Travel Your Bus - Routes Operated By Travel Your Bus

Routes Operated By Travel Your Bus

  • S1 Sutton Coldfield Falcon Lodge Circular (Anti-Clockwise) (as of 1997 Centro guide)
  • S2 Sutton Coldfield Falcon Lodge Circular (Clockwise) (as of 1997 Centro guide)
  • 2Y Birmingham - Maypole via Warstock
  • A6Y Birmingham - Northfield - Solihull - Birmingham Circular
  • C6Y Birmingham - Solihull - Northfield - Birmingham Circular
  • 37Y Birmingham - Solihull via Acocks Green
  • 37A Birmingham - Woodcock Lane via Warwick Road (withdrawn and replaced by Service 38Y)
  • 38Y Birmingham - Birmingham Airport via Acocks Green (tendered by Centro as of 1999 guide)
  • 47Y Birmingham - Cofton Common - (Alcester peak time only) via Cotteridge
  • 50Y Birmingham - Druids Heath - (Alcester peak time only) via Kings Heath and Maypole
  • 53Y Birmingham - Cotteridge via Selly Oak
  • 54Y Birmingham Circular via Moseley, Druids Heath, & Bournville (as of 1997 Centro guide)
  • 56Y Birmingham - Solihull via Sheldon & Olton (as of 1997 Centro guide)
  • 81Y Langley Green - Shard End via Jewellery Quarter and Birmingham City Centre (as of 1997 Centro guide)
  • 99 Birmingham - Chelmsley Wood via Hartlands Hospital (Centro as of 1999 guide)
  • 99 Birmingham - Chelmsley Wood North and Heartlands Hospital (tendered by Centro as of 1997 guide)
  • 118Y Erdington - Aldridge via Kingstanding (Contract on behalf of Centro until February 2001)
  • 192Y Acocks Green - Coventry via Solihull
  • 194Y Acocks Green - Coventry via Solihull

Travel Your Bus also ran two services branded 'The Link' these were numbered as follows:-

  • L1 Birmingham - Walmley via Tyburn Road
  • L2 Sutton Coldfield - Erdington via Walmley

Read more about this topic:  Travel Your Bus

Famous quotes containing the words routes, operated, travel and/or bus:

    The myth of independence from the mother is abandoned in mid- life as women learn new routes around the mother—both the mother without and the mother within. A mid-life daughter may reengage with a mother or put new controls on care and set limits to love. But whatever she does, her child’s history is never finished.
    Terri Apter (20th century)

    With two sons born eighteen months apart, I operated mainly on automatic pilot through the ceaseless activity of their early childhood. I remember opening the refrigerator late one night and finding a roll of aluminum foil next to a pair of small red tennies. Certain that I was responsible for the refrigerated shoes, I quickly closed the door and ran upstairs to make sure I had put the babies in their cribs instead of the linen closet.
    Mary Kay Blakely (20th century)

    Man lording it over man, man kneeling to man, is a spectacle that Gabriel might well travel hitherward to behold; for never did he behold it in heaven.
    Herman Melville (1819–1891)

    Literature transforms and intensifies ordinary language, deviates systematically from everyday speech. If you approach me at a bus stop and murmur “Thou still unravished bride of quietness,” then I am instantly aware that I am in the presence of the literary.
    Terry Eagleton (b. 1943)