The Anonymous Widower

Sporting Trophy Of The Week

The Tour of Britain cycle race started this week in Ipswich. The first stage took them from the county town of Suffolk to Norwich.

Kristian House was listed as the winner of the King of the Mountains for the stage!

September 14, 2012 Posted by | Sport | | Leave a comment

I Don’t Like The Cutty Sark Either!

The Cutty Sark has won the Carbuncle Cup and the Victorian Society doesn’t like it either.

For what it’s worth, I don’t like it either!

I much prefer the Tenacious, which is a real ship with a purpose and not a collection of timbers put together after a disastrous fire.

September 14, 2012 Posted by | World | , , | Leave a comment

The Hackney Stations Link

The councillor involved in transport has replied that Network Rail and Transport for London are actively pursuing plans for a possible pedestrian link between the two Hackney stations, similar to that, that existed before the Second World War, with the aim of completion in 2014. They included this old photograph, taken in 1928.

The amount of steel in the bridge was probably the reason it was taken down. After all there was a war on!

This could be the same bridge today.

The Bridge Taking The West Anglia Main Line Over The Overground

The track layout is slightly different and there is no trace of the footbridge. Judging by the modern-looking support at the right, it could have been rebuilt.

September 14, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , , | Leave a comment

Haggerston Espresso Room

This cafe is close to my new doctors.

The coffee was good, but the gluten-free polenta cake was brilliant.

September 14, 2012 Posted by | Food | , , | 1 Comment

The Inter City 125 On BBC4

There was a documentary last night on BBC4 about the legendary High Speed Diesel Train or Inter City 125. It described how the politics, finances and some clever thinking produced a real icon.

Catch the documentary before it disappears from the BBC iPlayer!

The programme said that they’ll still be running in the 2030s on some routes. I wouldn’t bet on them still being running long after that.

Because of their speed and acceleration, they have proven that they can mix it on lines with both slow and higher speed traffic, so unlike heritage units like steam trains, they don’t cause pathing problems. Since they have now been updated with new engines, they produce a lot  less noise and emissions too.

It is still proposed that they will be used for services to the far south west for many years, as electrifying the route from Exeter will be very difficult and expensive. They even did the journey from Plymouth to London in well under three hours recently. I reported it on this post.

But if they did a bit of marketing and perhaps uprated the catering, they could create a line, that would be a must-ride one for all visitors to Cornwall from London.

I have believed for a long time, that these trains will never go quietly. They’ll be like Routemasters and even if they’re not in main line service, they’ll turn up in the most surprising of places. The ghost of Jimmy Saville will see to that!

September 14, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , , | Leave a comment

When Was It Known Hillsborough Had No Safety Certificate?

It has been said many times in the last day or so, that Hillsborough had no safety certificate, at the time of the disaster on April 15th, 1989.

Perhaps, my memory has gone, but although I can remember the disaster, I can’t associate it with what I was doing at the time. I wouldn’t have been at football at Ipswich, as at that time I didn’t go. I can remember where I was when I heard about Lockerbie a few months earlier.

So for how long has it been known that Hillsborough did not have a valid safety certificate at the time of the disaster?

Surely to knowingly book the stadium without a valid safety certificate, is akin to flying a Boeing 747, without a valid certificate of airworthiness.

Or was that something that always happened in those days?

In trying to get more answers to my question, I came across this page on the web site of the Football Industry Group at Liverpool University. It is something everybody should read. This is one of the page’s conclusions.

The disaster was basically caused by the failure of South Yorkshire Police to control a large 
crowd of Liverpool fans outside the Leppings Lane End, and the poor state of the ground, 
but it was also clear that football’s total failure to learn from the numerous disasters that had 
afflicted it during the twentieth century, and a police force conditioned to view supporters as 
potential hooligans and so always expecting violence, contributed significantly to the 96 deaths 
and many hundreds of injuries.

I agree very much about learning from the past.  In the 1960s, I was in a few crushes at White Hart Lane and Highbury, and how they avoided a Hillsborough-type disaster in some matches, was more down to luck than any planning.

The page also says this about the safety certificate and emergency plans.

Sheffield Wednesday had redeveloped parts of the ground without obtaining 
a new safety certificate, or telling the emergency services: the result was that the safety certificate was 
outdated and useless, and that plans Sheffield Wednesday had developed with the local emergency 
services could not be put into practice, as the layout of the ground had changed.

That to me is inadequate, to say the very least. An emergency plan like that, only works without an emergency.

September 13, 2012 Posted by | Sport | , , , | Leave a comment

Is This £300m Home Unlucky?

It’s reported in the Standard that a house is being sold for £300m in London.

As the two previous owners died prematurely, would you want to buy such an unlucky house?

I wouldn’t even if I had the money.

And if I did, I certainly would spend that amount on a house.

September 13, 2012 Posted by | News | , , | 2 Comments

More CrossRail Green Walls

I visited two more of CrossRail’s green walls today, in Hanover Square and Park Lane.

They certainly seem a good way to improve the look of a building site.

September 13, 2012 Posted by | Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

Do We Learn From Football Crowd Tragedies?

In my lifetime, there has been three football crowd tragedies; Ibrox in 1971, Bradford City in 1985 and Hillsborough in 1989.

We may have dealt with the problems inside the grounds by better stadium design and rebuilding, but have we properly dealt with the problems the tragedies create for the emergency services and especially the paramedics.

Sadly, I think that it took some time for the message to get through. For example, with the latest news on Hillsborough, it becomes apparent that the paramedics couldn’t cope and this was probably the case at other non-football-related disasters in recent years.  The attacks on the London Underground on the 7th of July 2005 come to mind.  In that attack, how many lives were also saved as one bomb went off outside the Royal College of Surgeons?

We have to accept that tragedies and disasters will happen. But are we prepared for the worst, when they do? This week for instance there was a coach crash on the A3 at Hindhead, where three died. Did the emergency services of rural Sussex cope well?

Knowing the A14 well, what would happen if a coach crossed the dual-carriageway at say Newmarket and hit another head-on going the other way? The nearest hospitals are in Cambridge and Bury St. Edmunds, almost twenty miles away. Do the emergency services train for such an emergency? Or do they hope it won’t happen?

What I feel sorry about the past couple of decades is that Bradford was the wake-up call and everybody ignored it! There was a mixture there of a dilapidated wooden stand with rubbish underneath it. Just one stray cigarette was al it took.

Doesn’t that sound a lot like the wooden escalator at Kings Cross, that caught fire in 1987. It probably wasn’t that simple, but surely the engineers in London Underground must have thought about the danger, after the fire at Bradford.

But the modern safety culture may be just that. Modern!

In the 1970s, I worked on a chemical plant and an instrument that the section I worked for, found that the plant was going into a regime, where it could explode.  The plant manager immediately shut the plant and informed the makers.  They informed him, that what we had proven, couldn’t be measured and we should keep the plant going.  Two years later their plant buried itself in a hillside, killing a number of people.

So we were right! And they were wrong! It is not a nice thing to say, as people died, because of the blinkered thinking of others.

Even today, on my travels around the UK, visiting all the football grounds, one stood out as a place, where a bad accident could happen again! Not I hasten to add in the ground itself, but in the railway station, which brings large numbers of supporters to the ground.

September 13, 2012 Posted by | News, Sport, Transport/Travel | , , | Leave a comment

A Good Reason For All Types Of Marriage

I did a trawl of the Internet and found this article about William Farr in the New York Times.

He was one of the founders of medical statistics and to quote his Wikipedia bio.

In 1858, he performed a study on the correlation of health and marriage condition, and found that health decreases from the married to the unmarried to the widowed.

The only problem with the study is that it was done 154 years ago. But if he got his statistics right, I suspect his results still hold.

I’m surprised that no-one has invoked William Farr in the argument on gay marriage. After all, the longer we live healthy lives can only be to the good of everybody in the population.

 

 

September 12, 2012 Posted by | Health | , , | 1 Comment