them. They got out when the old guy passed, attacked him, killed him and partially ate him.
#12
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Re: Bus routes and fares
I have managed to find one more bus timetable which is the one I really need to use as the other bus timetable I found doesn't stop at Auchan.