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Great Western Coffee Shop
Recent Public Posts - [guest]
Re: Thoughts, tangents, personal big data. May I bore you for my enjoyment?
In "Introductions and chat" [367382/30964/1]
Posted by grahame at 19:13, 25th October 2025
 
Response code number 502 ( Official description - " Bad Gateway " )

Receptionist server could not reach worker server.  Occasional blip, I think - thought your referer is strange.  Anyway, I paste the URL and got to the page and not a 502.

Re: 25th October 2025 - Railbus returns to Cirencester
In "Heritage railways, Railtours, buses, canals, steamships and other public transport based attractions" [367381/30957/47]
Posted by grahame at 19:06, 25th October 2025
 
However, in light of the railbus’ return to Cirencester, the Old Station Experience event at Cirencester Town Station in Sheep Street will also now be open for an extra day on Sunday, October 26."

Thank you - I have just negotiated an extra day out (for Sunday) and will see if I can work out Sunday busses.

The timetabled Sunday train from Melksham at 08:38 to Swindon gets there at 09:02 ... and the bus from Swindon at 09:15 gets to Cirencester at 10:15.  Looks good

except

The Melksham train is replaced by a bus tomorrow ... which dawdles into Swindon after the 09:15 bus  has left.   Nice one!    Next bus to Cirencester gets there at 12:15.   4 hours, home to Cirencester - yuk.   How about driving for once?

By mid-morning Cirencester became impressively clogged with private vehicles: and at mid-day its car parks gridlocked. While the origin point of most of the people in those cars will not have been Kemble, that itself is shaped to some extent by available transport - and Kemble's still the local gateway to the national rail system.

Don't fancy that ... and as far as I can see, they don'e even bother to run a bus to Kemble to / from Cirencester on a Sunday.  And it's a bit far to walk.

Aborting my plans, I think. 

Re: Thoughts, tangents, personal big data. May I bore you for my enjoyment?
In "Introductions and chat" [367380/30964/1]
Posted by eXPassenger at 18:18, 25th October 2025
 
In 1982 I obtained executive committee approval to buy the first 12 IBM PCs for a major accounting firm, we already has some Apple IIs.  When the XT came out there was a special program on the diagnostics diskette to park the hard disk head before moving the machine.
I had an early Compaq Portable in the boot of my car for a week to see if the disk really could survive general use.

I remember that the New York office received a call from IBM marketing.  They said that sales were far, far higher than expectations and they wanted to know what they were being used for.

Re: 25th October 2025 - Railbus returns to Cirencester
In "Heritage railways, Railtours, buses, canals, steamships and other public transport based attractions" [367379/30957/47]
Posted by Mark A at 17:58, 25th October 2025
 
Visiting this today (full disclosure, in a vehicle, on a day when the M4 was closed between Tormarton and wherever, and took care to travel before things got completely silly).

The Cirencester station exhibition is a solid event with many volunteers on hand, tea, coffee, biscuits, pervasive access to the building site that is the interior of the station (and which housed an exhibition) and access also to the railbus - and at one point the organisers ran its engine, which sat there hunting in a conversational way.

It's certainly positive to finally see the building's interior as a work-in-progress.

By mid-morning Cirencester became impressively clogged with private vehicles: and at mid-day its car parks gridlocked. While the origin point of most of the people in those cars will not have been Kemble, that itself is shaped to some extent by available transport - and Kemble's still the local gateway to the national rail system.

With the cards falling slightly differently, there might now be a block of fast-charging equipment alongside at Kemble, and an appropriately scaled battery vehicle to shuttle back and forth to Cirencester, taking even less time for the trip than the 11 minutes booked to the 1950s railbus.

Not covered by the exhibition, a visit to one of the line's surviving masonry structures is a treat in terms of the quality of the work on display. Visiting the station building was a treat for different reasons - the bare bones of the interior often on display, the structure's brick core has gained various steel beams, and yet a sense in one upstairs room in particular of its significance in the year or so when the terminus at Cirencester was apparently very much a base for the team working on bringing the extension into existence, onward and through the Stroud Valley.

Oh, and thinking again of that railbus & wondering if there's another location that would be very much a fit for exhibiting it... ah... yes, but possibly much goodwill needs to be in place and then of course a bit of paperwork to tackle.

Mark


Re: HST to Fort William at Bath Spa 24/10/25
In "Heritage railways, Railtours, buses, canals, steamships and other public transport based attractions" [367378/30969/47]
Posted by bleeder4 at 16:57, 25th October 2025
 
It's a great experience. I always try and do it every year if I can, as well as the one to Inverness & Kyle. They're only going to Fort William twice next year, due to Royal Scotsman taking the path to Mallaig on Day 2. So I've booked on the one in March from Birmingham.

Looking at the return journey, which leaves Fort William at 9am, is quite an early start to have breakfast, check out of hotel and be at the station for a 9am departure.
Most passengers, as well as the train crew, stay at the Premier Inn as it's just a 5 minute walk across Morrison's car park to the station. So it's not actually too bad. One year I shared breakfast in the Premier Inn with the driver and guard, before they had to head off to the depot to get the train ready. Plus, Fort William station doesn't normally open until around 11 on Sundays, as the first train isn't until 11:41. So the station gets opened specifically for the charter passengers and then locked up again once we've left. Which is quite a fun experience.

Re: TravelWatch Report 24.10.2025 / Journey to Taunton
In "Across the West" [367377/30971/26]
Posted by ChrisB at 16:48, 25th October 2025
 
08:45 showing "cancelled", 08:56 to Exeter (and we know that Exeter is beyond Taunton) showing "on time".

The 08:56 - a slower train via Weston eventually ran, I understand, as far as Highbridge and Burnham; should have been indicated as "probably terminating short" on the board but there's a whole new topic there.

There might have been - in the end it ran all the way & was only 5 mins late

I am writing far more than planned here - posting in a minute but going to ask you reading this to add Saturday 7th March 2026 to your calendar for the next TWSW meeting - worth attending even if only half as good as yesterday, but yet early planning is already suggesting it will be twice as good!

All the Railway Bill contens to digest for a start....


Edit to correct typo
[/quote]

Re: Thoughts, tangents, personal big data. May I bore you for my enjoyment?
In "Introductions and chat" [367376/30964/1]
Posted by ChrisB at 16:32, 25th October 2025
 
Sorry - we cannot meet this request
25 Oct 2025, 15:31 - www.firstgreatwestern.info
502

Response code number 502 ( Official description - " Bad Gateway " )
30.8.2025 01:00 / Our worker server is down. Investigating. News by 08:00
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You received response code 502 ( Bad Gateway ) at 15:31 on 25 Oct 25

If you think you should have received a real page - please contact me - graham/at/sn12/dot/net
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Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025
In "London to the Cotswolds" [367375/29711/14]
Posted by ChrisB at 16:27, 25th October 2025
 
Lasted until about 1100

Re: Caledonian MacBrayne ferries in Scotland
In "Buses and other ways to travel" [367374/30034/5]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 13:20, 25th October 2025
 
From the BBC:

Over £1m spent on sending Scottish ferry staff to Turkey



More than £1m has been spent sending CalMac and CMAL staff to Turkey to oversee the construction of four new ferries, a freedom of information request has revealed.

The two companies, which operate and manage Scotland's nationalised ferry networks, have spent £1,016,162 on remuneration, subsistence, accommodation, flights and car hires on staff visiting the Turkish yard since 2022.

The Scottish Conservatives, who obtained the figures, said taxpayers were being "left to pick up the tab" for the SNP's "ferries fiasco which has left islanders without the vessels they need".

CalMac and CMAL said their staff's work in Turkey was "vital" and "essential".

A CalMac spokeswoman said most of the money related to staff costs, including wages, which would have been paid regardless of where the crew were. She said the extra amount - £23,000 - was for travel and subsistence costs which covered flights to and from Turkey, hotel accommodation, and general subsistence costs.

CMAL also said the same wages would have been paid to its staff regardless of travel costs.

The Cemre shipyard in Turkey was awarded the contracts to build four new vessels worth more than £200m.

These vessels are the MV Isle of Islay - which is due in November and will operate on the Kennacraig to Islay route - the MV Loch Indaal, MV Lochmor and MV Claymore at six-month intervals after the first vessel's delivery.

CalMac sent eight staff to Turkey, spending £845,981, while £170,181 was spent on five CMAL employees.

One Ferguson Marine employee was also sent to Turkey but the costs were covered by CMAL.

The first of the Turkish ferries, MV Isle of Islay, was launched a year ago by Morag McNeill, the chairwoman of CMAL, in a ceremony at the Cemre shipyard.

The nationalised Ferguson Marine is currently building two separate ferries - the Glen Sannox and the still under construction Glen Rosa.

The costs of the vessels has risen to more than four times their original £97m price tag, and were pushed back for completion several times.

Tory transport spokeswoman Sue Webber said taxpayers were being forced to foot yet another hefty bill. "After squandering half-a-billion pounds on the Glen Sannox and Glen Rosa, ministers have blown another £1m flying staff to Turkey to keep tabs on the ferries being built there. Some project oversight is understandable after the huge problems with the Ferguson-built ferries - but this level of spending seems excessive."

Webber said the SNP had "betrayed islanders and taxpayers at every turn" by leaving remote communities reliant on out-of-date vessels while "letting costs spiral out of control for hard-pressed Scots".

"SNP ministers, who are responsible for Ferguson Marine, must finally provide the support the yard needs to compete, so that ferries can be built here in Scotland, not abroad," she added.

The CalMac spokeswoman said: "New vessels are an essential addition to the CalMac fleet and we are very much looking forward to MV Isle of Islay joining us next month. Staff and crew have been spending valuable time at the yard in Turkey carrying out vital work to support CMAL with the build process and to ensure that the vessel is built as specified, and meets all legal and classification standards. This is the same as the process involved for MV Glen Sannox before she joined the fleet."

She added that staff working in Turkey included marine and technical specialists as well as the senior crew who will be responsible for the vessel's safe passage to Scotland. "Their role includes the implementation of the important processes and procedures required to gain the necessary safety management and other certification needed to operate the vessel in UK waters," she added. "Thirteen brand new vessels will be joining CalMac by 2029 and will be of huge benefit to service resilience and reliability, to the benefit of all customers, including island communities."

A spokesperson for CMAL said: "CMAL is required on site throughout the build of vessels to provide essential quality assurance and supervision. Remuneration is the same regardless of the build location, and travel and accommodation costs are standard. These form part of the overall project budget, which remains on target."

A Transport Scotland spokesperson said: "As people would expect, CMAL has been and is continuing to work closely with the shipyard to reduce the time between delivery of each of the new vessels where possible. We expect delivery of MV Isle of Islay later this year and MV Lochmor was successfully launched on 23 August 2025 marking another construction milestone."


Re: Home to Taunton - options and fares from local stations
In "Fare's Fair" [367373/30958/4]
Posted by Mark A at 08:23, 25th October 2025
Already liked by JayMac, GBM
 
Good to meet you, and Finn too. His hearing might not be so good but I couldn't miss that the moment I picked up a biscuit his tracking systems locked on to me with an almost audible 'Snap'.

Mark

Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025
In "London to the Cotswolds" [367372/29711/14]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 08:19, 25th October 2025
 
Cancellations to services at Evesham

Due to a fault with the signalling system at Evesham fewer trains are able to run on some lines.
Train services running through this station may be cancelled or delayed. Disruption is expected until 09:00 25/10.

Customer Advice
Due to a fault with the signalling system at Evesham some services maybe delayed; altered or cancelled as a result.
-
We're sorry for the delay to your journey.
-
We will update this message with more information when we have it.

Re: Waitrose related posts - split off from another topic
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367371/30963/51]
Posted by eightonedee at 08:11, 25th October 2025
Already liked by Chris from Nailsea, GBM
 
Chris  - I would send the pension administrator a letter,  setting out the full history (your length of service, retirement date, and details of your correspondence so far) and tell them that if you do not get a satisfactory response within the next seven days you will refer the matter to the Pension Ombudsman. Send it by Recorded Delivery (or whatever they call it now), keeping a copy, and follow up immediately if they don't deal with it to your entire satisfaction in that time.

It's easy to find the Ombudsman online. I had a problem with one of my schemes and this spurred them into action.

Re: TravelWatch Report 24.10.2025 / Journey to Taunton
In "Across the West" [367370/30971/26]
Posted by grahame at 07:10, 25th October 2025
Already liked by Timmer, GBM
 
Return Journey - excellent company and catch up on the very busy 5 car 16:05 Taunton to Westbury; MarkA hope you connected easily to Bath.  I was offered and accepted a lift from a Devizes rep to TWSW who had parked at Westbury and then trained onwards; networking all the way to my front door - thank you for the list and so much more discussed.

The day as a whole?  There are so many informed and motivated people out there - but the whole travel and transport setup and its wider place in the community is so complex that it required continued supreme investment of time, effort and money to make it work, and often gets lead astray from the ideal because of where we are today, limited resources, and individual and political desires taking priority. We know what needs doing.

But, my goodness, there's so much that we're not doing and we're currently in such as state of flux that we have many questions unanswered about what and how we;re doing, and we have - at least locally - a train service that's so unreliable that people are walking away from it.  Witness even my use of bus and lifts yesterday.  And whilst we have talk of doing better, and some changes which have gone a bit in the right direction, overall we have an ongoing problem that's being kicked down the road; that may not be the intent, but it's the effect

Re: 25th October 2025 - Railbus returns to Cirencester
In "Heritage railways, Railtours, buses, canals, steamships and other public transport based attractions" [367369/30957/47]
Posted by grahame at 06:54, 25th October 2025
Already liked by Mark A, Timmer, GBM
 
From my feed


Re: Thoughts, tangents, personal big data. May I bore you for my enjoyment?
In "Introductions and chat" [367368/30964/1]
Posted by CyclingSid at 06:33, 25th October 2025
Already liked by GBM
 
My first meeting with computers was at school cutting bits of perspex to make a water powered computer. All I can remember was that if your feet got wet the answer was going to be wrong!

In the army I used mechanical predictors. Analogue was well suited to artillery/ballistic calculations. Remember an anti-aircraft predictor, weighing about a ton, which sat inside a radar (rainbow code name Yellow Fever). In the process of changing one the pivot on the lifting gear sheared, that was a call for new underwear.

TravelWatch Report 24.10.2025 / Journey to Taunton
In "Across the West" [367367/30971/26]
Posted by grahame at 06:30, 25th October 2025
Already liked by Timmer, JayMac
 
TravelWatch SouthWest at the Firepool Innovation Centre in Taunton
Friday 24th October 2025

For me - Inspirational.  A valuable day with so much to think about and learn from - both from speakers and from networking with colleagues - partners in the advocacy of better travel and transport.

I have posted onto the "How Stuff Works" board my raw notes - I have given them the briefest spell check once-over but otherwise raw and very much "Errors and Omissions Excepted".  My interpretation of what was said, selective in what inspired me and which I had time to note, and I may have got it wrong in some cases - hence not out there in public view.

TravelWatch SouthWest general meeting day - meeting running from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. - is so much more than those 4 hours for me. It's about the whole day's experience - the planning, the travel, the observation, the networking along the way. And if things go a bit wrong, so be it and there is the more learning from those very issues.

In a perfect world, 07:00 from home, 07:21 train from Melksham, 07:34 from Chippenham, 08:45 from Bristol Temple Meads, 09:17 into Taunton.  But there's no such thing as a perfect world.  I didn't even attempt the 07:21 train - the connection at Chippenham is just under the industry "official" 5 minutes and often fails; not worth the risk. Hindsight - Real Time Trains suggests it made with 75 seconds from arrival to departure at Chippenham yesterday, with both trains late which meant I would probably have been having kittens, and possibly by the time doors were released on one train they would have been closed on the other.

So - "risk assessed" (note how we have added that technical term over the years to our common-sense approach, I walked out of home at 06:45 for the 06:47 bus. The MyTrip App allows me to be drinking coffee and chatting with Lisa even as the bus tracks its way around Melksham Forest and Bowerhill and I only need to walk out to the bus stop as it comes down Pathfinder way. Much of the theme / comment on transport at the TWSW related to ever increasing efficiency, and making public transport as welcoming as private transport.

Bus more or less on time; I don't care if it was a minute or two late - the comfort of tracking has overtaken the watching of the seconds and wondering where it is of years gone by.  Stood on the pavement, under the street light, aware I was in dark clothes and needed to be seen; very clear arm out to stop the bus, arm only withdrawn once he indicated he was pulling in.  Fare £3 - before 9 a.m., so old git card of no use; not sure how the £3 / child fare none-discount that Faresaver give on senior cards before 9 a.m. works - something to do with distance: gee - I wish the fare system was simple and clear.

Six on board into Melksham Market Place where another six joined, and for once no stop at The Bear, but passenger who had been on the bus before I joined got off at Avonside. No stop at Blenheim House or Scholars Way but we did pick up before Shaw, drop off further passenger at Maven House and then pick up as we went through Whitely - transport friend also headed for TWSW amongst others. On through Atworth and then the "top road" past The Swan and through Bathford, again with multiple pickups.  A good illustration of how the odd passengers here and there and the local traffic on and off all come together to make a viable service. Murmurs suggested that being half term the bus was quieter than usual, and my observation somewhat dropped off once I was chatting with John.

The 271 inbound stops in Manvers Street opposite the railway station and makes for really good connection.  The outbound 271 (and 272, 273) does NOT call at Manvers Street ... but a story for another day.

As we arrived in Bath, a text message to tell me that a person had been hit by a train just outside Taunton, and that all trains were on stop. Experience suggests that when such things happen, it will take some hours before trains are running again.  However, the ticket office clerk (yes, an open ticket office at Bath Spa Station with is so helpful and re-assuring) told me that the 08:45 connection from Bristol was running and that we should catch the 08:06 to Bristol to connect into it. John and I were not sure whether to believe that the train was running, but as I'm a board member at TWSW it's incumbent on me to be there for the meeting even "in extremis". So carried on.

Why advise to catch the 08:06 though?  We caught the 07:47 as the first available train to Bristol - it always seems sensible to me to travel on the next available train to an intermediate change rather than wait - as advised and as official systems will offer - the train with the closest possible connection that's within the designated minimum change time.  It seems like a needless risk to watch a train go then have a greater rush to make the change.

An email from an admin lady at TWSW let me know of the "all stop" at Taunton - received on the train, and letting me know that she too was already stuck / stopped at Temple Meads.  Our unofficial networks and information systems ahead of the game again.

Anyway - into Temple Meads and (first thing) search for an onward departure board or member of staff; we knew to leave the platform (15) and look for screens in the subway - for first timers, finding your onward train can be interesting and not obvious at Bristol.  08:45 showing "cancelled", 08:56 to Exeter (and we know that Exeter is beyond Taunton) showing "on time".

We knew to find a member of staff on an excess ticket desk at Bristol on platform 3 - headed that way and as we did, I spotted [R] - TWSW lady and we discussed onward plans. She was pulling in a personal resource to get to Taunton - good on her to get to the job / far more important for her as the meeting admin than for me, but it left us wondering.  Man on ticket desk didn't know - "developing situation - listen our for announcements" and thank goodness John was with me because there was no way I could hear.  We looked at the option of getting the "Falcon" long distance coach at 09:00, but that's a 25 minute walk from Temple Meads, and then would have dropped us off in Taunton on the outskirts (need for further transport or a 2 mile walk to the venue) at 10:35.  A clue from the ticket man, and from a customer assistant on platform 3 doing assisted travel, that they were looking for buses for rail replacement, but had only been able to find 2 at short notice so far and they were both at the Taunton end ... writing this up on the basis of "what do I learn" - no complaint, just "what could be done better" to help the staff help the customers.  The 08:56 - a slower train via Weston eventually ran, I understand, as far as Highbridge and Burnham; should have been indicated as "probably terminating short" on the board but there's a whole new topic there.

What about John and me?  Angels come in all shapes and sizes; a really good friend and member here - THANK YOU - had been out and about and was coming to the meeting and came a long way off his plan (also disrupted by the rail chaos) in his car up to Temple Meads, and picked us up. I would say much more to show just how much that's appreciated, but it's hard to do so without disclosing details that are not mine to share.  I will say THANK YOU again.

And so - three humans and a hound out of Bristol and down the M5 to Taunton and a wonderful chance both to network catch up, and also to see and feel the M5 for the first time for me in - well - a number of years.  From around 08:50 in Bristol, we got to the venue somewhere around 10:00 - for once I dashed in without taking any photo, so I can't look back at a timestamp to give you an exact time.

With so many TravelWatch people coming to Taunton by train, and no trains running, the 11:00 meeting didn't start on time;  trains from Bristol and from Westbury (and probably Exeter too) did arrive soon thereafter - enough to start the meeting at 11:15 as it turned out, with other arrivals up to 11:45 and a number of people - totally understood - taking the step (sensible for them / not meeting admins, etc) deciding to give the meeting a miss.   Several of them here - you missed an excellent meeting and a good opportunity to Network - but missing the meeting won't have been pivotal in our campaigning and it was a good call.

The TWSW admin team, and the staff at the Firepool Centre, did a professional job - and in the case of the TWSW ladies, that was in the extreme of a moving situation and damage limitation - full credit to them too.

I am writing far more than planned here - posting in a minute but going to ask you reading this to add Saturday 7th March 2026 to your calendar for the next TWSW meeting - worth attending even if only half as good as yesterday, but yet early planning is already suggesting it will be twice as good!

Edit to correct typo

Re: Weather updates, from across our area - ongoing discussion, 2025
In "Across the West" [367365/30953/26]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 22:43, 24th October 2025
Already liked by TaplowGreen, GBM
 
Those living in man-made underground bunkers - in Minehead, just for example - please note. 


Re: Weather updates, from across our area - ongoing discussion, 2025
In "Across the West" [367364/30953/26]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 22:38, 24th October 2025
 
From the BBC:

First snowfall of season possible for some as weekend cold snap arrives

Temperatures across the UK are set to fall this weekend, triggering the first snowfall of the season for some areas.

This coincides with the end of British Summer Time as the clocks go back with the weather reflecting the shift towards a more wintry feel.

Temperatures will be below average with strong, gusty winds making it feel especially cold and raw.

This change in weather is driven by the position of Storm Benjamin in the North Sea, drawing down a cold Arctic northerly airflow across the UK.

(BBC article continues)



Before people in Wiltshire and Somerset etc start panic buying heating equipment, ordering teams of huskies etc it's probably worth noting what the "BBC article continues" to say......

"If showers fall over high ground - mainly above 400m - there is the chance these will turn to snow.

This is most likely over the highest ground in Scotland where a few centimetres of snow accumulation are possible.

There may also be a touch of wintriness over the highest hills of northern England, Wales, and Northern Ireland"

......so we shouldn't need to prepare to he digging each other out of snowdrifts just yet.

Don’t panic, Captain Mainwaring.

Re: Asylum seeker guilty of hotel worker's savage murder at Bescot Stadium station
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367363/30968/51]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 22:25, 24th October 2025
 
As so often, Newsthump nails it........

Re: Thoughts, tangents, personal big data. May I bore you for my enjoyment?
In "Introductions and chat" [367362/30964/1]
Posted by paul7575 at 22:20, 24th October 2025
 
First desktop computer I ever used was about 1978 or 79, an HP9845 on the County class HMS London.  It was primarily used to display received data link info from the more modern ships (with their computerised ops rooms), but when not in use for that purpose it had some basic administrative uses.

By 1982 we were using dumb terminals and PDP11s (I think?) for networked admin tasks on ships.

But now that I’m into my 70s, at least I can refuse to accept the stereotype that us ‘oldies’ know nothing about computers.  In the mid 80s from my recollection it wasn’t really kids buying home PCs, but us parents…

Paul

Re: Ancillary increases - Car Parking charges going up!
In "Fare's Fair" [367361/30627/4]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 22:14, 24th October 2025
 
Blatant profiteering.

Re: HST to Fort William at Bath Spa 24/10/25
In "Heritage railways, Railtours, buses, canals, steamships and other public transport based attractions" [367360/30969/47]
Posted by Timmer at 22:11, 24th October 2025
Already liked by GBM, Chris from Nailsea
 
Taking an HST on the West Highland line is something I’d love to do.

Two things have put me off doing this charter in the past. By the time the HST reaches the West Highland line it will be dark. And the cost! This does not include accommodation either.

Looking at the return journey, which leaves Fort William at 9am, is quite an early start to have breakfast, check out of hotel and be at the station for a 9am departure.

I think if this rail tour was in the summer, I might one day be tempted.

Re: Weather updates, from across our area - ongoing discussion, 2025
In "Across the West" [367359/30953/26]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 21:48, 24th October 2025
 
From the BBC:

First snowfall of season possible for some as weekend cold snap arrives

Temperatures across the UK are set to fall this weekend, triggering the first snowfall of the season for some areas.

This coincides with the end of British Summer Time as the clocks go back with the weather reflecting the shift towards a more wintry feel.

Temperatures will be below average with strong, gusty winds making it feel especially cold and raw.

This change in weather is driven by the position of Storm Benjamin in the North Sea, drawing down a cold Arctic northerly airflow across the UK.

(BBC article continues)


HST to Fort William at Bath Spa 24/10/25
In "Heritage railways, Railtours, buses, canals, steamships and other public transport based attractions" [367358/30969/47]
Posted by Mark A at 21:45, 24th October 2025
Already liked by Timmer, GBM
 
Down to Bath Spa station and heading for the TWSW meeting in Taunton, and what should be at the platform at 8:57, apparently in the path of the old 8:57 to Penzance, was... an HST, but instead of heading off in the direction of Exeter with a travelling chef on board, this was a charter heading for Fort William, a destination it reached precisely 12 hours later (with a complement of several 'travelling chefs').

Mark



Re: Waitrose related posts - split off from another topic
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367357/30963/51]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 21:40, 24th October 2025
 
From my perhaps rather jaundiced viewpoint by now, I think Waitrose have "done too little, too late" for Tom Boyd.

Two years later, after 11 years loyal service as a partner, where is my own pension fund?  I'm aged 66 - I need that money in my retirement. 

Re: Waitrose related posts - split off from another topic
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367356/30963/51]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 21:33, 24th October 2025
 
From the BBC:

Waitrose job U-turn over rejected autistic worker

Waitrose has reversed its decision not to offer paid work to an autistic man after initially saying he had to stop stacking shelves at the store where he had volunteered for four years.

In July, Frances Boyd asked whether her 28-year-old son Tom Boyd could be given a job at the supermarket in Cheadle Hulme, Greater Manchester, but her request was eventually rejected by Waitrose head office.

On Thursday, rival chain Asda said it wanted to offer Tom paid shifts at its Cheadle Hulme store.

Responding to Waitrose's U-turn, Frances said: "We are going to think about it and decide whether it is in Tom's best interests to return... and are having further discussions with Waitrose."

A spokesman for Waitrose said: "We'd like to welcome Tom back, in paid employment, and are seeking support from his family and the charity to do so. We hope to see him back with us very soon. We care deeply about helping people into the workplace who might otherwise not be given a chance. As such, we warmly welcomed Tom and his support worker into our Cheadle Hulme branch to gain experience and build his confidence. We have policies in place to support volunteering, and are investigating what's happened in Tom's situation."

Frances said she had been "overwhelmed" by how people had responded to her talking about her son's experiences.

Tom, who has limited communication skills, was praised for his work ethic by managers. "He gave over 600 hours of his time purely because he wanted to belong, contribute, and make a difference," said his mum.

Frances praised and thanked staff at Waitrose's Cheadle Hulme store for supporting him, adding: "They included him and were absolutely brilliant. I think he was just under the radar - all was running smoothly until it went to head office."

Tom and his mum have been backed by Greater Manchester mayor Andy Burnham. He posted on X that Tom had received "truly terrible" treatment and promised to "support him to find another placement that works". Burnham said the Greater Manchester Combined Authority "would encourage all employers - including Waitrose - to sign up to our brand new Bee Neuroinclusive Code of Practice".

Speaking with Frances, who broke the news of Tom's Asda job offer on BBC Radio Manchester, the Labour mayor said: "Good on you for raising awareness because we need a huge awareness campaign here."  She accepted his offer to become an advocate for the campaign.


Re: Lostwithiel - footbridge, services and sidings (merged topic)
In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [367355/2681/25]
Posted by Kernow Otter at 21:13, 24th October 2025

Asylum seeker guilty of hotel worker's savage murder at Bescot Stadium station
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367354/30968/51]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 21:11, 24th October 2025
 
From the BBC:


Rhiannon Whyte worked at the asylum hotel in Walsall, where Deng Chol Majek was living

An asylum seeker has been found guilty of murdering a hotel worker, who he stabbed 23 times with a screwdriver at a railway station.

Deng Chol Majek had denied killing 27-year-old Rhiannon Whyte, who died three days after being attacked at Bescot Stadium station, in Walsall, in October 2024.

The killer was staying at the nearby Park Inn Hotel, where Ms Whyte worked, and staff reported Majek, originally from Sudan, had earlier been staring at her and others, in a "scary" and "spooky" manner.

CCTV captured Majek following Ms Whyte to the station before he fled minutes later. He was then seen dancing and drinking in the hotel car park, behaviour described as "callous" by prosecutors.

Majek denied he was the killer, repeatedly telling the court that CCTV and DNA evidence was wrong. No motive for why he attacked Ms Whyte has ever been established.


Majek stabbed Ms Whyte 23 times, 11 times in the head, after he followed her from the hotel to nearby Bescot Stadium railway station

He showed no emotion when the jury returned its verdict after a little over two hours of deliberations.

Ms Whyte's mother Siobhan put her head in her hands and started crying when the verdict was read out, while Ms Whyte's two sisters were also in tears.

In a statement outside court, her sister Alexandra, who is now raising Ms Whyte's son, aged only five at the time, said: "Deng Chol Majek stalked, hunted and then preyed on our defenceless Rhiannon, before cornering her and unleashing a vicious attack – and for what purpose?  She was at work, helping people as she always did, and he chose her for no purpose other than cold-blooded self-gratification."


Ms Whyte's family gave a statement outside court following the guilty verdict

Alexandra said Majek had stolen a "crucial piece" of her family. "He took so many opportunities from Rhiannon, she will never watch her son grow up, we will never watch her marry, build a family, buy her first house or learn to drive," she said.

She said getting justice for her sister was not the end of her story and her family would continue to "advocate to evoke change" in her name. "Many have tried to imply this is about immigration, but these are the choices of one man, not an ethnic group," she added.

Before he was convicted, in a trial that lasted two weeks at Wolverhampton Crown Court, the jury heard Majek travelled to the UK on a small boat, arriving on 29 July 2024.

He was living at the Park Inn Hotel, which was owned by Radisson but was then being managed by Serco as an asylum hotel.

(BBC article continues)


Re: Person hit by train, Taunton 24/10/2025
In "London to the West" [367353/30967/12]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 20:50, 24th October 2025
 
Harry Basham, age 17.



RIP.

CfN.

 
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