Jump to content
RMweb
 

Captain Kernow

RMweb Gold
  • Posts

    19,421
  • Joined

  • Last visited

  • Days Won

    34

Everything posted by Captain Kernow

  1. Surprised by the number of folk in Totnes this morning, thought they'd all be up at Stonehenge... ;-))

    1. bgman

      bgman

      It's their Holy Shrine Tim, sustainability is the by-word!

    2. bgman

      bgman

      Hope you're wearing your oak leaves and white robe !

    3. Kris

      Kris

      Possibly they had smoked so much that they'ed forgotten the date.

  2. Certainly will, two site meetings in the Duchy with Craig and others in as many weeks...! (Treviscoe last Monday, St. Blazey next week)...
  3. Some of his colleagues might be flattered, though... No, of course not, certainly not these days, oh no Guv, I wouldn't say that, it wasn't me, I wasn't there...
  4. Hi Robin, The landscape has now changed sufficiently to enable the backscene photos to be taken. The 'polytunnels' are still in situ on the distant hills, but what I hadn't anticipated was that the crops grow through them, much like this similar scene from a nearer field up above Buckfastleigh: From a distance, I think that the overall effect, now that the plants are growing well, is OK for backscene purposes, here are two of the images I've taken: The 'polytunnel' field is actually on this one, the next image in the consecutive 180 degree survey that I took: I also took a few views of country lanes receding into the distance, in case these were of use to you or anyone else for backscene purposes: All gen-u-ine South Devon views, taken in the last few days... Full resolution files will be on their way to you asap on a memory stick, Robin.
  5. Just one week to go until the SWAG curry night at Buckfastleigh - all are welcome - http://www.rmweb.co.uk/community/index.php?/topic/85827-the-swag-mid-summer-curry-night/

  6. Thanks. The Marlin (now long sold) used to belong to Simon Castens (aka 'Not Jeremy' of this forum), who now runs The Titfield Thunderbolt railway bookshop in Larkhall, Bath.
  7. We're still around, only most of us have also got day jobs to do! I suspect some of my compadres may even have indulged in the temerity to take a...gasp!.... holiday!!! The walkway from Teignmouth to Smugglers will reopen sooner than some of the more dire predictions. The walkway from Rockstone to Coastguards, and the associated bit of beach in front of that, won't reopen until the new high level walkway is completed.
  8. Yes, that's it. Here are some of my photos from the early 1980s: Simon's Marlin sits outside the old signal box at Long Marston: Old signal post, this would have been the Up Starter, I think: The remains of Honeybourne West Loop Jct, with the signal box (a BR 'plywood' structure) lurking to the left beyond the bridge in the distance. The tracks diverging to the right in this photo would have let up to Honeybourne station on the OWW line, those to the left would have gone on to Long Marston and Stratford-on-Avon:
  9. Don't forget the SWAG curry evening at Buckfastleigh on Friday 27th June - http://www.rmweb.co.uk/community/index.php?/topic/85827-the-swag-mid-summer-curry-night/

    1. Indomitable026

      Indomitable026

      Yes, wish I could be there for that one...

  10. Without having seen it, I can't really be specific, but the Sea Wall project team are now gearing up to start work on the raising of the walkway, starting in the next few weeks, so it may be connected with ground surveying/testing, perhaps?
  11. Codswallop

    1. Show previous comments  5 more
    2. Captain Kernow

      Captain Kernow

      Nowt to do with football!!

    3. Dr Gerbil-Fritters

      Dr Gerbil-Fritters

      neither were the two matches I've seen so far, what a waste of an evening.

    4. 69843

      69843

      Codswallop-a new brand selling sausages in half pound packages.

  12. I've remembered another one - exploring the remains of the old Cheltenham to Stratford line with Simon Castens in the late 1970s, after most of the track lifting had been done, but at Honeybourne, the connection to the Long Marston section via Honeybourne West Loop was still in place, although the North chord (a more direct connection taking away the need to reverse at West Loop) had just been reopened. Similar at Long Marston, where the box was just about intact, signal posts present, but all closed and the new connection in place at the south end of the site. All on a quiet, clear winters day, very evocative and hard to believe that this has once been a main line. Fast forward 30 years, and my younger experiences at Honeybourne served to heighten the pleasure at being involved professionally in the Cotswold line redoubling and meeting with representatives of the Glos & Warwickshire line to discuss possible future reconnections at Honeybourne!
  13. Thanks Robin - excellent! That's my industrial loco shopping list for the forseeable future sorted, then!
  14. I suppose you could say that I have a bit of 'form' when it comes to telling tall tails to support the supposed 'histories' of my first two layouts, 'Engine Wood' and 'Bleakhouse Road'. Certainly the first article in the Railway Modeller didn't give any sign that 'Engine Wood' was fictitious, and my former website enginewood.co.uk (currently temporarily off line) didn't give much away, either. At shows, both layouts have information boards describing the 'history' of each location, together with photographs purporting to have been taken at those very places (it's amazing how a farm track on the Somerset Levels can look like a disused railway, especially with a blurred cow shed masquerading as a distant PW hut!). A deliberately fuzzy photo of Shillingstone station, taken before the current preservation era, was used to portray 'Engine Wood' prior to final demolition and conversion of said site to a housing estate. I've had people turn up at shows asking exactly 'where the station was', some swore blind that they'd caught a train from there in their youth, and even the Clerk to the Parish Council of Burrowbridge asked for more information on the South Polden Light Railway, prior to updating the history of their village (to him I did admit the truth... ). All in all, virtually everyone has 'got' the joke and enjoyed the whimsy (although the Clerk to the Parish Council didn't e-mail me back afterwards...!). I must confess that I've found it interesting to watch supposedly knowledgeable enthusiasts read the 'historical accounts', see their brows furrow as they realise that this is something they didn't know about before, and then see the penny drop! I've never knowingly let anyone leave the layout at a show without admitting that it's all a pack of lies (something that I usually admit to in the exhibition guide anyway - so I wonder how many really read the full text of those right through?). So, when it came to concocting some unlikely co*k and bull story to support the premise for 'Callow Lane', the fevered imagination was once again fired up and set in motion. The idea is that this was a double track freight only line from the Midland's yards at Westerleigh to Callow Lane, then reverting to single line at Callow Lane as far as the Great Western main line, just west of Coalpit Heath. A connection to the still viable North Bristol pits near Coalpit Heath would, of course, be included for my flexible period of 1959 - 1971 (in reality these closed a few years after the second world war). Finally, a chocolate factory, like Carsons at Mangotsfield, would provide some additional traffic and a further excuse to run industrial locos on the BR line. An entry was duly made up and posted on the Enginewood website and work continued (far too slowly!!) on the layout itself. Imagine my amazement, then, when a friend very kindly gave me a copy of 'The Midland in Gloucestershire' (OPC) one day, which has track plans of virtually all MR locations in that county. I was perusing the pages for Westerleigh Yard (as you do), when I noticed that there was, in reality, a double track freight-only branch running off towards the north-west (in the direction of Coalpit Heath - not actually that far away). This real line led to a place called New Engine Yard, where it actually terminated, but not before it also made a connection with colliery lines to two of the local pits - Frog Lane and Mayshill. This was a real eye-opener, perhaps my invented justification for the layout wasn't so far fetched at all? Admittedly there was no single line running on beyond New Engine Yard towards the GW main line (the gradients would probably have been quite severe), nor was there a chocolate factory, but most of the other elements of 'Callow Lane' were already present. Sadly it proved virtually impossible to find any photos of the real New Engine Yard, and in any case, development on the layout was sufficiently advanced that there was no turning back. The model was to be fairly suburban/urban in nature, but when I finally got round to visiting the area a year or so later, I found no track of the old line from Westerleigh Yard (I think it now forms part of the access road), and the whole area is really very rural! No matter, I was really rather pleased that things had turned out that way. More recently, I've had another pleasant little surprise. Motive power for the colliery trips from the revitalised Frog Lane pit to Callow Lane would be mostly in the hands of 'Lord Salisbury' (Mercian kit), which I argued would have been kept on up there had the colliery survived, and not sent to Norton Hill on the S&D. A diesel was also called for, however, to supplement the steam loco, so at the most recent RailEx in Aylesbury this May, I treated myself to a Judith Edge Ruston 88DS kit, a prototype I'd always wanted to have a model of. The plan was (and still is) to make this up in a suitable NCB livery, and run it into Callow Lane with 16t minerals etc. I didn't really worry that the chances of there having been such a loco working in the collieries of that area were really quite small (or so I thought)... Then, a week later I was helping Simon Castens of The Titfield Thunderbolt bookshop set his stand up on the Friday night, as usual. Whilst Simon was sorting out which books to put where, I noticed a slim little paperback volume entitled 'The Ruston' by David Hall (published by The Moseley Railway Trust). Whilst leafing casually through that, I found, guess what - a photo of Ruston 88DS (works number 242869 of 1946) working at the real colliery (caption calls it 'Coalpit Heath Colliery) in 1947! Unbelievable! So, no further justification for the diesel needed (well, just some convincing 'Sectional Appendix instructions' to let it onto BR metals and a convincing reason not to send a 'Jinty' or 350hp diesel shunter into the colliery... )
  15. Spot on, all discussed and agreed with the local residents.
  16. I think it's the old maxim of 'you can't please all of the people all of the time', Rich. Whilst it is amazing, incredible, unbelievable that anyone would wish to oppose this scheme, after the narrow escape last February, there will always be someone that the media are able to ferret out to say something 'controversial'. Rest assured, we have a programme of positive engagement with the local residents and I'm sure the project team will speak to this gentleman in a constructive manner!
  17. Exquisite workmanship throughout - beautiful stuff and one to watch as work progresses, many thanks!
  18. Two class 66s in the Freightliner terminal at Bristol West Depot - rock on, rail freight!

  19. Yes indeed, and I believe there was an abortive preservation attempt a few years ago, making the most of the existing track, but even their website appeared moribund and weed-grown when I looked at it at the time...
×
×
  • Create New...