Recent Public Posts - [guest]
Briefing issued - mirror for members at https://www.firstgreatwestern.info/mirror/D052025_251126_Dean_Forest_Railway.pdf
Important safety messages
This accident demonstrates the importance of heritage railway staff and volunteers:
* only undertaking safety-critical tasks for which they have been trained and
assessed as competent
* being aware of any loading gauge restrictions when transporting large or
unusual loads by train.
This accident also underlines the importance of heritage railways undertaking
appropriate risk assessments for their activities and implementing effective
controls.
Summary of the accident
At around 10:55 on Thursday 14 August 2025, part of a 360-degree excavator being
transported on a train struck the footbridge which carries a public footpath over the
Dean Forest Railway at St Mary’s Halt station, Lydney, Gloucestershire. The train
was travelling at around 10 mph (16 km/h) when the accident occurred. The
footbridge collapsed as a result of the collision, with parts of it falling onto the station
platform and the moving train.
There were no injuries caused by the accident. No pedestrians were using the
footbridge when the accident occurred, and the railway was not open to the public.
The train, operated by Dean Forest Railway volunteer staff, was transporting an
excavator owned by the railway from Lydney Junction to Whitecroft, a distance of
around 3 miles. The train consisted of a class 08 diesel-electric shunting locomotive
propelling two 4-wheel well wagons and a bogie brake van, which was at the leading
end. The excavator was on the wagon nearest the locomotive, but the train driver
was unable to see it as the locomotive’s driving cab was at the rear.
This accident demonstrates the importance of heritage railway staff and volunteers:
* only undertaking safety-critical tasks for which they have been trained and
assessed as competent
* being aware of any loading gauge restrictions when transporting large or
unusual loads by train.
This accident also underlines the importance of heritage railways undertaking
appropriate risk assessments for their activities and implementing effective
controls.
Summary of the accident
At around 10:55 on Thursday 14 August 2025, part of a 360-degree excavator being
transported on a train struck the footbridge which carries a public footpath over the
Dean Forest Railway at St Mary’s Halt station, Lydney, Gloucestershire. The train
was travelling at around 10 mph (16 km/h) when the accident occurred. The
footbridge collapsed as a result of the collision, with parts of it falling onto the station
platform and the moving train.
There were no injuries caused by the accident. No pedestrians were using the
footbridge when the accident occurred, and the railway was not open to the public.
The train, operated by Dean Forest Railway volunteer staff, was transporting an
excavator owned by the railway from Lydney Junction to Whitecroft, a distance of
around 3 miles. The train consisted of a class 08 diesel-electric shunting locomotive
propelling two 4-wheel well wagons and a bogie brake van, which was at the leading
end. The excavator was on the wagon nearest the locomotive, but the train driver
was unable to see it as the locomotive’s driving cab was at the rear.
| Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025 In "London to the Cotswolds" [368634/29711/14] Posted by charles_uk at 14:22, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
Earlier 1P26 1059 Great Malvern to London Paddington was cancelled between Oxford and London Paddington due to unknown cause (ZW)
13:50 London Paddington to Great Malvern due 16:15 will be started from Oxford.
It will no longer call at London Paddington and Reading.
This is due to a points failure.
13:18 Hereford to London Paddington due 16:24 has been cancelled.
This is due to a fault on this train.
It will no longer call at London Paddington and Reading.
This is due to a points failure.
13:18 Hereford to London Paddington due 16:24 has been cancelled.
This is due to a fault on this train.
The service following the cancellation from Hereford (15:18 Worcester Foregate Street to London Paddington) is a five car short-formation. On the other hand, the truncated services from/to Great Malvern were nine coaches vice five so swings and roundabouts.
| Re: Re-opening the Cowley branch to passenger traffic In "London to Didcot, Oxford and Banbury" [368633/27074/9] Posted by johnneyw at 14:20, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
Thanks all; very useful.
There a some lines around Bristol (and Wiltshire!) which could benefit from re-doubling, and I have always assumed that if an alignment once had two tracks it should be piossible to re-double it without needing to acquire land.
I can see now that this may not always be the case -although thanks to Brunel, we may have more wiggle room than some!
There a some lines around Bristol (and Wiltshire!) which could benefit from re-doubling, and I have always assumed that if an alignment once had two tracks it should be piossible to re-double it without needing to acquire land.
I can see now that this may not always be the case -although thanks to Brunel, we may have more wiggle room than some!
I've been having a ponder over any problem points for redoubling on The Beach Line, a line that I'm reasonably familiar with and which is relatively short but which may need additional passing loops for a more "metro like" frequency.
Pleasingly, I'm hard pushed to think of any, save perhaps the railway arch over the A38 Gloucester Road (or is it Cheltenham Road there?). Could there be gauge or weight restriction issues there?
Thanks all; very useful.
There a some lines around Bristol (and Wiltshire!) which could benefit from re-doubling, and I have always assumed that if an alignment once had two tracks it should be piossible to re-double it without needing to acquire land.
I can see now that this may not always be the case -although thanks to Brunel, we may have more wiggle room than some!
| Re: Holding GWR to account - service reliability In "TransWilts line" [368631/31113/18] Posted by a-driver at 12:25, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
Of course it does, TG. That's the way the TUPE regulations work.
Then I guess it comes back to the question I asked over a year ago and has never been answered.....what positive differences can customers expect post nationalisation?
When the service collapses the sentiment here is often "don't blame GWR, it's the DfT who pull the strings"
So what'll change for the better?
Nothing! It’ll get worse, far worse.
When the service collapses it’ll be because of “14 years of Tory austerity”
| Re: Holding GWR to account - service reliability In "TransWilts line" [368630/31113/18] Posted by grahame at 12:04, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
An update on this story at https://grahamellis.uk/blog1791.html
Last night (25.11.2026), I attended Melksham Town Council's Economic Development and Planning meeting to speak to the agenda item 13 - asking the Town Council to add their support to the MTUG request / campaign to get GWR to run the current timetabled service more reliably. Delighted that they added their support, unanimously, and with some very kind words for the work we do at MTUG.
We now have both Melksham Town and Melksham Without, and our MP, fully on board with the call - a not just making the cal but pressing with us for fixing. All six public transport providers have helped by proofing / approving a Melksham timetable booklet ready for the December Timetable change, and we are looking to all raise the bar in partnership on reliability, friendliness and use of all public transport services.
Found this on Facebook post by Cllr Mike Bell
WHY DOES WINTERSTOKE BRIDGE REPLACEMENT TAKE 18 MONTHS❓
Why is the Winterstoke Bridge Replacement Scheme going to take approx 18 months? Here’s the full detailed answer from the contractor courtesy of my colleague Cllr Ciarán Cronnelly - Weston super Mare.
Matt Whale, Octavius:
"The biggest engineering challenge on the Winterstoke Road Bridge is the ground conditions, with Weston-super-Mare being situated on the alluvium of the Somerset Levels, this fenland is the second largest in England and is characterised by low-lying land prone to flooding, the alluvium is deep, extremely soft, and unstable in nature. The poor ground conditions are the main reason the existing structure has failed albeit it was only ever supposed to be a temporary structure and it was never designed to carry modern traffic flows or weights.
The ground conditions are also a major reason (the main reason) why we cannot install a new bridge by lifting it in as a complete unit, nor by constructing it off-line and sliding it into position using SPMTs. Much of the new bridge structure sits below ground level and must be supported on 24 no. 1.2m diameter steel-cased bored concrete piles, each drilled to a depth of 35m to reach stable Mercia Mudstone.
With a 60m span and a weight of over 2000 tonnes, a bridge of this scale would simply sink without piling, and so would any heavy lifting or sliding equipment required to install it. Prefabrication and sliding options are therefore ruled out.
Even if the bridge could be built off-line, we would still need to install the piled substructure first and the ground conditions dictate that this is a slow and highly controlled process. The piles are so large, and the soil so challenging, that we are using the smallest rig capable of achieving both the required depth and diameter, meaning progress is limited to approximately one pile every other day, all being carried out in a small area adjacent to a live railway line.
The work above takes considerable time, and we have many other challenges to factor in as well:
1) Spatial constraints and proximity to businesses and properties – when the original bridge was built it was surrounded by fields, rhynes and a flak tower and not the built-up area you see today.
2) A large drainage culvert and water course (Rhyne) underneath the existing bridge – A high water table adds to the difficult ground condition challenges and must be carefully managed.
3) The 100mph Bristol to Exeter Mainline to which the project team or NSC don’t have any control over - Work over the railway line can only be carried out when there are no passenger and freight trains running and these types of closures usually must be booked months, sometimes years in advance, and the operational window is small.
If Network Rail and Train Operators did agree to diversions or daytime closures the project would be expected to pay out £millions due to compensation payments to cover the Train Operator Companies (TOCs) and the Feight Operator Companies (FOCs) loss of income, as well as passenger compensation for delays potentially all the way up to London and beyond.
Delays on this section of mainline can affect the rolling stock all over the country causing further delay and compensation, Trains are unable to be diverted around Weston-super-Mare due to this being the Bristol to Exeter Mainline and having two tracks, the loop line into Weston is a single bi-directional line.
The railway track itself below the bridge is also susceptible to the poor ground conditions with heave or ‘lifting’ expected once the old bridge is removed, this must be carefully managed as the slightest twist or fault in track alignment can potentially derail a train travelling at 100mph.
We are also very mindful to keep the community connected with a temporary footbridge which also serves a secondary purpose to ensure uninterrupted service supplies when the old bridge is removed with BT, City Fibre, gas and watermains currently crossing it, supplying businesses and hundreds of private properties.
This is a significant engineering challenge, and the design also must consider the poor ground conditions, pedestrians, trains, and utilities.
No records of the existing bridge exist (not surprising being built by the MOD during the war) and partial demolition of the bridge while keeping a section open to traffic is not feasible, as the bridge is too small and the construction techniques used in 1941 do not allow for this approach.
When you consider the all of the above we have significant limits on what we can do, the plant and equipment we can use and the timeframes we do it in, Octavius and our specialist supply chain have the capability and expertise to carry out rapid infrastructure replacement using complex offline techniques and I have been fortunate enough to deliver a number of them, but sadly this scheme is not suited to those techniques due to the challenges I have mentioned above, you would be hard pushed to find anyone globally that could undertake this particular scheme any differently."
Why is the Winterstoke Bridge Replacement Scheme going to take approx 18 months? Here’s the full detailed answer from the contractor courtesy of my colleague Cllr Ciarán Cronnelly - Weston super Mare.
Matt Whale, Octavius:
"The biggest engineering challenge on the Winterstoke Road Bridge is the ground conditions, with Weston-super-Mare being situated on the alluvium of the Somerset Levels, this fenland is the second largest in England and is characterised by low-lying land prone to flooding, the alluvium is deep, extremely soft, and unstable in nature. The poor ground conditions are the main reason the existing structure has failed albeit it was only ever supposed to be a temporary structure and it was never designed to carry modern traffic flows or weights.
The ground conditions are also a major reason (the main reason) why we cannot install a new bridge by lifting it in as a complete unit, nor by constructing it off-line and sliding it into position using SPMTs. Much of the new bridge structure sits below ground level and must be supported on 24 no. 1.2m diameter steel-cased bored concrete piles, each drilled to a depth of 35m to reach stable Mercia Mudstone.
With a 60m span and a weight of over 2000 tonnes, a bridge of this scale would simply sink without piling, and so would any heavy lifting or sliding equipment required to install it. Prefabrication and sliding options are therefore ruled out.
Even if the bridge could be built off-line, we would still need to install the piled substructure first and the ground conditions dictate that this is a slow and highly controlled process. The piles are so large, and the soil so challenging, that we are using the smallest rig capable of achieving both the required depth and diameter, meaning progress is limited to approximately one pile every other day, all being carried out in a small area adjacent to a live railway line.
The work above takes considerable time, and we have many other challenges to factor in as well:
1) Spatial constraints and proximity to businesses and properties – when the original bridge was built it was surrounded by fields, rhynes and a flak tower and not the built-up area you see today.
2) A large drainage culvert and water course (Rhyne) underneath the existing bridge – A high water table adds to the difficult ground condition challenges and must be carefully managed.
3) The 100mph Bristol to Exeter Mainline to which the project team or NSC don’t have any control over - Work over the railway line can only be carried out when there are no passenger and freight trains running and these types of closures usually must be booked months, sometimes years in advance, and the operational window is small.
If Network Rail and Train Operators did agree to diversions or daytime closures the project would be expected to pay out £millions due to compensation payments to cover the Train Operator Companies (TOCs) and the Feight Operator Companies (FOCs) loss of income, as well as passenger compensation for delays potentially all the way up to London and beyond.
Delays on this section of mainline can affect the rolling stock all over the country causing further delay and compensation, Trains are unable to be diverted around Weston-super-Mare due to this being the Bristol to Exeter Mainline and having two tracks, the loop line into Weston is a single bi-directional line.
The railway track itself below the bridge is also susceptible to the poor ground conditions with heave or ‘lifting’ expected once the old bridge is removed, this must be carefully managed as the slightest twist or fault in track alignment can potentially derail a train travelling at 100mph.
We are also very mindful to keep the community connected with a temporary footbridge which also serves a secondary purpose to ensure uninterrupted service supplies when the old bridge is removed with BT, City Fibre, gas and watermains currently crossing it, supplying businesses and hundreds of private properties.
This is a significant engineering challenge, and the design also must consider the poor ground conditions, pedestrians, trains, and utilities.
No records of the existing bridge exist (not surprising being built by the MOD during the war) and partial demolition of the bridge while keeping a section open to traffic is not feasible, as the bridge is too small and the construction techniques used in 1941 do not allow for this approach.
When you consider the all of the above we have significant limits on what we can do, the plant and equipment we can use and the timeframes we do it in, Octavius and our specialist supply chain have the capability and expertise to carry out rapid infrastructure replacement using complex offline techniques and I have been fortunate enough to deliver a number of them, but sadly this scheme is not suited to those techniques due to the challenges I have mentioned above, you would be hard pushed to find anyone globally that could undertake this particular scheme any differently."
| Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025 In "London to the Cotswolds" [368628/29711/14] Posted by charles_uk at 09:43, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
And for second day running (though at least it does stop at some stations this time):
08:18 Worcester Shrub Hill to London Paddington due 10:25 will no longer call at Pershore, Honeybourne, Moreton-In-Marsh, Kingham and Hanborough.
It has been delayed at Worcester Shrub Hill and is now 37 minutes late.
This is due to a points failure.
Will be formed of 5 coaches instead of 9. There are no reservations on this service
It has been delayed at Worcester Shrub Hill and is now 37 minutes late.
This is due to a points failure.
Will be formed of 5 coaches instead of 9. There are no reservations on this service
and the following service, which was "full and standing" well before Oxford yesterday
08:56 Great Malvern to London Paddington due 11:27 was started from Worcester Shrub Hill.
It will no longer call at Great Malvern, Malvern Link and Worcester Foregate Street.
This is due to a points failure.
It will no longer call at Great Malvern, Malvern Link and Worcester Foregate Street.
This is due to a points failure.
and has just gone through Norton Junction 20 minutes late
| Re: Thames Valley infrastructure problems causing disruption elsewhere - 2025 In "Across the West" [368627/29650/26] Posted by TaplowGreen at 08:44, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
Delays to services between London Paddington and Reading
Due to congestion between London Paddington and Reading:
Train services running to and from these stations may be delayed by up to 20 minutes. Disruption is expected until 09:00 26/11.
Customer Advice
Owing to earlier points problems at Slough, an ongoing points failure at Didcot Parkway and a defect on a train in the Maidenhead area train services between London Paddington and Reading are experiencing some delays.
A video news report, from the BBC:
200th rail anniversary exhibition train arrives
An exhibition train marking the 200th anniversary of the modern railway has arrived at the West Somerset Railway.
The train, called Inspiration, is on a nationwide tour with more than 200,000 people expected to visit.
The West Somerset Railway is the only stopping point for the mobile exhibition in the West.
The train is emblazoned with the words Past, Present, Future and Together.
An exhibition train marking the 200th anniversary of the modern railway has arrived at the West Somerset Railway.
The train, called Inspiration, is on a nationwide tour with more than 200,000 people expected to visit.
The West Somerset Railway is the only stopping point for the mobile exhibition in the West.
The train is emblazoned with the words Past, Present, Future and Together.
https://www.bbc.co.uk/iplayer/episode/m002msyc/spotlight-evening-news-25112025
Local BBC TV evening news. Inspiration starting at 20:25.
Viewable for a limited period?
| Re: Belgium public transport issues Wednesday 26 November In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [368623/31159/52] Posted by GBM at 08:04, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/articles/c0jew0lyv98o
24 November 2025
Belgium is bracing for widespread disruption across sectors including public transport and schools this week as unions hold a three-day national strike.
The action was called in response to Prime Minister Bart De Wever's attempts to shrink Belgium's debt by changing labour laws and reforming unemployment benefits and pensions.
............continues........
.....planning permission hoped for by 2029...... 
https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0je8nd0x2yo

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0je8nd0x2yo
Considering it was all agreed and went through Courts just before Covid, dithering for another 4 years is probably Government speak for we are kicking it into long grass until after next election.
| Belgium public transport issues Wednesday 26 November In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [368621/31159/52] Posted by infoman at 06:06, 26th November 2025 | ![]() |
BBC news are reporting on Strike action effecting Belgiums public transport system.
It seems that the Eurostar services are not effected.
| Re: 175s to GWR In "Across the West" [368620/28982/26] Posted by REVUpminster at 22:41, 25th November 2025 Already liked by IndustryInsider | ![]() |
Been announced that contract for £3,159,166 enhancement works at Laira depot for 175s has been awarded to Emeg of Chesterfield
https://bidstats.uk/tenders/2025/W47/859046297
https://bidstats.uk/tenders/2025/W47/859046297
£3m not going to buy much; a new walkway, new lighting?
On Friday hopefully more than one unit is coming from Wolverton to Laira.
https://www.realtimetrains.co.uk/service/gb-nr:K48039/2025-11-28/detailed
| Re: Re-opening the Cowley branch to passenger traffic In "London to Didcot, Oxford and Banbury" [368619/27074/9] Posted by IndustryInsider at 22:32, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
There is a footpath at 44:33 that would need risk assessing, and a large equipment room building (44:53) on the site of Kennington Junction Signalbox that might be in the way unless there is room behind it.
That’s not a public footpath/crossing anymore so shouldn’t be a problem.
The large building will need to be (re)moved though.
| Re: Isles of Scilly sea ferry and air services - merged posts In "Buses and other ways to travel" [368618/11098/5] Posted by anthony215 at 22:09, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
I assume a Boeing 737 was all they could find available. It would have been cheaper to hire a dozen limousines with liveried chauffeur, but that wouldn't protect the slot.
Only supposed to be for this week i believe then they getting a Q400 for the route which I think would be a better aircraft
| Re: Heathrow Airport - plans for expansion: ongoing discussion, merged posts In "Buses and other ways to travel" [368617/22971/5] Posted by TaplowGreen at 21:48, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
.....planning permission hoped for by 2029......

https://www.bbc.com/news/articles/c0je8nd0x2yo
| Re: Winterstoke railway bridge, Weston super mare closed for two years. In "The West - but NOT trains in the West" [368616/31150/31] Posted by grahame at 21:21, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
So if we say the height of ceilings in a terraced house is eight feet
so if we take into account a two story house that's 24 feet.
Eh? How could you have possibly have worked that one out - even allowing for primary school arithmetic?

I looked at that one before I put up my earlier answer. A two storey house typically has a loft and comes in around 25 feet tall including the pitch of the room, on which the total height is very dependent. Here is a typical example

The best feature is the sand-pit, which Phil and I both enjoyed (big kids at heart!) The sand-pit is a little hard to explain. It has an interactive animation projected onto it, which changes the features of a railway landscape (hills, tunnels, rivers, track, viaducts...) as you change the topography of the sand. The animation changes in real time as you move the sand around. For example, if you pile it up and a hill and tunnel are built. Just be careful not to block tracks or derail the trains!
I have no idea how I managed to do it, but I did derail the train!
Railway 200's Inspiration Train is currently (24th-29th November 2025) visiting Bishops Lydeard station on the West Somerset Railway.
I visited today, 25th November, along with fellow forum member PhilWakely. GWR had laid on a free shuttle (a Class 150) service from Taunton so we joined that for the rare opportunity to take a passenger train via Norton Fitzwarren Junction onto West Somerset Railway metals. That shuttle service is running again on Friday 28th November 2025 should anyone wish to make the trip to visit the Inspiration Train. The Inspiration Train is free to visit and the shuttle service from Taunton is also free. Booking is required though. This can be done on the WSR website. Tickets need to be booked at least 12 hours ahead of visit.
https://www.west-somerset-railway.co.uk/events/view/inspiration-railway-2002-travelling-exhibition-train-visit-to-west-somerset-railway
The Inspiration Train itself? An okay exhibition. You can only put so much into Mk3 carriages while allowing for footfall through them. There are things to play with that will interest children, with historical artifacts, pictures and text to keep the grown ups interested. The best feature is the sand-pit, which Phil and I both enjoyed (big kids at heart!) The sand-pit is a little hard to explain. It has an interactive animation projected onto it, which changes the features of a railway landscape (hills, tunnels, rivers, track, viaducts...) as you change the topography of the sand. The animation changes in real time as you move the sand around. For example, if you pile it up and a hill and tunnel are built. Just be careful not to block tracks or derail the trains!
No more than half an hour is needed to walk through the exhibition. Here's a video of the day wot I made.
https://youtu.be/yk_o9FcQc3k?si=7WYuLw-MIujDNZtF
| Re: Re-opening the Cowley branch to passenger traffic In "London to Didcot, Oxford and Banbury" [368613/27074/9] Posted by Oxonhutch at 20:30, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
There is a footpath at 44:33 that would need risk assessing, and a large equipment room building (44:53) on the site of Kennington Junction Signalbox that might be in the way unless there is room behind it.
The six foot looks to be a generous broad gauge dimension so the Up Oxford could be slewed over a bit to add some extra room for the Relief.
| Re: Winterstoke railway bridge, Weston super mare closed for two years. In "The West - but NOT trains in the West" [368612/31150/31] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 20:11, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
So if we say the height of ceilings in a terraced house is eight feet
so if we take into account a two story house that's 24 feet.
Eh? How could you have possibly have worked that one out - even allowing for primary school arithmetic?

...infrastructure takes up much more space than it used to in order to comply with modern standards.
I'm interested in this statement. How much more space is needed? I recognise that safe access (walkways and so on) didn't use to be a priority, but what other new requirements are there?
Ballast shoulders are wider and higher, even for relatively slow speed lines, and there would clearance and space for electrification even if it is not in the current plan
And as well as that the furniture like signal gantries is getting bigger and more robust, along with cabinets for that equipment which now also house TPWS equipment...and so on and so on.
Fortunately the one big potential obstacle for extending the Up Oxford Relief, the bridge that carries Old Abingdon Road over it was rebuilt with space for a fourth track, indeed if you watch the following video from 43m00s to 46m 00s you can see the route in question:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TMADOeBumAU
From the site of the proposed new junction north of Radley at 43m 10s to Kennington Junction at 44m 55s you can see the width of the formation is adequate for a third track without widening the boundary. A small bit of track slewing and movement of equipment boxes/signals will be needed, but nothing too monumentral and note the new footbridge at 44m 38s is wide enough.
From 45m 00s to 45m 25s the extra track is already in place as it's a goods loop.
45m 28s is the Old Abingdon Road bridge which has space for the fourth track on the right and it can then run behind the equipment boxes until it passes over one of the Hinksey Stream bridge at 45m 43s where the right hand span is currently not used and with a small amount of track slewing (and movement of equipment) there is room for it to continue on the right hand side under the two footbridges at 46m 11s and 46m 40s until 47m 00s where the current Up Oxford Relief line ends.
| Re: OTD - 2nd March 1953 - Passenger service to Highworth ceases In "Railway History and related topics" [368610/26105/55] Posted by Marlburian at 18:15, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
A new YouTube video (just two days old) about the Highworth branch.
OK, there are lots of "old railway" videos, but I'm mentioning this one for two reasons:
1. the amount of surviving track, now obscured by vegetation.
2. in the summer my cousin-criminologist from a Welsh university was discussing with a senior officer at Wiltshire Police a meeting so she could research something sensitive. There was some confusion as to whether this would take place at Devizes or Swindon, and some discussion between us as to how she would get to either place by train, though we agreed that it would make sense for her to travel to me, stay overnight, and then I could drive her to either place. (In both cases the routes would be very scenic.) I pondered how I would amuse myself during her meeting. Had it been Swindon I might have killed time in Highworth. Now I realise that the overgrown track was very close to Swindon police station - and I might now explore it next year.
As it happened, no meeting took place, possibly because her research would have related to over-sensitive areas.
| Re: Re-opening the Cowley branch to passenger traffic In "London to Didcot, Oxford and Banbury" [368609/27074/9] Posted by Electric train at 18:02, 25th November 2025 | ![]() |
...infrastructure takes up much more space than it used to in order to comply with modern standards.
I'm interested in this statement. How much more space is needed? I recognise that safe access (walkways and so on) didn't use to be a priority, but what other new requirements are there?
Ballast shoulders are wider and higher, even for relatively slow speed lines, and there would clearance and space for electrification even if it is not in the current plan
Drivers are *never* at fault. We all know this, don't we?

From the BBC:
Weardale Railway Santa train cancelled over mechanical failures

Weardale Railway said the Santa Express services would be back next year
A "much-loved" Santa train experience on a heritage railway has been cancelled over mechanical problems.
Weardale Railway's 2025 Santa Express services had been due to begin next month but restoration works on one of its locomotives were delayed and the backup engine suffered a "major generator fault", rendering it inoperable.
The company apologised saying it was "absolutely devastated" and that it had been unable to source alternative engines in time to reliably deliver the service. People with existing bookings will receive a full refund and those affected will be contacted, Weardale Railway said.
In previous years, customers on the heritage railway attraction would be transported from Stanhope Station in County Durham, before Santa boarded the train and gave out gifts.
General Manager Claire Gibbons said: "We are sad and frustrated to have to make this decision. We have explored every possible option to keep the event running, but the mechanical challenges we're facing simply cannot be resolved in time."
Its key locomotive was sent for repairs in April and was originally due to return to service in this month.
Weardale Railway said the festive service would be back next year. Other events such as their Halloween trains will go ahead as planned this year, as they use a smaller single-carriage diesel train unaffected by the current issues, the company said.

Weardale Railway said the Santa Express services would be back next year
A "much-loved" Santa train experience on a heritage railway has been cancelled over mechanical problems.
Weardale Railway's 2025 Santa Express services had been due to begin next month but restoration works on one of its locomotives were delayed and the backup engine suffered a "major generator fault", rendering it inoperable.
The company apologised saying it was "absolutely devastated" and that it had been unable to source alternative engines in time to reliably deliver the service. People with existing bookings will receive a full refund and those affected will be contacted, Weardale Railway said.
In previous years, customers on the heritage railway attraction would be transported from Stanhope Station in County Durham, before Santa boarded the train and gave out gifts.
General Manager Claire Gibbons said: "We are sad and frustrated to have to make this decision. We have explored every possible option to keep the event running, but the mechanical challenges we're facing simply cannot be resolved in time."
Its key locomotive was sent for repairs in April and was originally due to return to service in this month.
Weardale Railway said the festive service would be back next year. Other events such as their Halloween trains will go ahead as planned this year, as they use a smaller single-carriage diesel train unaffected by the current issues, the company said.














