The Anonymous Widower

Irish Correctness!

I saw this newspaper on a bus this morning, as I came home from shopping and having lunch at Canary Wharf.

Irish Correctness!

Irish Correctness!

If you can’t read it, by the side of the headline of Keano 3 Latvia 0, someone has written + Martin in green ink.

November 16, 2013 Posted by | Sport | , , , | 2 Comments

The Only Rollercoaster I’ve Ever Ridden

This article about Dreamland in Margate caught my eye.

I rode it once in probably the 1980s.  I think it’s best we don’t delve into how I found myself enjoying one of the few wooden rollercoasters.

It was the only time, I ever rode on one!

I’ll go again, when and if it reopens.

November 16, 2013 Posted by | World | | Leave a comment

Norwich In Ninety

I travel regularly on the Great Eastern Main Line to Ipswich and have used the line since the 1970s, when we lived just north of Ipswich.

In those years, there has been very little improvement in journey times, although the trains are newer and perhaps slightly more comfortable.

So I was interested to find this report on the Treasury’s web site. Here’s the first paragraph.

Plans for a new expert group charged with finding ways to speed up rail services to the East of England by as much as 25% have been set out by the Chancellor.

Personally, I will be pleased if the speed improvement to Norwich, is matched on my shorter journey to Ipswich.

At present Ipswich and Norwich take 67 and 110 minutes respectively on a typical train. If Norwich were to be reached in ninety minutes, then Ipswich should be a few minutes or so under the magic figure of one hour.

Given that these trains would probably interface to Crossrail at \Shenfield, Stratford and Liverpool Street, it should be possible to go from Ipswich to Heathrow in under a hundred minutes. The Norwich figure would be two hours ten minutes.

I would think that this could be one of those small improvements, that show a very high return on the money invested. At least the line is fully electrified and all of the major stations can accept long high-capacity trains.

The major problem of delays caused by freight trains going to and from Felixstowe is also being solved with the Bacon Factory Curve, so I’m hopeful that by the end of this decade, we’ll be seeing much reduced journey times to East Anglia.

Will we also be seeing more electrication in East Anglia, like Ely to Norwich and Ipswich to Peterborough? I doubt it, although the latter would really help with the movement of freight out of Felixstowe.

November 16, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | 4 Comments

Praise For Gospel Oak To Barking Line

I have a Google Alert looking for news of this railway line and it is mentioned today in these readers contributions in the Independent. Here’s the actual letter.

I nominate London’s Gospel Oak to Barking line. Goes from Michael Palin’s home territory east over the River Lea, and on over the rooftops, roads and railways to Barking.

i agree with “Ricp”‘s comment. It will be much better, when it is fully-electrified and receives the new five-car Class 378 trains.

A duck will have been truly turned into a swan! Or should I say a set of old, rattling travelling urinals, as in was twnty or so years ago, will have been turned into a railway fit for any Pearly King or Queen.

How many other Cinderella lines could benefit from similar improvements.

For example, I went to Blackpool last week, by taking the train to Blackpool South. This single track, South Fylde Line from Preston, goes via Blackpool Airport, Lytham St. Annes and Blackpool Pleasure Beach, before stopping close to Bloomfield Road. When the current electrification in the Blackpool, Liverpool and Manchester are is complete, surely this route should be a candidate for overhead wires.

November 16, 2013 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | 1 Comment