Monday, 14 October 2019

11th - 13th October, A trip to Liverpool (bookended with London)

12th October – A trip to Liverpool

The aim of this weekend’s trip was to focus mainly on the Merseyrail units I needed for mileage as they are due to be replaced at some point next year.  I also had a few stations in Merseyside I needed to revisit for platforms so that would give me something to do in the early morning.  Due to being a bit tight with accommodation & travel costs I was in a hostel around 5 minutes away from Lime Street, the rooms themselves were very well designed (not simply a room with some bunk beds thrown in along with some lockers, the room I was in had built in beds with USB/plug sockets by the bedside (as well with a lockable sizeable locker), the only downside was there was an annoying buzzing noise coming from an alarm box and some very drunken people returning at half three in the morning, but I wasn’t expecting a great night due to the location.  (There isn’t a lot of choice when arriving around 23:30 on a Friday night).

My first focus was on the Northern “City Line” services, so buying my All Area Saveaway ranger from the ticket office at Lime Street, it was onto one of the first Crewe stoppers formed of 323232 for the run to Rainhill, returning to Roby on 319379, this is when my plan changed as the next Wigan stopper had been cancelled due to a train fault so it was a tiny leap to Huyton on 319372 returning to Lime Street on winner 331008 (first of the 3-coach 331s, sorry but the interior just isn’t suitable for local stopping services).  Into Lime Street where it was a case of remaining on the same train back to Prescot to clear that station, and I made a tight connection onto winner 331005 working a random semi-fast service from Blackpool.  I took this 331 to Lime Street but decided to leave it until later as the run back to Huyton would mean a long fester for 008 to return from Wigan (as the next stopper from the Rainhill direction had been cancelled).

323 & 185 at Lime Street


Onwards to the low level platforms (after visiting a Sainsburys located outside Lime Street for breakfast, as you can’t beat a Sainsburys bacon sandwich).  The first Merseyrail service wasn’t of interest, but the next one was low mileage 507026 which I took to Rock Ferry, 508112 up next to Port Sunlight returning to Bebington on 508122, before taking 508139 to Bromborough Rake to clear the platform.  The next Ellesmere Port service wasn’t of interest so it was a case of heading to the opposite platform just as a very low mileage 508138 rolled in from Chester, it would be cleared for the run to Hamilton Square after going round the city centre circle.  I crossed over to the “Birkenhead Park” bound platform just to see which unit was following on a New Brighton service, and it ended up being 507003, I decided to bail at Wallasey Grove Road to intercept the previous service which turned out to be a good move as it was 508104, an unit of interest.  The run to Hamilton Square was enough to push it over 10 miles and I stepped back.


Wallasey Grove Road


The next city bound service was 507028 which I took round the loop to James Street, making a tight connection (bringing back memories of when I was hunting my last couple units both on Chester services) with 507003 which I took to Liverpool Central which was just enough to push it over 10 miles (saves trying to hunt it down later for the sake of 5 chains!)  I walked back to Lime Street and onto a Blackpool bound 331005 which I took to Huyton, returning to Lime Street on 319379, for my attention was drawn to a grey machine on platform 1, for one of TPEs new trains had come out to play.

Ninja Train!


I took a seat on 802207 for the run to Newton Le Willows, bumping into Jamie who was out hunting down Spoons.  Interior wise it is pretty much the same as a GWR/LNER model, just bluer.  The run to Newton Le Willows was done on electric, and I had a tight connection onto a busy 185147 on the next Lime Street service, the future is bright.  I heard announcements that an Oxford Road stopper was being delayed so my planned trip to Boots for lunch was put on hold as I walked over to the unbarriered platforms, jumping on a pair of 156s as the rear was the unmissable 156480 (with 156464 leading).  The run to South Parkway would have been enough to push this 156 over the ten mile line, but there wasn’t any decent connections (other than 2 minutes to reach platform 5) so I remained on for the trip down the curve to Hunts Cross (because it was cross platform onto Merseyrail!).

Back onto Merseyrail, this time on the Northern line where I was only planning on spending a few hours before returning to the Wirral line, first up was 507018 to St Michaels for the platform, returning to Cressington on 508111, with 507020 taken to Moorfields.  A short wait before 507010 rolled in from Liverpool Central to take me to Aintree, allowing me to intercept 507006 for the short run back to Walton.  Next up was 507027 which I took to Maghull North, giving me another connection onto a southbound service which was 507017 which I took to Sandhills to intercept the last unit on Ormskirk services, a nice low mileage 508140 for the run back to Aintree, to intercept the return of 507027 to take me back to Sandhills.

Swapping over to the Southport services, it was a trip to Moorfields on 507020, crossing over to 507029 for the run to Hall Road, crossing over to the southbound platform with 508114 for the single stop leap to Blundellsands & Crosby, to intercept 508110 running the next Southport, it was cleared by Ainsdale, so I crossed over to intercept 507032 for the long run to Bootle New Strand, crossing over to board 507021 for the mile to Seaforth & Litherland, intercepting 507029 for the 2nd time for the mile to Bootle New Strand.  Back northbound with the return of 508114 from earlier, which was cleared by the quiet Hightown, I could have stayed on to Formby but decided to bail at Hightown for a picture.

Hightown Station

507020 took me back south to Sandhills, where I had a short wait for 507029 to take me back to the nice island platform of Seaforth & Litherland, for 507021 to finish my trip to the Northern line back to Moorfields.  Darkness had fallen, as had the temperature so I headed to the Wirral line, falling onto 507028 from earlier in the day, it was cleared for ten miles by Hamilton Square, as I crossed over for a 10 minute fester (I’m surprised how soon the frequency dropped on Merseyrail), before my final Merseyrail service of the day with 507026 taken to Lime Street.

I exited the low level station, swinging via Boots for dinner (and a late lunch!), noticing the legendary Pigs in Blankets Christmas Sandwich was back, before boarding 390123 for the slow run to London.  Lost some time around Crewe, and lost a bit more time north of Watford as we got caught up in congestion behind a couple charter services and some late running Pendos from earlier in the day.  Sadly not enough time to push it over half an hour, I think it was around 23 minutes late in the end so no money back, boo.

When I planned this trip back in July time, my original idea was to head home on the 23:40 service, but when I checked last month to my horror it was engineering works between Woking & Basingstoke, and not wanting to get home around 2:30 or so after a bus from Woking to Grateley I looked up somewhere to stay on the Saturday night.  Everywhere seemed to be pricier than normal so I ended up in a hostel near Kensal Green, one I’ve stayed in last year and I had forgotten that it wasn’t the best for road noise, or the staff that friendly.  No drunks tipping up in the early hours in my room at least (but they did in other rooms, all because I was a bit tight with money).

Anyhow back on the day, I turned down the first Willesden Junction bound 378 as I needed to visit the toilet, and got rewarded with winner 710263 on the next Watford Junction bound service, which I stayed on to Willesden Junction to push it over 5 miles.  Nice bit of comedy when it was waiting to depart as a large group of kids flooded on thinking it was a Northampton train, flooded off to a 350 which had arrived but wasn’t in service, before flooding back over to the 710 after the driver had closed the doors (the doors being released before shouts of “this is the Watford train, get off!” as they noticed the Northampton service was the 350 on a different platform!  I wasn’t the only passenger laughing when the 710 eventually departed.

Certainly flies, even on DC!


At Willesden Junction it was a short wait for Bakerloo set 3256/3548 to take me back the 75 chains to Kensal Green, where I checked in and attempted to get some sleep.  Overall a very good day for my requirements on Merseyrail, certainly my list of required units is easier on the eye, probably a job for a return in January time, although I might be willing to break out the pulse strings for a hotel rather than a hostel in Liverpool this time!

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13th October – A Zombie in South Eastern Land

I will admit, after 2 bad nights I was a bit on the tired side this Sunday morning as I checked out of the hostel and headed across the road to Kensal Green station, buying my travelcard from the TVM, and grabbing a picture of two Bakerloo line services passing.

Bakerloo Line at Kensal Green


The first Euston bound service was a 378 of little interest so it was onto Wembley Central on 378224 to intercept the next southbound service; sadly it was 378226, both of little interest but hey ho.  Into a busy Euston station (had I fallen asleep and woken up around 6pm on a weekday, for it was that level of busyness), and I headed over to Sainsburys for breakfast before taking 11037/11038 for the speedy run to Victoria, for it was another day I was spending in South Eastern land.  But the first move wasn’t for a South Eastern service, but one of the few booked Thameslink services.

"If I hide on platform 1, do you think anybody will notice?"


After making a note of a couple required units for later on, low mileage 700026 rolled into platform 1 for a quick turnaround, felt strange boarding a 700 at Victoria and heading towards Denmark Hill.  The unit would have been cleared for ten miles by Bellingham, however that is where the half hourly services pass on Sundays so I decided to bail at Crofton Park, mainly as I’ve already got a picture of Catford.  A short wait for 700028 to get a small mileage boost back to Nunhead before heading towards Falconwood on a Dartford bound 465244 & 465167.  I had a short wait for 465049 & 465169 to return from Dartford, where 169 needing the full run back to Victoria to be cleared for mileage as it was a sub-mile unit.

Falconwood


After a quick scan of the platforms, I noted a pair of 377s on a Sittingbourne Fast service, odd seeing the former Thameslink units working services towards the Medway towns, but leading was 377522 with 377515 on the rear, so I took a seat in the former 1st class area for some phone charge.  When waiting for departure I noted a low mileage 465 rolling in to form the following Sevenoaks terminator.  Anyhow it was to Bromley South, for a short wait before the next Victoria stopper which was 465152 & 465005, which I took to Kent House which just about pushed 152 over the line.  A tight connection (not so tight as it once was on a Sunday where the services passed each other here), and it was back to Bromley South on 465184 leading 465042.

A short wait in the rain as the next service from Dover rolled in, with 375813 leading 375804 which I took back to Victoria, and had time for lunch before returning to Bromley on the same pair of units, being a bit thankful I didn’t hang back at Bromley for a service from Sittingbourne behind as that got delayed due to a stopper having issues at West Dulwich.  At Bromley South it was a short fester, made a bit longer due to late running (the stopper got put in front, and looped at Kent House) before 375303 & 375921 returned from Dover.  Always nice to get an high density 375 attached to a low density unit as it means I can tick it off without having to suffer from the 3+2 seating (although I know some other bashers wouldn’t be happy unless they sat in said unit).  Back to Victoria where after one last quick scan I headed for the long walk to the Victoria line, with a busy 11011/11012 taken to Oxford Circus, before 3534 & 3245 were taken to Paddington, arriving with 5 minutes to spare before the next Hayes & Harlington departure.

My red pen came out for winner 345027 which I took to Ealing Broadway to intercept the other unit, which was 345030 (a dud), a trip back to Paddington and back out to Ealing Broadway to intercept 345027 for the second time to push it over ten miles, but another 345 is in the book ahead of the mass rollout in December.  One of these days I will make a start with the 717s but there is no nice fast section within the London Zones, like there is with the 345s.  Anyhow it was time for me to head towards Waterloo with 3234 & 3567 doing the honours back to Baker Street with 96095 & 96080 for the fast run to Waterloo with some 1996 stock motor noises.  Upstairs and it was to a Weymouth bound 444041 & 444011 for the run to Woking where like last week it was buses to Andover, and I stepped back from the stopping coach to await the semi-fast coach, which was annoyed as serving Andover only (woohoo!).  Amport & District coach WJ16 KCN was the bus, and once it weaved through some small villages to join the M3 at junction 3, it was full speed ahead back to Andover.

Thankfully the next few weekends for me should be rail replacement bus free, but overall it was a productive few hours on South Eastern.  Once home I had a nice shower and a good night sleep!

Ealing Broadway

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11th October – The Day before Liverpool

For the first time I have asked for gen on the services for my last few 321s, although I restricted it to my last 5x 321/4s.  I got information for 3 out of the 5, the other two had no allocation showing when they were checked but it gave me a start at knowing where to be.   Like the week before I drove to Andover (thankfully not in the pouring rain) and caught the 14:05 service to Basingstoke, this week it was 159011 & 159010.  165114 took me towards Reading where I had a short fester before winner 802107 popped up on a service from Oxford which was good as it was my last 802/1 so in future I can focus on just the 5 coach units (where I need 3, plus 800001).

At Paddington I headed towards the Bakerloo with 3263 & 3556 to Baker Street, followed by 21109/21110 to Liverpool Street, where I had some time to kill before needing to head to Shenfield for my first known unit.  First up was a low mileage 345 in the shape of 345022 which I took to Stratford, clearing the original batch of RLUs, and I took a gentle walk over to platform 10, noticing that there were some serious delays heading towards London caused by something caught on the overhead wires near Ilford.  First option wasn’t needed and with one eye on the delays I decided to board 321334 & 321307 for the run to Shenfield, losing a couple minutes in the process.  Sadly these delays meant one of my known services was being turned round at Shenfield, but at least I managed to clear 321405 for ten miles with the run back to Stratford, 3213058 & 321407 were the other two units.  I prefer the original 321s for motor noise on this fast bit of line.

I hung around Stratford for a while, noting a few new 7 coach 345s floating around on the TfL Rail side, eventually 321356 rolled in with 321426 & 321327 which I took to Liverpool Street to push it over ten miles.  With some time to kill before the next departure I popped to Tesco passing some demo outside (might have been those rebellion folk), before returning to take winner 345039 for the 4 mile run to Stratford, sadly I will need to come back for it as I headed over to platform 9, but before my known train appeared, an unknown pair rolled up with 321439 leading 321313.  Into Liverpool Street for around ten minutes before I boarded 321410, 321427 & 321435 for the run back to Stratford, another ‘dusty bin’ taken over the line, sadly these were delayed by a late running freight train (surprise suprise!) so it was a short wait for 321349 & 321433 to take me to Liverpool Street for the final time.

Due to the rain, I decided not to walk from Euston Square, so headed to the sub surface line where after a short delay (something about someone rebelling on the tracks near Aldgate) a busy 21537 & 21538 rolled in from Hammersmith to take me one stop (it would have been quicker to walk!) to Moorgate, followed by 51506 & 51507 on the Northern line to Euston, where I arrived to find a station in a bit of chaos.

The set for the last Liverpool service roiled in around the time it was meant to have departed, so it was a short turnaround for 390123 as it departed around 15 minutes late, dropping some more time by being caught behind the sleeper (where it weaved around at Watford going on the slows for a few miles).  Sadly it didn’t lose any more time so it was around 25 minutes late into Liverpool, where I had a gentle walk to the hostel to check in and attempt some sleep.  Overall, 3 more 321s taken over the line (7 to go, excluding 448 & 902), one more given a 4 mile boost, a 345 in the book and another 345 over the ten mile line.  Not a bad evening so to speak, it will only get harder with those 321s.

Monday, 7 October 2019

5th Oct – Return to Kyle, 6th Oct - LNER HST farewell & 4th Oct - Southern Hunting


5th October – The Return to Kyle Of Lochalsh

Like I mentioned in the previous blog post, the challenge to revisit the stations I had only previously boarded at or I had only previously alighted at was near the end, along the way two stations have dropped by the wayside, Manchester Utd FC Halt which hasn’t been served since November 2017 so is mothballed in my eyes and Dolgarrog which got seriously damaged in the flooding at the start of the year and is currently a replacement bus service.  Clearly if Dolgarrog ever gets rebuilt I will be heading in that direction to alight from a train at (as previously I caught a service bus there to board), and in the very unlikely event Man Utd FC Halt gets served I will try and work out a plan to board there.

For the meanwhile, I was down to the final 2 stations, the end was in sight, I was both happy and sad, and it would be mission accomplished.  I have no idea how many other people would have done what I was about to do.  But time to move from feelings onto the trains, it wasn’t the best of nights on the sleeper as the coach was boiling hot when I boarded at Euston, but the heating failed soon after departure and other than a brief bit of warmth around Crewe it was freezing within a busy seated coach.  90041 did the hauling to Edinburgh with 67004 carrying on for the diesel leg, lost some time around Kingussie but it gained it back as the Kings Cross HST waited for us to pass around Tomatin, arrival into Inverness was a minute or so early giving me around 17 minutes to make a quick dash to the Co-Op for supplies.

Probably the last time I will be having a 67 into Inverness


Back at Inverness I took an unreserved seat on 158720 (removing my reservation from a busy table) for the run towards Plockton, the Kyle line is one of my favourite lines for looking out of the window off, such beauty, one of the lines I would recommend anybody to do.  I alighted along with around two dozen other passengers at Plockton, and after a couple pictures of the station I took up a seat on the bench (not somewhere you want to visit in the rain as there is no seating underneath the canopy), and waited for 158720 to return to board at my last station

Boarding at all the stations in GB, Tick


In my original plan for this trip in June, I was going to head to Kyle first, and then Duncraig before Plockton, as there is short time between these two stations so it would be a rush to locate the guard to make my request.  The guard was at the front when 158720 rolled in so the first time I did was make my request, it was front door only at this little used station due to a tiny platform, but as I stepped from the 158, a large smile appeared on my face, it was done. Scotland completed for all the stations boarding & alighting and for the time being all currently rail served national rail stations in Great Britain done.  And frankly I couldn’t have picked a better location in which to end the quest, all it be unplanned.  A lot better than my original end station of Snaith.

Alighting at all the stations in GB, Tick


After walking onto the little bridge for a picture of the platform and the beautiful waiting shelter, I returned into said waiting shelter for it had began to rain.  I was joined on the platform by someone else for when 158721 rolled in, flagging it down and waiting a couple minutes for the guard to open the centre doors (probably shocked he had customers!), I finished with the run to the end of the line at Kyle Of Lochalsh, for a quick picture in the strong wind before heading back on board, sitting on the opposite side in which I arrived for the beautiful run back towards Inverness.

I decided to alight at Conon Bridge as one of my regrets in doing the original challenge & the revised challenge was the lack of pictures I took at the start of the challenge, some areas are better than others.  Maybe one of these days I will attempt to sort through my pictures, making a list of stations I need to revisit for pictures.  A brief 20 minute fester at the station with a tiny platform before 158705 rolled in to take me a couple stops down the line to Beauly, another station where I needed a picture, and another brief wait for 158713 to arrive from Wick.  It was back to Inverness, the end of the day for playing with trains.

I checked into the same hostel I’ve used in the past couple visits, one near the bus station, and spent half an hour in the lounge relaxing before getting a celebratory pizza (eating said pizza in the concourse of the station as that was the best place I could think of eating as it was horrid wet weather).

The Last One!


6th October – A personal farewell to the HSTs on LNER

As this would be the last time I would have a long distance trip on a LNER HST, it was fitting for it to be my personal farewell.  Yes HSTs will still be around in Scotland, and on XC (plus on East Midlands for the time being), but this would probably be my last long distance trip on a full sized set.  And it doesn’t get any longer than the 10 hours on the Highland Chieftain on a Sunday (it takes longer due to calling at pretty much every station towards Stirling).  I was lucky to bag myself a cheap advance ticket when they eventually went on sale and decided to upgrade myself to first class (as £35 for the distance/time is a bargain).

After checking out of the hostel and a little supply raid from the Co-Op, I headed towards the station where on platform 1 sat 43277 leading 43208, sadly as it was on platform 1 I couldn’t get a decent picture of the leading powercar so had to make do with a picture of the rear power car (which when I put it on Twitter kinda exploded, last check it had 190 likes, rivalling my picture of the “what train is mine?” poster at Stapleton Road for most likes.  Platform 2 had 2 “mini” HSTs on, a classic set and a refurbished set, the future is safe for the time being.

"Do you remember the good times when you reached 125 mph?"


When the doors were unlocked, I removed my seat reservation from a busy coach F, and took a seat in first class, sadly my first pick of a table for 2 were unavailable, and I didn’t fancy sitting backwards on a single seat so I had to pick a table for 4, for the trip towards Perth.  I’ve done the Highland Main Line in January 18 when it was covered in snow so I know how beautiful it is in places, the bleak wilderness of the Pass of Drumochter reminds me a bit of Rannoch moor.  The HST kept good time, maybe a minute or so late due to large loadings at Aviemore, and soon Perth was reached for a race towards the wires at Dunblane and onwards to Stirling where a bit more time was lost due to an extended dwell time.

This late running meant the HST got delayed some more around Polmont for an Express time from Glasgow so arrival into Edinburgh was around 10 minutes late for the usual changing over of passengers and crew.  Departure was around 5 minutes late (racing alongside a 385 for North Berwick), but something was wrong as it didn’t feel as strong to accelerate as before, even after being checked for an Edinburgh bound service at Dunbar (the new platform seems to be coming along well), kept losing time until Berwick and afterwards, it was announced that due to a fault in one of the powercars the train would terminate at Newcastle with passengers changing onto another service.  So my HST farewell ended in Newcastle, with a cross platform onto a Mk4 set with DVT 82215 leading and 91113 on the rear.

An unexpected 91 farewell trip, first class was busier, but I managed to get a seat, changing seats at York as the recliner was broken, it was busy in first class after York (no spare seats), I dread to think how busy it would be in standard class, for it was two trains in one (the 13:19 Edinburgh – Kings Cross got cancelled at Newcastle for the stock to be used).  Annoyingly the 91 managed to claw back some of the time to arrive into London 26 minutes late, not late enough for money back, but late enough for me to ditch my original planned move to Clapham Junction via Clapham High Street.

It was onwards to Waterloo, with 11039/11040 taken to Oxford Circus, with 3232/3544 for the leg to Waterloo, where I headed to the first available train to Woking which was a Weymouth bound 444022 & 444003 departing from platform 20.  At Woking I exited the station to await a rail replacement bus, due to the entire Basingstoke area being closed for engineering works today it would be a bus to Andover, I turned down the first coach as it was a stopper, awaiting for the ‘fast’ service.

In all fairness when I saw a Hounslow registered coach roll round I had it down as being the replacement bus towards Hounslow, but it was the Andover fast bus, CX07 NNF.  I have no idea which was the bus went but it joined the M25 for a short section before joining the M3 for a fast run towards Basingstoke, for a drop off (and picking up of one passenger) before returning to the M3 to head towards Andover on the A303.  The engine was quite noisy at speed, but the coach arrived into Andover a bit late, so it was a quick dash for passengers heading towards Yeovil, but for me it was a walk to the car because of the rubbish Sunday service at Grateley, 2 hourly with the services which skip it staying at Salisbury for an extra 3 minutes for a clockface departure west.  So it was a case of driving home, before relaxing.

What started with an Intercity 125 farewell...

...Ended with an Intercity 225 Farewell!


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4th October – The Road to Euston

I decided to hunt down my last few Southern units for mileage, but decided to only ask for the 455s, the 377/1 & couple 2s I needed (not the trio of 3s), I got given the information which services they were on so I formed a fluid plan in order to intercept them for the required mileages.  I drove to Andover in the rain, parked in my usual spot and headed to the station buying my tickets for the day, before joining 159013 & 159006 on the 14:06 service for the short trip to Basingstoke, where I remained on the same platform to board 444026 & 444009 for the non-stop run to Clapham Junction.  It was non-stop until just before Clapham where the train lost a few minutes, rolling into platform 7 alongside the diesels which were slowly rolling through platform 8 waiting for the next signal to clear.  For me it was a fast walk over to platform 14 for 455818 & 455815 to take me to Victoria, where I remained on board for the trip to Streatham Common, one down.

A short fester at Streatham Common before 455809 & 455835 rolled in from London Bridge, the run to East Croydon was just enough to clear 5835 for ten miles as I had a tight connection to another London Bridge bound service (via Norwood Junction), the connection was made onto 455829 & 455812 to take me to Honor Oak Park, noticing a slight lack of 378s.  A few minutes at Honor Oak Park before a Sutton bound 455846 rolled in with 455811 on the rear, this is the 455 I turned down last Sunday and it needed a good run as it was only previously on a Battersea Park leap, and after Sutton it would run ECS back towards Norwood Junction via the depot so good to get it out of the way before having to give chase.  Semi-fast after West Croydon and the train emptied out by Penge.

The 2nd last 455 for ten miles


With the 455s cleared (which means no more having to try and ID them, as some of those numbers are hard to read at speed due to the cables), the next move was towards Clapham Junction with 377102 & 377107 taken via Mitcham.  As I headed towards platform 1 I noticed some of the signage had been replaced in Network Rail colours, before I boarded a busy 378203  to take me to Shepherd’s Bush to intercept an East Croydon bound service.  I only noticed the footbridge at the northern end of the station after the crowding to exit and cross over to the opposite platform.

A short fester before 377214 & 377209 rolled in, 377214 only previously had on a Thameslink core leap so needed a good run, Selhurst would have been enough but I stayed on to East Croydon as it gave more options.  I managed to get a seat (all be it in the 3+2 coach) for the run as the train got very busy after West Brompton.  The first Thameslink wasn’t needed and a failed attempt to get food from Sainsburys outside the station, before returning, the 2nd service was also not-required, but the 3rd was low mileage 700144 which I took to London Bridge.  For lack of a better idea I jumped onto a pair of low mileage 376s (which I’ve now decided to aim for ten miles on) with 376002 & 376017 taken to Charing Cross, returning to London Bridge on 466004, 465190 & 465152, every little helps pushing the 465 onto 9 miles.

I grabbed dinner from Boots before joining 700152 for the run to St Pancras and a gentle walk across to Euston where I joined the queue to check into the sleeper for my trip to Inverness (see the start).  Overall a successful few hours, although I was glad to be on that 700 which was fast after a few trips on stopping services.

Wednesday, 2 October 2019

Looking ahead to the end of the challenge & 29th Sept - London


Looking ahead to the end of the challenge

I’m currently sitting at home on the laptop, a couple days before I return to Scotland for some unfinished business on the Kyle of Lochalsh line, which got missed out in June due to a car accident writing off my old car meaning instead of heading to Inverness on the sleeper it was a trip on the Chieftain).  But that is all in the past, this weekend was the first dates which were reasonably priced for accommodation & sleeper.

Anyhow since I completed the original challenge to board & alight at every (currently rail served National Rail*) station in Great Britain on the 9th October when I alighted from 150242 at Roman Bridge, I had a short break when I did random bay platforms before deciding around April time to set myself a new challenge to revisit the stations where I had previously only alighted from, or previously only boarded from.  Either making use of bus services, walking or riding a bike, a little break over the winter time due to the Northern Saturday strikes messing up a few of my plans.  Time passed with more stations being revisited over the course of the past 16 or so months, eventually coming down to my last two in Scotland.  For the sake of arguments, I’m classing Dolgarrog on the Conwy Valley under the “not currently rail served” category until the platform is rebuilt after the flood damage earlier in the year, that assuming it actually gets rebuilt and the station becomes another Barlaston, effectively closed with ticket acceptance on the local bus service.  Similar with Man Utd FC Halt, it’s effectively mothballed as it hasn’t seen a train call there in nearly 2 years and will likely never see another train call there for security & pathing reasons.

In a way, I’m glad the challenge to board & alight at all 2564 (currently rail served) stations is nearly over, no more long festers at rural request stops, no more detailed planning using RTT for those stations with limited service.  I just hope the sleeper is on time on Friday to Inverness, although I do have a backup if it does go wrong, but I want to try and end with an alight as that will make a better picture.

Anyhow, changing topics, a summary of my various moves on the 29th September, the day after the tour.

29th September

The day began using a travelcard which I had purchased before hand, with a route 105 bus (VH45266) from the Cranford Avenue area all the way to the Heathrow Central Bus Station; only because I wanted to do the Heathrow tunnel on a bus.  I eventually found the way into the rail station and jumped on 332005 for a short hop to terminal 5, before returning to Heathrow Central for a short wait before 360204 to Paddington.  It might be worth noting that the 332 rolled in from Paddington looking very busy, and it also departed towards Paddington again looking quite busy, even the 360 is slightly busier now than they used to be (a benefit of appearing on the tube map & being in zone 6 I assume).

The main reason for heading to Paddington was to see which 345s were out, because the 9-coach full length units have started to appear on the Hayes & Harlington services, so after a visit to Sainsburys for breakfast (the sausage sandwich looks nice, and I would give it a try if it had tomato sauce rather than brown sauce on) before winner 345030 arrived from Old Oak to form the first Hayes service which I took to Hayes, where the unit doesn’t quite fit (the rearmost set of doors is off the platform).  I returned back to West Ealing for a short connection to winner 345037 back to Hayes, where a 66 passed before I returned to Paddington.



9-coach 345037 in the Bay at Hayes


I couldn’t quite make up my mind where to head for, either Liverpool Street or Victoria, in the end with the sub surface lines being closed, I headed to Victoria for some South Eastern hunting, straight away landing on a Sevenoaks stopper (engineering works in the Hither Green area I believe) formed of a pair of low mileage 465s, with 465046 & 465008 taken to Bromley South, they were cleared by Beckenham Junction but there is more options at Bromley, straight away I was away on a low mileage 700048 which was cleared by Beckenham Hill which is good because it gave me a tight connection to another low mileage 700 in the shape of 700018  which I took to Bickley, the run to St Mary Cray wouldn’t be enough and I didn’t fancy a 20 minute wait.  During my brief stay at Bickley I noticed a pair of low mileage 465s on service from Rochester and a pair of 375s from Folkestone, so I gave chase.

Bickley, one of my first stations to be visited


465013 & 465019 took me back the mile to Bromley South, with 375609 & 375607 for the run to Victoria, it was a gamble in case those 375s were anything of interest.  At Victoria I made my way over to platform 8 where 375926 was leading 375306, the 3-coach unit wasn’t something I was expecting to see out and about on a Sunday, but good because both were on roughly a mile so the run to Bromley was enough, where I was going to cross platform for those 465s but 375923 & 375304 rolled up on the opposite platform so it would have been rude to turn down another low mileage 375/3 for the trip back to Victoria.  Time for some lunch before heading to Denmark Hill on a Dartford bound 465248 & 465156 for a short wait before 465190 & 465247 took me back to Bromley South via the Catford loop with a short fester for 465193 & 465166 to return from Rochester to take me back to Victoria non-stop.

Another short break, with noticing a low mileage 377 & 455 on the Southern side, allowing me time to make a rough plan, deciding to ditch the 455 as it would mean a late finish.  For my next move it was to Lewisham on 465902 & 465934, my rough plan going out of the window as the next Victoria bound service was running 15 minutes late, I was going to catch that back to Denmark Hill to intercept 465156 again.  I headed to Blackheath on 465158 & 465171, crossing over to the opposite platform, turning down that Victoria service which was a good move as next up was 465028 & 465047 which I took to Charing Cross, remaining on the same train back to Waterloo East, just to push 465047 over the ten mile line.  My original idea was to head to Waterloo main for something to Vauxhall, or even Clapham to get to Victoria, but when I was at Charing Cross a pair of 375s on the next Hastings caught my eye, so it was a quick walk to platform C to board 375618 & 375606 for the mile to London Bridge, it being enough to push another 375 over the line.

Reduced service meant it was a walk to the jubilee line via a busy concourse, with a short 4 minute wait for a busy 96106 & 96073 to Westminster, before another 4 minute wait for a very busy 21483/21484 (serious had I fallen asleep and woken up at 5pm on a weekday?).  Back to Victoria where I had the decision between a 377 or a 465/9, deciding on the 377 because they are more free range.  A pair of 73s were on one of the platforms on a railhead treatment train as a 10-coach set departed for East Grinstead, but my eyes were on a Brighton bound 377109 & 377140 which I took to East Croydon, it was completely rammed out, and I was in the 2nd coach.  I turned down a quiet 10 coach set from East Grinstead (377/4+377/3+377/3) for a service from Brighton as it was another wedged out pair of units (seriously Southern, couldn’t you run 12 coach units on Brighton services on Sundays where there is a reduced Thameslink service).  377475 &377452 were the two I squeezed onto, back to Victoria where it was like 6pm on a weekday, the concourse was that busy.


Not something you see everyday, a 73 in the Southern platforms at Victoria

I was bound for Paddington, deciding to go via the sub surface line to see how long it was for a circle line train, getting lucky as 21489 & 21490 was rolling in as I walked up the stairs, which was very lucky because had I gone via the Victoria to Oxford Circus for the Bakerloo, I would have got stuck as the Bakerloo line had collapsed with a signal failure at Baker Street.  It took me around 10 minutes to exit Paddington underground, due to the overcrowding.  But I had time to check the next 4 departures for Reading, none were off any interest so it was on the first which was 800321, making a tight connection to a busy 158890 working a Reading – Salisbury service which I took to Andover for a short wait before 159003 & 159017 to take me one more stop to Grateley.

Overall a successful day, some more South Eastern units falling, plus my first 2x full length 345s.  A productive weekend all in all.