Choose the real loading point first
In Verwood, the useful question is where the van can actually work, not just where it can technically stop. Spread-out estates, bungalow-heavy streets, shared parking courts, longer front paths all affect whether loading can happen in one clean run or has to be staged in shorter trips.
A workable stop point usually matters more than a nominally closer but impractical bay.
What to confirm before move day
Check any shared bays, restrictions, gates or frontage issues that could interrupt loading. Where the first choice of stopping point is uncertain, having a second workable option often saves more time than trying to improvise on arrival.
Why stop-start loading costs time
On a small move, repeated repositioning is where momentum disappears. The more often the driver has to break the route, the more likely the booking is to drift beyond the quicker range.