Alpha: Statfold

AlphaJust back from another good day at the Statfold Barn Railway. Photos etc. will appear in due course on “Geoff’s Rail Diaries” – in the meantime, a taster: Hudswell Clarke 1172 of 1922 “Alpha”, the latest new entrant. I’d say more about this lovely little loco – if I knew any more about it…

Update: it’s from the Ryam sugar mill in India – same place as the little black Davenport, also resident at Statfold… See http://geoffspages.co.uk/raildiary/davenport.htm  Thanks to http://www.steamlocomotive.info/ for that.

Dudmaston in spring

Rain is threatened – better not stray too far. A wander around Dudmaston might be pleasant? It was! Spring is really getting going here – and not just the flora. The swans on the lake are quite excited about it, and the geese are honking happily. Just out of sight in the Severn valley, the steam trains whistle as they clatter along, a far more relaxing sound than the motorcycles screaming along the A442…

Dudmaston NT

Back to the Munslows

A pleasant five-mile stroll in a quiet part of the Wenlock Edge – and once we’re away from the road, it really is quiet. The birds are singing, but that doesn’t count as noise, and the only other sound, as we approach the highest parts, is the gentle rustling of a very light breeze in the trees. It’s clear too – the Black Mountains stand out to the south-west. At home, the grass needs cutting, but it will have to wait…

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map.srf?X=351485&Y=287911&A=Y&Z=120

Langley Chapel

We’d driven past once or twice, but never looked more closely. The last regular service was held here in 1871, according to English Heritage, its owners. They also say it was one of the first historic buildings to be taken into the care of the state – in 1914! It’s in the middle of nowhere (i.e roughly half-way between Acton Burnell and Kenley, perhaps 10 miles to the south of Shrewsbury), built for the farm nearby, Langley Hall (itself worth a second glance), when presumably it was of some significance in the area. A remarkable little building – heavy, rather plain and rustic oak pews (and box pews), very simple, very quiet ( a perfect brief Good Friday outing – there’s no-one else here!), and kept clean and tidy despite its long redundancy.

Langley Chapel EH

Mary Knoll – 40 years later

We’ve walked many times in the woodlands to the south-west of Ludlow – this walk was probably our first. Today we retraced our steps, visiting Mary Knoll Valley for the first time in 40 years. The valley, with its pleasant but well-hidden little stream, cuts deeply through the land. Near its head, there’s a herd of deer, and beyond Mary Knoll itself, there are woodpeckers hammering away in the trees. Earlier, as we drove towards Ludlow, we’d passed a pair of red kites, wheeling in the warming air. Oddly, this walk seemed shorter than it was in 1976, though the trees have grown, and Ludford weir has been tidied up. How will it all look in 2056? (Will we care?)

Photo note: it was a dull, slightly murky day in 1976, so I used a roll of FP4 (monochrome) film – which I reversal-processed for black-and-white slides. I was rather pleased with the results, though I never tried it again…


View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map.srf?X=349675&Y=273336&A=Y&Z=120

A Northern Rail tour

Tuesday: A friend had managed to obtain vouchers for £10 day rovers on the Northern Rail network – would I care to join him? No arm-twisting required there… The most convenient starting point is Crewe, where we’re off on the 9.34am to Manchester, via the airport. From Manchester we’ll take a ride through the Hope Valley to Sheffield. Our route and schedule is determined by the nature of Northern Rail’s services – they tend to operate the “stoppers” – so we can’t take the Crewe – Stockport – Sheffield route, instead, we’re heading out on the old GCR/MR joint lines through Romiley and Marple, joining the Midland line proper at New Mills.

At Sheffield, we’ve a longish wait for the Huddersfield train – or we can join a Nottingham – Leeds service, and change at Barnsley. We’ve been on Midland metals from New Mills, but at Barnsley, we’re back on the GCR as far as Penistone, along a line which lost its passenger service in 1959, and regained it in 1983 when the direct Sheffield – Penistone line closed. It’s interesting new track, especially the section from Penistone to Huddersfield, which is really up in the hills.

Only minutes after arriving at Huddersfield, we’re off again, to Leeds (LNWR), where we’re straight onto a modern electric unit for Bradford Forster Square (Midland again; the station almost totally unrecognisable from my last visit in the late ’80s). We’d toyed with the idea of a trip to Ilkley, but the times would have been very tight, and it might have meant a late return home – another day, perhaps. A leg stretch now – we need to get to Bradford Interchange, where there’s just time to grab a bite to eat before setting forth for Manchester, via the L&Y Calder Valley route through Hebden Bridge. Another leg stretch through central Manchester to Piccadilly, where we’ve a longish wait (lots of trains to Crewe, but our ticket’s not valid for Virgins or Arrivas…), this time travelling direct through Stockport. Eventually we’re back to our starting point, after an interesting tour on northern rails… (Will the offer be repeated? Fingers crossed – and many thanks again, J)

Northern Rail

Telford to Ironbridge – along old lines

Monday: We’ve taken the bus to Telford town centre, and we’re walking back. For roughly half the distance (just over 6 miles in total) we’re on, or close to, the Silkin Way, which follows the track of the old Coalport railway. In places, its predecessor, the canal, is also still in water. We leave the trackbed of necessity – there’s a gap, where it used to cross the railway to Ironbridge power station – both now out of use. From this point (near to the old windmill), we’re roughly parallel to the Ironbridge line, and as we descend from Lightmoor, we join the track of an older way – one of the many pre-railway age tramways that ran in these parts. Arriving in Ironbridge, there’s time for tea and cake…

View OS map on Streetmap http://www.streetmap.co.uk/map.srf?X=369040&Y=306086&A=Y&Z=120