Recent Public Posts - [guest]
| Re: AQ10 - "Pilning" - West Country Mornington Crescent In "The Lighter Side" [369328/31234/30] Posted by grahame at 15:05, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Having just spoken with Samantha,the next destination for those playing at home randomly selected by the laser display board is Filton Abbey Wood.
And that could oh so nearly lead us to Pilning - except that there's nowhere to stop on that side so we end up as Severn Tunnel Junction
| Re: Gales to cause Friday Isle of Man ferry passenger disruption - December 2025 In "Buses and other ways to travel" [369327/31208/5] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 13:54, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
An update, from the BBC:
Isle of Man ferries resume after overnight disruption

Ferry sailings between the Isle of Man and Lancashire have resumed after overnight after they were cancelled by strong winds over the Irish Sea.
The Isle of Man Steam Packet Company cancelled the Manxman's Wednesday evening journey Heysham and its Douglas-bound return due to the choppy conditions.
The morning's crossing to the Lancashire port departed shortly before 08:00 GMT as scheduled.
Forecasters have warned of possible further disruption to travel to and from the island at the weekend, with gales expected to return on both Saturday and Sunday.
The lasted disruption followed the scrapping of all sailings on Tuesday as Storm Bram hit the island bringing storm force winds.

Ferry sailings between the Isle of Man and Lancashire have resumed after overnight after they were cancelled by strong winds over the Irish Sea.
The Isle of Man Steam Packet Company cancelled the Manxman's Wednesday evening journey Heysham and its Douglas-bound return due to the choppy conditions.
The morning's crossing to the Lancashire port departed shortly before 08:00 GMT as scheduled.
Forecasters have warned of possible further disruption to travel to and from the island at the weekend, with gales expected to return on both Saturday and Sunday.
The lasted disruption followed the scrapping of all sailings on Tuesday as Storm Bram hit the island bringing storm force winds.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369326/31241/30] Posted by eightonedee at 13:53, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Is No.3 London Bridge?
| Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025 In "London to the Cotswolds" [369325/29711/14] Posted by charles_uk at 13:52, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Thursday December 11
11:58 Great Malvern to London Paddington due 14:23 will be started from Worcester Shrub Hill.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:11/12/2025 06:29
11:58 Great Malvern to London Paddington due 14:23 will be started from Worcester Shrub Hill.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:11/12/2025 06:29
but in the end
11:58 Great Malvern to London Paddington due 14:23 has been cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:11/12/2025 12:02
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:11/12/2025 12:02
| Re: Swindon <-> Westbury service updates and amendments, ongoing discussion - 2025 In "TransWilts line" [369324/29726/18] Posted by TaplowGreen at 12:40, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
18:37 Westbury to Swindon due 19:21
18:37 Westbury to Swindon due 19:21 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
20:12 Swindon to Westbury due 20:56
20:12 Swindon to Westbury due 20:56 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369323/31241/30] Posted by johnneyw at 12:25, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
A very vague childhood memory makes me think that 2 could be Gants Hill, but that was some time back.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369322/31241/30] Posted by John D at 11:58, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
I think number 11 is Crystal Palace
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369321/31241/30] Posted by Richard Fairhurst at 11:34, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
6 is the big-numbered platforms (11+) at Liverpool Street, I think.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369320/31241/30] Posted by Ralph Ayres at 11:11, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
I'll stay out of this one; all either very obvious for me or frustrating "I ought to recognise that" pics. I go far enough back in London to have bought things from that slim W H Smith's kiosk sticking out from the wall in number 7, as well as helping commission the first dot matrix display there.
| Re: Two South Western Ambulance workers arrested after six people die in Wiltshire In "The West - but NOT trains in the West" [369319/30766/31] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 10:50, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
An update, from the BBC:
Wiltshire deaths probe linked to patients' altered care records

The arrest of two ambulance workers over the deaths of six adults is linked to allegations some patients were not taken to hospital when they should have been and had their care records altered, the BBC can reveal.
A Wiltshire Police investigation, launched in 2023, is believed to be connected to an internal audit by South West Ambulance Service NHS Trust [SWAST] of an electronic patient care record system [ePCR].
The BBC understands vital readings were allegedly changed to make a patient appear less ill at the end of a shift so hospital transport - and potentially a long wait at the hospital - was avoided.
SWAST and Wiltshire Police have declined to comment while the investigation is ongoing.
Last year a man in his 30s, from West Wiltshire, was arrested on suspicion of six counts of gross negligence manslaughter and four counts of ill-treatment or willful neglect by a care worker. An Emergency Care Assistant [ECA], a woman in her 50s, was also arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter in March. Both have been released on bail.
One source, who the BBC is not naming, said: "One of the patients who died at home... had low oxygen saturation... a criteria that demanded hospital conveyance.The observations they changed manually, increased the saturation level to a rate that justified being managed at home."
The BBC understands the arrested paramedic was sacked, while the ECA, who is suspected of assisting the paramedic in changing the ePCR, remains suspended.

An NHS promotional video showed how the electronic patient care record system worked
A new ePCR system was launched by the ambulance service in 2016 and described it as "an electronic solution designed by paramedics for paramedics". Nineteen emergency vehicles were fitted with the device.
Under the system paramedics using a mobile electronic pad can input vital data such as blood pressure or a heart monitor reading. This is communicated to a unit at the hospital, streamlining the process of recording patient data during emergency responses.
Training for crews emphasises that patients seen at the end of a 12-hour shift should be treated in exactly the same manner as those at the beginning. But several sources within the emergency services have told the BBC that when an audit of the system was introduced in 2022, it flagged up discrepancies between the readings sent using bluetooth by the West Wiltshire paramedics and subsequent manual overrides they made.
The sources told the BBC that it is common practice to make manual changes to readings - such as blood pressure and blood oxygen saturation levels (SATS) - if paramedics believe an original reading was incorrect. Incorrect readings can also happen if, for instance, a patient is wearing nail varnish as that can affect the SATS reading. Temperature readings can also be wrong if patient's extremities are cold.
However, sources say that the audit identified a number of occasions where manual changes were later made that were not legitimate.
A Freedom of Information request by the BBC showed that, since January 2025 a total of 12,453 audits were completed, of which 719 were non-compliant - the equivalent of one in 17. Non-compliance can be for a variety of reasons, for example where paramedics failed to explain their clinical decisions.
As part of its investigation the BBC has also been told that two other SWAST paramedics have been suspended after another failed ePCR audit, not related to the police investigation. SWAST has declined to confirm the reason for these two suspensions.

The arrest of two ambulance workers over the deaths of six adults is linked to allegations some patients were not taken to hospital when they should have been and had their care records altered, the BBC can reveal.
A Wiltshire Police investigation, launched in 2023, is believed to be connected to an internal audit by South West Ambulance Service NHS Trust [SWAST] of an electronic patient care record system [ePCR].
The BBC understands vital readings were allegedly changed to make a patient appear less ill at the end of a shift so hospital transport - and potentially a long wait at the hospital - was avoided.
SWAST and Wiltshire Police have declined to comment while the investigation is ongoing.
Last year a man in his 30s, from West Wiltshire, was arrested on suspicion of six counts of gross negligence manslaughter and four counts of ill-treatment or willful neglect by a care worker. An Emergency Care Assistant [ECA], a woman in her 50s, was also arrested on suspicion of gross negligence manslaughter in March. Both have been released on bail.
One source, who the BBC is not naming, said: "One of the patients who died at home... had low oxygen saturation... a criteria that demanded hospital conveyance.The observations they changed manually, increased the saturation level to a rate that justified being managed at home."
The BBC understands the arrested paramedic was sacked, while the ECA, who is suspected of assisting the paramedic in changing the ePCR, remains suspended.

An NHS promotional video showed how the electronic patient care record system worked
A new ePCR system was launched by the ambulance service in 2016 and described it as "an electronic solution designed by paramedics for paramedics". Nineteen emergency vehicles were fitted with the device.
Under the system paramedics using a mobile electronic pad can input vital data such as blood pressure or a heart monitor reading. This is communicated to a unit at the hospital, streamlining the process of recording patient data during emergency responses.
Training for crews emphasises that patients seen at the end of a 12-hour shift should be treated in exactly the same manner as those at the beginning. But several sources within the emergency services have told the BBC that when an audit of the system was introduced in 2022, it flagged up discrepancies between the readings sent using bluetooth by the West Wiltshire paramedics and subsequent manual overrides they made.
The sources told the BBC that it is common practice to make manual changes to readings - such as blood pressure and blood oxygen saturation levels (SATS) - if paramedics believe an original reading was incorrect. Incorrect readings can also happen if, for instance, a patient is wearing nail varnish as that can affect the SATS reading. Temperature readings can also be wrong if patient's extremities are cold.
However, sources say that the audit identified a number of occasions where manual changes were later made that were not legitimate.
A Freedom of Information request by the BBC showed that, since January 2025 a total of 12,453 audits were completed, of which 719 were non-compliant - the equivalent of one in 17. Non-compliance can be for a variety of reasons, for example where paramedics failed to explain their clinical decisions.
As part of its investigation the BBC has also been told that two other SWAST paramedics have been suspended after another failed ePCR audit, not related to the police investigation. SWAST has declined to confirm the reason for these two suspensions.
| Re: Warning as drivers seen queuing on level crossing near Willington In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [369318/31238/51] Posted by stuving at 10:48, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Repainting the yellow box would help too - it also reinforces the "do not stop here" message. I know there has been a problem finding paint that sticks to the polymer road panels well enough to withstand wear from traffic, though the newer stuff does seem to work better.
Of course making the panels with a yellow box moulded in would be best for durability. However, while the pattern is fixed, the skew of the railway to the road is not. But I would not rule out making the panels customised just for one crossing - it's the kind of manufacturing cleverness that can be cost-effective these days.
| Re: 04:50 Fratton - Bristol Temple Meads cancelled In "Bristol (WECA) Commuters" [369317/31177/21] Posted by grahame at 10:34, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
..and nice to see Graham handing out timetables at Melksham at 6:30
(the 6:32 to Trowbridge (eventually Southampton) becomes the 6:29 next week)
(the 6:32 to Trowbridge (eventually Southampton) becomes the 6:29 next week)A very interesting morning. Much learning, though no massive surprises. Thawing out over a coffee then out for lunch with the Bowerhill Villager team.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369316/31241/30] Posted by stuving at 10:20, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
12. Barking.
| Re: Swindon <-> Westbury service updates and amendments, ongoing discussion - 2025 In "TransWilts line" [369315/29726/18] Posted by grahame at 10:19, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
14:18 Westbury to Swindon due 15:00
15:15 Swindon to Westbury due 15:59
15:15 Swindon to Westbury due 15:59 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
15:15 Swindon to Westbury due 15:59
15:15 Swindon to Westbury due 15:59 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369314/31241/30] Posted by RobT at 10:08, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
4. Clapham Junction
Edit: WP beat me to it!
| Re: How ‘The Flying Banana’ became a British railway icon In "Across the West" [369313/31243/26] Posted by rogerw at 09:53, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Romic have just introduced their own HST for charter use. I shall be sampling it on 31 January on a tour from Derby to Shildon via a very indirect route.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369312/31241/30] Posted by Western Pathfinder at 09:53, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
Number for Clapham Jct.
| Re: AQ10 - "Pilning" - West Country Mornington Crescent In "The Lighter Side" [369311/31234/30] Posted by Western Pathfinder at 09:49, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Having just spoken with Samantha,the next destination for those playing at home randomly selected by the laser display board is Filton Abbey Wood.
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369310/31241/30] Posted by Oxonhutch at 09:24, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
8: Paddington - Heading down to the Lizzie Line
| Re: AQ10 - "Pilning" - West Country Mornington Crescent In "The Lighter Side" [369309/31234/30] Posted by froome at 08:57, 11th December 2025 Already liked by Western Pathfinder, johnneyw | ![]() |
I claim my choice of Yate stands under Mertons convention,be that as it may moving onwards from Melksham,with all due deference to The webmaster! Our next stop is
Bradford On Avon.
Bradford On Avon.
But Merton's Convention was never more a footnote in Stovold's revised rules. Should it be formally recognised? Yes there's no huffing but regardless, I propose Dilton Marsh and hang the repercussions.
No repercussions, it is the Thursday exemption. Which must take us to Ashchurch (for Tewkesbury).
| Re: Near miss Slovakia In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [369308/31242/52] Posted by Witham Bobby at 08:54, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Nasty situation, and very fortunate that a disaster did not occur. A mid-country meet is the worst kind of railway nightmare
But, how lovely the passenger accommodation looks, compared to the average GB sardine can
| Re: Near miss Slovakia In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [369307/31242/52] Posted by matth1j at 08:20, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
...and turn down/off your speakers if you're at work

| How ‘The Flying Banana’ became a British railway icon In "Across the West" [369306/31243/26] Posted by matth1j at 08:19, 11th December 2025 Already liked by Witham Bobby, PrestburyRoad, rogerw | ![]() |
Telegraph piece on the Intercity 125's "final bow" this week.
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gift/4b4246cdb4fb7fe7
Half a century ago, two pioneering examples of British transport technology were being fine-tuned ahead of their introduction to the world.
One was the Anglo-French Concorde, the supersonic jet that promised to revolutionise air travel – flying to destinations as glamorous as Barbados, Bahrain, Miami and New York – but is today just a fond, fading memory.
The other was the more humble High Speed Train, which was destined for even more exotic locales – like Peterborough, Leicester and Swansea. Its name was a real “back of an envelope” job – but unlike its more celebrated and poetically monikered rival, the High Speed Train is still around, but only just.
A symbol of British engineering flair
The Class 43 High Speed Train, or HST, appeared to modest fanfare in an era soundtracked by the Sex Pistols, the Ramones and David Bowie’s just-released “Young Americans”.
Trainspotters slipped on brown parkas to stand shivering at Doncaster station and watch “The Flying Banana” whizz by. It got that nickname from the flash of yellow on the classic wraparound InterCity 125 logo, and it dragged nationalised British Rail (BR) into the modern era. The first trains ran in 1975. Following testing, BR cleared them for their passenger debut in early 1976.
Its stub-nosed look, by legendary industrial designer Sir Kenneth Grange, makes the train look like a sad cod. But it became a transport icon. Branded InterCity 125s for their supposed top speed, they could actually hit a trifle-wobbly 148mph and were the fastest ever diesel train – and also one of the world’s fastest trains at the time.
Built in Crewe and Derby, they became emblematic of a British engineering flair which – almost – conquered the world. If BR hadn’t cancelled the HST’s sister project, the tilting Advanced Passenger Train, that too could have become a highly exportable design. But the HST succeeded and is now celebrating its 50th birthday.
After the ignominy of the Beeching cuts, BR in the 1970s wanted to focus on long-distance travel – hence the HST. The InterCity brand and refreshed design were supposed to usher in a new era of comfort and speed that would compete with cars and the 1,000 miles of motorways completed by 1972. The trains were great, the design was great, and the infamously floppy BR buffet sandwiches were… grating. You could smoke onboard and lean out of the slam-door windows.
The train of the people
HST fans are legion. Initially, trainspotters lamented the death of locomotive-hauled trains and the iconic steam services like the Flying Scotsman that came before them. But today there are plenty of aficionados. The UK HST Enthusiast Group on Facebook counts almost 14,000 members.
Travellers miss the comfort of the Mark 3 carriages they pulled – deep chairs swallowed you like a brown velour whale, and there were armrests, tables, carpets, acres of space for bags and Radio Rentals TVs and huge picture windows.
The plush interiors were a million miles away from the HST’s modern replacements, where bright neon lighting burns the retinas like it’s midday in the Nevada desert, and wipe-clean surfaces make it all look like a mobile dentist’s surgery. An hour or two on the dreaded “ironing board” seats found on newer trains will have you Googling a chiropractor.
We used HSTs to go to university in Leeds, to see great aunties in Grantham, for business in Bristol or for comedy in Edinburgh. It was the train of the people. After 50 long years of service, the HST will be taking its final bow in the South West on December 13, bringing to a close regularly timetabled service in England and Wales.
The last Great Western Railway Castle Class HSTs will retire with a flourish. Three of the last trains will line up at Plymouth Station between 7.17pm and 7.37pm for fans to take pictures.
The Castle Class trains were all named after – you guessed it – British castles. After stepping down from long-distance mainline services from London Paddington to Penzance and South Wales, they were shortened to three, four and five coaches and lived out their semi-retirement on local services ferrying cream tea-fuelled daytrippers around Devon and Cornwall.
From December 14, your only chance to ride these trains in Britain as a regular passenger will be on Scotrail’s Inter7City services from Glasgow and Edinburgh to Aberdeen and Inverness.
But it’s not the end of the line for the HST. This surprisingly resilient train will live on. Several heritage railways have bought them, and rail-tour companies use them too. The Midland Pullman runs a luxury service around Britain in a beautiful baby blue livery. Germany’s RailAdventure freight company will use them to haul cargo, while Network Rail’s canary yellow New Measurement Train, aka the “New Flying Banana”, monitors the tracks for safety.
A place in the sun
But the most intriguing part of the HST story is their glamorous second life in the sun. Like a divorced dad barrelling through a midlife crisis, the trains have pitched up in Mexico, Nigeria and Australia. An almost exact copy, christened XPT (for Express Passenger Train), was built Down Under. For a while they even used the InterCity brand too, making homesick Britons feel pangs of nostalgia. These workhorses of the Aussie rail network still run from Sydney to Melbourne and Brisbane.
They were just versions of the HST, but the real things have had a new beginning in Mexico and Nigeria. Shipped from Great Yarmouth by boat, the ex-GWR trains have travelled halfway across the world and are now well-used on services around Lagos and on the brand new Interoceanico service, which runs across the spine of Mexico from Coatzacoalcos on the Atlantic to Salina Cruz on the Pacific. This line is bizarrely run by none other than the Mexican Navy, who – one would assume – should be able to make the trains run on time.
As some HSTs head for the great siding in the sky and others enjoy a new life abroad, at age 50, Britain’s oldest train is fondly remembered as among our very best.
One was the Anglo-French Concorde, the supersonic jet that promised to revolutionise air travel – flying to destinations as glamorous as Barbados, Bahrain, Miami and New York – but is today just a fond, fading memory.
The other was the more humble High Speed Train, which was destined for even more exotic locales – like Peterborough, Leicester and Swansea. Its name was a real “back of an envelope” job – but unlike its more celebrated and poetically monikered rival, the High Speed Train is still around, but only just.
A symbol of British engineering flair
The Class 43 High Speed Train, or HST, appeared to modest fanfare in an era soundtracked by the Sex Pistols, the Ramones and David Bowie’s just-released “Young Americans”.
Trainspotters slipped on brown parkas to stand shivering at Doncaster station and watch “The Flying Banana” whizz by. It got that nickname from the flash of yellow on the classic wraparound InterCity 125 logo, and it dragged nationalised British Rail (BR) into the modern era. The first trains ran in 1975. Following testing, BR cleared them for their passenger debut in early 1976.
Its stub-nosed look, by legendary industrial designer Sir Kenneth Grange, makes the train look like a sad cod. But it became a transport icon. Branded InterCity 125s for their supposed top speed, they could actually hit a trifle-wobbly 148mph and were the fastest ever diesel train – and also one of the world’s fastest trains at the time.
Built in Crewe and Derby, they became emblematic of a British engineering flair which – almost – conquered the world. If BR hadn’t cancelled the HST’s sister project, the tilting Advanced Passenger Train, that too could have become a highly exportable design. But the HST succeeded and is now celebrating its 50th birthday.
After the ignominy of the Beeching cuts, BR in the 1970s wanted to focus on long-distance travel – hence the HST. The InterCity brand and refreshed design were supposed to usher in a new era of comfort and speed that would compete with cars and the 1,000 miles of motorways completed by 1972. The trains were great, the design was great, and the infamously floppy BR buffet sandwiches were… grating. You could smoke onboard and lean out of the slam-door windows.
The train of the people
HST fans are legion. Initially, trainspotters lamented the death of locomotive-hauled trains and the iconic steam services like the Flying Scotsman that came before them. But today there are plenty of aficionados. The UK HST Enthusiast Group on Facebook counts almost 14,000 members.
Travellers miss the comfort of the Mark 3 carriages they pulled – deep chairs swallowed you like a brown velour whale, and there were armrests, tables, carpets, acres of space for bags and Radio Rentals TVs and huge picture windows.
The plush interiors were a million miles away from the HST’s modern replacements, where bright neon lighting burns the retinas like it’s midday in the Nevada desert, and wipe-clean surfaces make it all look like a mobile dentist’s surgery. An hour or two on the dreaded “ironing board” seats found on newer trains will have you Googling a chiropractor.
We used HSTs to go to university in Leeds, to see great aunties in Grantham, for business in Bristol or for comedy in Edinburgh. It was the train of the people. After 50 long years of service, the HST will be taking its final bow in the South West on December 13, bringing to a close regularly timetabled service in England and Wales.
The last Great Western Railway Castle Class HSTs will retire with a flourish. Three of the last trains will line up at Plymouth Station between 7.17pm and 7.37pm for fans to take pictures.
The Castle Class trains were all named after – you guessed it – British castles. After stepping down from long-distance mainline services from London Paddington to Penzance and South Wales, they were shortened to three, four and five coaches and lived out their semi-retirement on local services ferrying cream tea-fuelled daytrippers around Devon and Cornwall.
From December 14, your only chance to ride these trains in Britain as a regular passenger will be on Scotrail’s Inter7City services from Glasgow and Edinburgh to Aberdeen and Inverness.
But it’s not the end of the line for the HST. This surprisingly resilient train will live on. Several heritage railways have bought them, and rail-tour companies use them too. The Midland Pullman runs a luxury service around Britain in a beautiful baby blue livery. Germany’s RailAdventure freight company will use them to haul cargo, while Network Rail’s canary yellow New Measurement Train, aka the “New Flying Banana”, monitors the tracks for safety.
A place in the sun
But the most intriguing part of the HST story is their glamorous second life in the sun. Like a divorced dad barrelling through a midlife crisis, the trains have pitched up in Mexico, Nigeria and Australia. An almost exact copy, christened XPT (for Express Passenger Train), was built Down Under. For a while they even used the InterCity brand too, making homesick Britons feel pangs of nostalgia. These workhorses of the Aussie rail network still run from Sydney to Melbourne and Brisbane.
They were just versions of the HST, but the real things have had a new beginning in Mexico and Nigeria. Shipped from Great Yarmouth by boat, the ex-GWR trains have travelled halfway across the world and are now well-used on services around Lagos and on the brand new Interoceanico service, which runs across the spine of Mexico from Coatzacoalcos on the Atlantic to Salina Cruz on the Pacific. This line is bizarrely run by none other than the Mexican Navy, who – one would assume – should be able to make the trains run on time.
As some HSTs head for the great siding in the sky and others enjoy a new life abroad, at age 50, Britain’s oldest train is fondly remembered as among our very best.
| Near miss Slovakia In "The Wider Picture Overseas" [369305/31242/52] Posted by Mark A at 08:14, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
Slovakia, two passenger services, opposite directions, on the same line. You may need a translation services for the following.
Mark
https://www.noviny.sk/slovensko/1144088-vlaky-sa-tesne-vyhli-zrazke-pri-liptovskom-hradku-zastali-len-par-metrov-od-seba
| Re: 04:50 Fratton - Bristol Temple Meads cancelled In "Bristol (WECA) Commuters" [369304/31177/21] Posted by matth1j at 08:06, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
..and nice to see Graham handing out timetables at Melksham at 6:30
(the 6:32 to Trowbridge (eventually Southampton) becomes the 6:29 next week)| Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025 In "London to the Cotswolds" [369303/29711/14] Posted by Class 50 at 07:54, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
The 07.04 with 5 cars , from Kingham was to say the least a bit overcrowded, and then delayed due to long dwell times, very late off Oxford..
| Re: Capital Quiz - 11th December 2025 In "The Lighter Side" [369302/31241/30] Posted by Timmer at 07:50, 11th December 2025 Already liked by grahame | ![]() |
10 Woking
| Re: 04:50 Fratton - Bristol Temple Meads cancelled In "Bristol (WECA) Commuters" [369301/31177/21] Posted by matth1j at 07:26, 11th December 2025 | ![]() |
4:50 Fratton - Bristol cancelled again, at Trowbridge anyway - it's running (about 50 mins late) but missing out a number of stations. Blamed on crew shortages.
6:42 Frome - Cardiff is ok today though, so an extra 20 mins on Trowbridge platform (waiting room closed) but not too bad.
News Thump nails it as so often!

https://newsthump.com/2025/12/10/new-state-run-body-to-be-responsible-for-making-up-excuses-as-to-why-great-british-railways-are-always-late/
I cannot see evidence of a red light enforcement camera, where these have been installed they have reduce if not eliminated incidents of car hitting trains (I have put it as cars hitting trains as trains have right of way)
Although the crossing in this thread the cars are obstructing the crossing when the lights are not operating, however the use of red light enforcement cameras would drastically reduce the obstruction of the crossing as would improved "Do not obstruct the crossing" signage














