Driving from Bath to St Andrews today, any advice?
Discussion
Morning ph'ers,
In my 5 years of driving this will be by far my longest continuous drive, of which I am looking forward too it. What I was wondering is, are there any sections of motorways to avoid today and also are there any "nice" service stations without a McDonalds?
Thanks a lot,
Vince
In my 5 years of driving this will be by far my longest continuous drive, of which I am looking forward too it. What I was wondering is, are there any sections of motorways to avoid today and also are there any "nice" service stations without a McDonalds?

Thanks a lot,
Vince
marshalla said:
Avoid A1 between Dishforth and Darlington if possible - roadworks, 50mph limit and SPECS.
Avoid the A1. M6/M74 would be the best way. From the M74 you have several choices, stay with the motorway network and M8 over the Forth Road bridge, or from the M74 take the A702 through Biggar to the Edinburgh bypass and then onto the Forth Road Bridge. Be aware that traffic over the bridge/around Edinburgh can be pretty bad at rush hour.bp1 said:
marshalla said:
Avoid A1 between Dishforth and Darlington if possible - roadworks, 50mph limit and SPECS.
Avoid the A1. M6/M74 would be the best way. From the M74 you have several choices, stay with the motorway network and M8 over the Forth Road bridge, or from the M74 take the A702 through Biggar to the Edinburgh bypass and then onto the Forth Road Bridge. Be aware that traffic over the bridge/around Edinburgh can be pretty bad at rush hour.Superhoop said:
bp1 said:
marshalla said:
Avoid A1 between Dishforth and Darlington if possible - roadworks, 50mph limit and SPECS.
Avoid the A1. M6/M74 would be the best way. From the M74 you have several choices, stay with the motorway network and M8 over the Forth Road bridge, or from the M74 take the A702 through Biggar to the Edinburgh bypass and then onto the Forth Road Bridge. Be aware that traffic over the bridge/around Edinburgh can be pretty bad at rush hour.Services wise the Tebay (lake district) stop is lovely with a nice farm shop. However I'm always shocked by the price of food there. It is lovely though.
Whilst the ring road and FRB can be busy compared to traffic down south it's trivial. More of a rush half-hour as well.
By the time you get to Fife I suspect it will be dark, so there's no point going the pretty way. Just head past Kirkcaldy on the dual carriageway all the way to Glenrothes then follow the signs to St A.
Last month I did the trip in reverse - I left Edi at 1.30pm in the afternoon midweek, and was in Bath before 7.30pm. In a 40 year old car!
cccscotland said:
Superhoop said:
bp1 said:
marshalla said:
Avoid A1 between Dishforth and Darlington if possible - roadworks, 50mph limit and SPECS.
Avoid the A1. M6/M74 would be the best way. From the M74 you have several choices, stay with the motorway network and M8 over the Forth Road bridge, or from the M74 take the A702 through Biggar to the Edinburgh bypass and then onto the Forth Road Bridge. Be aware that traffic over the bridge/around Edinburgh can be pretty bad at rush hour.Services wise the Tebay (lake district) stop is lovely with a nice farm shop. However I'm always shocked by the price of food there. It is lovely though.
Whilst the ring road and FRB can be busy compared to traffic down south it's trivial. More of a rush half-hour as well.
By the time you get to Fife I suspect it will be dark, so there's no point going the pretty way. Just head past Kirkcaldy on the dual carriageway all the way to Glenrothes then follow the signs to St A.
Last month I did the trip in reverse - I left Edi at 1.30pm in the afternoon midweek, and was in Bath before 7.30pm. In a 40 year old car!
[quote]Sorry guys, you got that wrong. The Biggar road is tedious and often full of lorries. You want the previous exit via Moffat (A701) signed as tourist route to edinburgh and known locally as the beef tub.
[/quote]
100% Correct, Moffat -> Edinburgh along the A702 is one of my favorite Mugs.
Stop in at Moffat and buy some of the famous toffee too.
Just what you need while enjoying the flowing bends, and challenging hairpins.
Tasty.
[/quote]
100% Correct, Moffat -> Edinburgh along the A702 is one of my favorite Mugs.
Stop in at Moffat and buy some of the famous toffee too.
Just what you need while enjoying the flowing bends, and challenging hairpins.
Tasty.
cccscotland said:
Sorry guys, you got that wrong. The Biggar road is tedious and often full of lorries. You want the previous exit via Moffat (A701) signed as tourist route to edinburgh and known locally as the beef tub.
100% Correct, Moffat -> Edinburgh along the A702 is one of my favorite roads.You can stop in at Moffat and buy some of the famous toffee too.
Just what you need while enjoying the flowing bends, and challenging hairpins.
Tasty.
Edited by Malcster on Friday 29th October 10:26
i do this trip regularly, its a long old day and the last thing you want after 300 boring miles but still with 150 miles to go is to then fight your way up the slow roads to edinburgh its so much easier to just stay on the m74, then M8 and over the bridge.
If I only had to go from Carlisle to Edinburgh I'd take the fun roads, but not when its a long trip with a long way to go.
If I only had to go from Carlisle to Edinburgh I'd take the fun roads, but not when its a long trip with a long way to go.
Edited by rallycross on Friday 29th October 11:08
Malcster said:
cccscotland said:
Sorry guys, you got that wrong. The Biggar road is tedious and often full of lorries. You want the previous exit via Moffat (A701) signed as tourist route to edinburgh and known locally as the beef tub.
100% Correct, Moffat -> Edinburgh along the A702 is one of my favorite roads.You can stop in at Moffat and buy some of the famous toffee too.
Just what you need while enjoying the flowing bends, and challenging hairpins.
Tasty.
Edited by Malcster on Friday 29th October 10:26
bp1 said:
marshalla said:
Avoid A1 between Dishforth and Darlington if possible - roadworks, 50mph limit and SPECS.
Avoid the A1. M6/M74 would be the best way. From the M74 you have several choices, stay with the motorway network and M8 over the Forth Road bridge, or from the M74 take the A702 through Biggar to the Edinburgh bypass and then onto the Forth Road Bridge. Be aware that traffic over the bridge/around Edinburgh can be pretty bad at rush hour.pay more on using M42 and M6 toll avoid the always congested and roadworks between M5 J1 till M6 J12 despite that's longer route
if you need to fuel up and have some food you can have a stop in manchester where there are some places to eat in trafford centre(a big ASDA is nearby) or on the M602-A57 (Sainsburys, Shell, KFC, McDonalds).
if you need to fuel up and have some food you can have a stop in manchester where there are some places to eat in trafford centre(a big ASDA is nearby) or on the M602-A57 (Sainsburys, Shell, KFC, McDonalds).
The fatboy said:
pay more on using M42 and M6 toll avoid the always congested and roadworks between M5 J1 till M6 J12 despite that's longer route
if you need to fuel up and have some food you can have a stop in manchester where there are some places to eat in trafford centre(a big ASDA is nearby) or on the M602-A57 (Sainsburys, Shell, KFC, McDonalds).
Why would you leave the motorway for a stop? It'll add far too much time to the journey.if you need to fuel up and have some food you can have a stop in manchester where there are some places to eat in trafford centre(a big ASDA is nearby) or on the M602-A57 (Sainsburys, Shell, KFC, McDonalds).
I did Edinburgh to Bath in 7 hours on a Bank Holiday Monday, route was A701 (or 2 can never remember which)-M74-M6-M5-M4. As others have said, probably best to stay on the M74 and go M8 as you're heading north of Edinburgh.
Edited by ewenm on Friday 29th October 11:38
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