Now, I do know for certain about this.jules wrote:Mainly about country routes though. I was never allowed on country buses as a kid.
As I recall, if you stopped the 329 Thornbury bus in Filton, it stopped at only the major stops on the way into town and the fares were twice what they were on the city buses (3, 6, 36, 98).
Many a freezing morning as a schoolboy I watched the 329 thunder past when all the aforementioned city services seemed to have disappeared off the face of the earth!
As Bristol Corporation (as it then was) had a stake in the City services, they laid down certain rules. Country buses running within the city boundaries did not/were not allowed to call at "request stops" (these were bus stops with a yellow backgroud on the bus stop sign). They only called at stops that had a white background on the sign. Presumably, "officially" buses were supposed to stop at those "white stops" whether or not there were any boarding or alighting passengers.
In addition, the country services within the city boundary had a minimum fare, which was effectively the price of a ticket to the nearest point not served by the City services.
I came across this time and time agian in the early 1960s waiting for buses outside Staple Hill bus depot, by the Red Lion pub. There was a 319 service from Pucklechurch to Bristol (one of the few through services) that arrived at Staple Hill at 08.11, due in the bus station at 08.29, allowed 18 minutes for the run. The number 4 city service bus was allowed 23 minutes from Staple Hill to Old Market. So, if I actually wanted to go to the Bus Station at that time in the morning, I would go on the 319.
Every time, there was a variation on this conversation:
(As I attempted to get on the bus): Conductor: "You can't get on this bus"
Me - "Why not? I want to go to the Bus Station"
Conductor - "Well all right, you can, but it'll cost you tenpence" (IIRC, sixpence was the fare on the number 4 to Old Market Street, and the tenpenny fare was from the last fare stage outside the City Service limits, which would in those days have been Mangotsfield village)
Me - "Thats OK - I'll pay the extra"
Conductor - "Get on then"
Ah, the memories come flooding back
PS - I'm talking "old money" here - ten pence was just sort of 4p and sixpece was 2.5p. Just to help our younger readers understand the sums involved