Not sure if you'll be able to catch the bus service
from London to Oxford in the morning as the first one
arrives in Oxford a little too late for the morning
handover I think.
--- Clare Rees <c.rees@...> wrote:
> Hi Ed,
>
> I would say it depends on your family circumstances
> and how you would want
> to commute. There are coaches to Oxford from central
> London and from west
> London - and the A40 goes directly to Oxford. GOSH
> is in central London
> (Russell Sq station), an expensive area to live,
> Kings is in Denmark Hill
> and the Royal London in Aldgate, which is the
> 'wrong' side of London for
> oxford. If you have no family it might be worth
> living in Oxford for the
> first two years and then moving to London. If you
> are worried about schools
> etc. this may not be the best plan. I guess it also
> depends whether you want
> to live in the country or the city!
>
> Sorry if this isn't very helpful,
>
> Best wishes,
>
> Clare.
>
>
>
>
>
> From: paediatricsurgerytrainees@yahoogroups.com
> [mailto:paediatricsurgerytrainees@yahoogroups.com]
> On Behalf Of edhannon1
> Sent: 26 May 2008 17:19
> To: paediatricsurgerytrainees@yahoogroups.com
> Subject: [paediatricsurgerytrainees] London Rotation
>
>
>
> Hi
> I am starting an ST3 rotation in London deanery in
> August. My first job
> is in Oxford for 2 years and then rotating through
> Kings, Royal & GOS.
> Can anyone who is or has done a similar rotation
> give me any advice
> about where to live. Is there anywhere that makes
> all these places
> commutable or is it better to live in Oxford for 2
> years then move to
> London ?
> I am new in the area so need some advice soon so i
> can start looking at
> houses etc asap. Any advice would be much
> appreciated.
> Cheers
> Ed Hannon
>
>
>
>
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