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A LIFE SPENT CHASING TRAINS

  1. Trains
  2. 2012

May 2012 - the prelude to summer

May started on quite a positive note with both the 7L22 and it's return, the 7O81, running on time. On Friday we set off to Pembrokeshire for a weekend away, stopping off at Chepstow for the 6B13 which obligingly also appeared on time. Despite staying in SW Wales I spent Saturday 5th in Snowdonia, joining in the Ffestiniog's celebrations marking the 30th anniversary of the railway returning to its original terminus, Blaenau Ffestiniog having overcome all sorts of obstacles in the 27 years since the first train ran in the preservation era. Long slog from south to north and back again but worth it.

For the third week of the month something a bit different; together with five colleagues I cycled from London to Paris via Newhaven and Dieppe. From Dieppe the first 30+ miles to Serqueux are along the old railway, which has now been turned into a cycle way, part of the Avenue Verte Londres–Paris which eventually will provide an off road route between the two cities. Today the route is better marked in France than it is in Britain, hopefully that will change. Beyond Serqueux the route follows the railway on minor roads, the rail infrastructure still intact despite being out of service. After Gourney en Bray our route and that of the railway diverged until we crossed it again at Santeuil le Perchay, where it is electrified and used by commuter trains to Gisors. Over thirty years ago I caught a relief boat train from Newhaven to Paris (Gare St Lazare) which took the Serqueux and Gisors route. Never thought I'd cycle it as well!

The last full week of the month heralded a spell of warm and sunny weather. A few shots during the working week and an early morning trackside between Ely and the Ouse Washes on Saturday. I didn't stay out very long as after mid morning the sun is very high and shadows are hard to come by.

The weather remained largely fine for the last few days of the month. I was extremely busy at work so was only able to take a few pictures on my way in and on the way home.
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The 11:40 train from Porthmadog was hauled by double Fairlie Merddin Emrys, built at Boston Lodge in 1879 and, along with George England 0-4-0STT Prince and Palmerston (both delivered in 1863), one of the oldest operational steam locomotives in the world.
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The 11:40 train from Porthmadog was hauled by double Fairlie Merddin Emrys, built at Boston Lodge in 1879 and, along with George England 0-4-0STT Prince and Palmerston (both delivered in 1863), one of the oldest operational steam locomotives in the world.

welsh narrow gaugemerddin emryssteam

  • The 11:40 train from Porthmadog was hauled by double Fairlie Merddin Emrys, built at Boston Lodge in 1879 and, along with George England 0-4-0STT Prince and Palmerston (both delivered in 1863), one of the oldest operational steam locomotives in the world.
  • The leading carriage is THE oldest bogie carriage still in regular service, no.15 was built by Brown, Marshalls in 1872. Merddin Emrys belies its age as it pounds upgrade on the last stage of its climb from Porthmadog.
  • Along with the trains to and from Porthmadog the FR also ran a Blaenau to Tanygrisiau shuttle which utilsed England no. 4 'Palmerston' and Statfold Barn's visiting Peckett 0-6-0ST Harrogate, seen here arriving at Tanygrisiau.
  • From Tanygrisiau I walked towards the Moelwyn Tunnel, I really enjoy taking pictures along this stretch. Lyd is on a relief train (12:35 ex-Porthmadog) utilising the four car vintage rake which had earlier been on the Early Bird special.
  • Lyd pounds along the Deviation, the new route built to bypass the line flooded by the Ffestiniog HEP scheme.
  • At Tanygrisiau Lyd crossed Merddin Emrys returning on the 13:40 from Blaenau, it came tearing round the corner on the approach to the footpath crossing behind the Power Station as it climbed from the old formation to the new.
  • The sight and sound as it approached was quite extraordinary, the noise bouncing off the cutting walls.
  • All too soon it passed and the driver shut off steam as it commenced the descent and the sound died away.
  • The north portal of the old Moelwyn Tunnel, abandoned once it had been compulsory purchased in 1956.
  • Earl of Merioneth emerges from the new Moelwyn Tunnel at the head of the 13:35 from Porthmadog.
  • It crossed Lyd at Tanygrisiau, here is the latter drifting down towards the Tunnel, crossing the bleak landscape. Back in the 1920s there were leads to both a quarry and a zinc mine just north of the tunnel.
  • Approaching Tanygrisiau from Blaenau Earl of Merioneth on the 15:15 ex-Blaenau.
  • Linda pulls in to Tanygrisiau on the 14:25, passing a fan.
  • Last picture before I started the long trek back to Pembrokeshire. Earl raising the roof as it lifts its train out of Tanygrisiau.
  • May 18th - Six Smart Men go to Paris
  • The former station building at Nesle St Saire is now a cafe, we stopped to repair a puncture. Unfortunately the cafe didn't open until 10:30 and I think it was probably only 7 when we cycled past, having started off when the Transmanche ferry arrived in Dieppe at 4 a.m.!
  • Serqueux was a four way junction between the Dieppe to Paris route and that from Amiens to Rouen. the latter is still in service, having been electrified. This former colour light signal guards the approach to Serqueux from Dieppe. That's one of my team cycling past.
  • Next to Serqueux is Forges les Eaux. We found a nice cafe for a late breakfast and a patisserie before setting off. At Serqueux the track immediately east of the station on the Paris route looked to have been recently relaid, but at Forges les Eaux all was derelict again.
  • No train has passed along these lines for a long time, this is one of the better stretches,
  • Our destination on Friday, which we reached courtesy of the 4 a.m. start at lunchtime, was Gournay en Bray, a distance from Dieppe of some 50 miles. Here is my colleague Alan walking along the Serqueux bound platform.
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