Carrying meths & knife on public transport

woodymellor

Member
Jul 14, 2010
19
0
London
Hi,

I am making a journey Oxford for a Woodland Ways weekend next week. I was thinking of taking my Mora knife and meths cooking set, I don't need them but I haven't used them yet and fancied getting to know them.

Does anyone have any advice on traveling on public transport with a knife and meths? I know there have been similar threads about knives before, but I am also wary of taking a bottle of meths. I will be getting a train to Victoria and then a coach to Oxford. I have seen random bag searches at Victoria before.

Any advice appreciated

Cheers,

Woody
 

resnikov

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Have the meths in a proper fuel bottle or even the bottle you bought it in should be ok. As for your knife pack it in the bottom of your bag. You have a valid reason to be carrying it.

Sent from my GT-I9000 using Tapatalk 2
 

Mesquite

It is what it is.
Mar 5, 2008
28,216
3,197
63
~Hemel Hempstead~
Have the meths in a proper fuel bottle or even the bottle you bought it in should be ok. As for your knife pack it in the bottom of your bag. You have a valid reason to be carrying it.

Sent from my GT-I9000 using Tapatalk 2

The only advice I'd add to that is have the details of your course with you as well to add weight to your reasons for carrying the knife
 

Wildgoose

Full Member
May 15, 2012
871
509
Middlesex
As above. Before being searched you will be asked if you have anything dangerous or sharp in your possesion, that's the time to explain BEFORE anybody puts hands on your bag.
I'm no expert, but I think search dogs used on the transport network would probably pick up the scent of the meths. Have it in a suitable container.
Enjoy your trip
 

mace242

Native
Aug 17, 2006
1,015
0
53
Yeovil, Somerset, UK
Hi,

I am making a journey Oxford for a Woodland Ways weekend next week. I was thinking of taking my Mora knife and meths cooking set, I don't need them but I haven't used them yet and fancied getting to know them.

Does anyone have any advice on traveling on public transport with a knife and meths? I know there have been similar threads about knives before, but I am also wary of taking a bottle of meths. I will be getting a train to Victoria and then a coach to Oxford. I have seen random bag searches at Victoria before.

Any advice appreciated

Cheers,

Woody

All good advice so far. I'd add just to not be worried. I have carried all of my kit to various places a fair few times by train and bus and never had a problem.
 

santaman2000

M.A.B (Mad About Bushcraft)
Jan 15, 2011
16,909
1,120
68
Florida
I won't go into the knife or the cooking set itself; but why not just buy the meths (the actual fuel) when you get to Oxford?
 

Hammock Hamster

Full Member
Feb 17, 2012
1,076
82
Kent
As per the other posts you have a valid reason for carrying the knife in a public place provided it is kept in your bag and not waved about.
The meths should be in a suitable container but again for public transport it should not be an issue, think of the various flammable substances your average shopping bag contains.

I have carried my full bushcraft kit on buses and trains numerous times and provided you dont have anything sharp of obviously dangerous, axes/knives/saw, on display you wont even get a second glance.
I also used to belong to a local shooting club and transported air rifles back and forth on the bus in a custom gun slip (it was rectangular and had nothing to seuggest a gun was inside).
I was once stopped by the police and had an interesting 20 minute chat in the back of their car after first telling them what was inside then showing them.
Like most police officers, and no offence to any here, they did not fully understand the law surrounding carrying of air rifles, very similar to the knee jerk reaction most have when coming accross a knife in peaceful circumstances - i dont mean this as a dig at our boys in blue as i think on the whole they do a stellar job under increasingly difficult circumstances however with so many laws, bylaws etc... i dont believe anyone can know/understand every law and find for anything involving what i will loosley term as "weapons" (and im talking stop and search scenarios not some yobo waving a rambo knife in the street so there is no threat por danger implied) there is an instant assumption on that you have done something wrong.
Anyway after our chat in which i was polite and patient as i expalined it was legal for me to own and was transporting it from my home to a club where i have permission to use it they were happy to let me on my way, they were aware i was using the bus and made no comment - i expect from a police point of view a bus/train/coach or the side of the road it is all public place.

Sorry i just realised ive gone into rant mode and wandered off far off from the OP.

My point is you have genuine reasons for carrying your knife and a bottle of meths and there is no reason i am aware of why they could not bw taken, suitable packed, onto public transport.

Cheers, Hamster
 

widu13

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Feb 9, 2008
2,334
19
Ubique Quo Fas Et Gloria Ducunt
HH, it very much sounds like they were doing their job? Saw something which required explanation and after you had done so allowed you on your way?

Don't forget that whilst it is legal to carry knives and small amounts of flammable liquid in public, many public transport operators prohibit their carriage. Quite a few operators out of Victoria do NOT allow knives. It's their company and their rules! All the time they aren't discovered- fine, otherwise travel will be refused.
 

Hammock Hamster

Full Member
Feb 17, 2012
1,076
82
Kent
HH, it very much sounds like they were doing their job? Saw something which required explanation and after you had done so allowed you on your way?

Don't forget that whilst it is legal to carry knives and small amounts of flammable liquid in public, many public transport operators prohibit their carriage. Quite a few operators out of Victoria do NOT allow knives. It's their company and their rules! All the time they aren't discovered- fine, otherwise travel will be refused.

Hi Widu,

I fully agree they were doing their job and have no problem participating in a stop and search as i know i will always have a valid reason to have anything i may be carrying.
IMO there were no circumstances for them to feel a search was required as i was simply standing at a bus stop reading a book when they approached but that is by the by.
The only thing that gets me, and i should have stated this before, is at the beginning of the conversation one of the officers was quite rude and basically implied that i had an illegal firearm which they would be confiscating and a trip to the station would be involved.
As you said it all worked out in the end, mainly due to the common sense approach by his colleague, but it annoys me that i had to be the one to point out the fact that both owning, transporting etc... my equipment was in fact lawful.

I have to confess i hadnt thought about the transport operators own rules though i would suggest from experience they are more of a small print issue and as you say if suitably packed there should be no issues, i cant imagine they would refuse travel to say an elderly woman who has just purchased a new kitchen knife or a tradesman travelling to work with a stanley blade in his toolbag.

Hamster
 

Perrari

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Feb 21, 2012
3,090
1
Eryri (Snowdonia)
www.erknives.com
Wouldnt of thought the meths would be a problem, you could buy it in a shop and take it home on the bus, so why not be allowed to carry it on the bus elsewhere ?
The knife should also be ok as long as it remains in the bottom of your bag, dont take it out to look at it and alarm Joe Public, and dont carry it in your pocket.
Usually when I carry a knife in public I double bag it first then put it in the bottom of my rucksack just to try & give the impression that there is no intention of getting it out on route.(maybe this is a lame idea but it makes me feel safer).
If you are unfortunate enough to have your bag searched be nice & polite and explain why you have it. It is clear to me that you have a very valid reason for carrying it, so you should be able to convince the bag searchers the same.
 
Wouldnt of thought the meths would be a problem, you could buy it in a shop and take it home on the bus, so why not be allowed to carry it on the bus elsewhere ?
The knife should also be ok as long as it remains in the bottom of your bag, dont take it out to look at it and alarm Joe Public, and dont carry it in your pocket.
Usually when I carry a knife in public I double bag it first then put it in the bottom of my rucksack just to try & give the impression that there is no intention of getting it out on route.(maybe this is a lame idea but it makes me feel safer).
If you are unfortunate enough to have your bag searched be nice & polite and explain why you have it. It is clear to me that you have a very valid reason for carrying it, so you should be able to convince the bag searchers the same.

Main problem is BRail dont allow knives regardless of reason . So they can if they find one refuse you access to the station and your train with it. Their house their rules
 

mrcharly

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jan 25, 2011
3,257
45
North Yorkshire, UK
1) BR don't exist anymore

2) Many stations are operated by a Train Operating Company (TOC) rather than Network Rail

3) I've been searched (by a police officer) on York station with a locking SAK in my bag - no issues.

Apart from that, as you say, it's their house, their rules.
 
1) BR don't exist anymore

2) Many stations are operated by a Train Operating Company (TOC) rather than Network Rail

3) I've been searched (by a police officer) on York station with a locking SAK in my bag - no issues.

Apart from that, as you say, it's their house, their rules.


ok jsut generic term


was it a police officer or a British Rail police officer
one will enforce the Law of the land
one will enforce the law and rules of the Trains house rules who ever runs them
 

mrcharly

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jan 25, 2011
3,257
45
North Yorkshire, UK
I think normal police have jurisdiction everywhere.

It was a normal police officer.

It is important to recognise that the 'rules' on one station might be different from another. For instance, I believe that Eurostar operate a no-tolerance policy to carrying knives on board the eurostar trains.
 

ged

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jul 16, 2009
4,995
29
In the woods if possible.
As far as the carrying of knives is concerned, travel by rail in the UK is not unlike travel by air.

You won't be asked to walk through a metal detector on every train journey, but you can be asked. If you refuse, you will be denied travel.

Many people misunderstand the nature of our railway system, and comments like "it's a public place, so [random faulty deduction]" are a common result.

Between 1994 and 1996 the government sold all our railway assets to private organisations, many of which were set up expressly for the purpose.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privatisation_of_British_Rail

As a result, all railway property in the UK is private property, not public property, and the property owners are entitled, within reason, to forbid whatever they want to forbid.

Given the large amount of criminal activity which takes place on railway property, some of which involves the use of knives, the rail operators have taken a fairly strong stance on carrying knives on railway property. They have simply forbidden it. They will occasionally ask passengers to pass through metal detectors in 'intelligence led' operations designed to deter the carrying of knives and other items which could be misued. If you get picked up by one of these operations, expect at least to spend some time trying to explain why you were breaking the rules, and prepare for the possibility of your travel plans being modified by your arrest. Don't expect to see your sharps again unless you're lucky enough to have met an especially understanding member of the British Transport Police who happens already to be over his performance criterion.

http://www.btp.police.uk/passengers/issues/knife_crime.aspx
 
Last edited:

Stringmaker

Native
Sep 6, 2010
1,891
1
UK
As far as the carrying of knives is concerned, travel by rail in the UK is not unlike travel by air.

You won't be asked to walk through a metal detector on every train journey, but you can be asked. If you refuse, you will be denied travel.

Many people misunderstand the nature of our railway system, and comments like "it's a public place, so [random faulty deduction]" are a common result.

Between 1994 and 1996 the government sold all our railway assets to private organisations, many of which were set up expressly for the purpose.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privatisation_of_British_Rail

As a result, all railway property in the UK is private property, not public property, and the property owners are entitled, within reason, to forbid whatever they want to forbid.

Given the large amount of criminal activity which takes place on railway property, some of which involves the use of knives, the rail operators have taken a fairly strong stance on carrying knives on railway property. They have simply forbidden it. They will occasionally ask passengers to pass through metal detectors in 'intelligence led' operations designed to deter the carrying of knives and other items which could be misued. If you get picked up by one of these operations, expect at least to spend some time trying to explain why you were breaking the rules, and prepare for the possibility of your travel plans being modified by your arrest. Don't expect to see your sharps again unless you're lucky enough to have met an especially understanding member of the British Transport Police who happens already to be over his performance criterion.

http://www.btp.police.uk/passengers/issues/knife_crime.aspx

Very good summary.
 

sasquatch

Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
Jun 15, 2008
2,812
0
48
Northampton
Common sense and all that, just pack it away well and crack on I'd say. That's what I'd do anyway...
 

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