10:47 from Salisbury ... 6 car class 159
Well - thank goodness it survived at all ... a trip on the old South West Railway main line from Salisbury to Exeter - "The Mule". Gone, many years ago, the class 33 Brighton to Exeter train and its replacement in the form of a Saturday only Hastings demu service. Gone, many years ago, the class 50 loco hauled services from Exeter to Waterloo - all traffic now in the hands of class 159s which run every hour, with extras at each end of the line. The service frequency is more or less to line capacity as it is single with passing places, and many of the trains are filled to capacity too.
Over the years, many intermediate stations have been lost. As we start from Salisbury, we pass Wilton, Dinton, Semley ... and I gave up counting. Some closed and have re-opened - Templecombe and Feniton, and a completely new station at Cranbrook.
Passing loops away from current stations can add to an increased end to end running time - Tisbury loop cost us five minutes, passengers waiting patiently in the train for the London train to go through. And indeed trains in both directions are timetabled to spend 3 minutes in the loop - make that an extra running time of 5 minutes if you add an extra slow down and speed up. 15 / day each way = 30 services. 150 minutes per day, 360 days per annum = 54,000 minutes. Average 50 passengers per train = 2.7 million wasted minutes!
The land on the south side at Tisbury - sold; a loop cannot be restored at the stationDouble track from just outside TempleCombe Station right though Sherborne allowed us to pass the next London-bound train. A good number of people got off; the train thinning out. I recall many years ago trying to use Sherborne as a railhead for a day trip to Exeter; in those days, Melksham had a near-zero service, but I found the car park as Sherborne full and - with time tight - ended up driving all the way to Exeter for (!) a transport hearing. Looks like the parking may still be oversubscribed - even on a Saturday.
Sherborne - full car park even on a Saturday"The Mule" headed east - west crossed several north-south lines on its way. At Templecombe, the old Somerset and Dorset trackbed can just about be spotted in the undergrowth (and almost impossible to photograph). The Heart of Wessex line just short of Yeovil Junction is spotted, but gone in a flash. Oh for an interchange platform; services between Yeovil Junction and Yeovil Pen Mill, though restored in recent years, are sporadic. They give the feeling of not being timed for connectional purposes. Look carefully, and you ca spot long-disused earthworks from beside Yeovil Junction towards the Weymouth line headed off south.
Wot - no station here? Somersetshire and Dorsetshire Parkway wantedTreeline and track towards the south at Yeovil JunctionBack on single track as we head west. Unlike Templecombe, where the new platform is on the trackbed, or Tisbury where the old south side of the station has been sold off, the next station at Crewkerne looks like it could be redoubled; not sure about accessible footbridges, mind you. And so - another climb, another tunnel as we cross over into the next valley.
I didn't spot the previous site of Chard Junction - suggested by some as a potential re-opening, and slammed by others as being primarily abstractive from Crewkerne and Axminster, rural and difficult to access from the surrounding area including Chard itself, and slowing on the single line such that calls would impact the resilience of the hourly service. Certainly we passed the next London train soon after we got onto the double track section on the approach to Axminster, which we would have help up had we stopped at Chard Junction.
Crowds at Axminster .. the train's filling again as it starts to double up as a regional service into Exeter as well as a long distance service.
And so - single track - to Honiton where there's another loop. Though in the hourly service, all trains call at one platform, and wheelchair access to the "far side" looks a long way round via a car park - reminiscent of Trowbridge and Bradford-on-Avon. The loop is a short one and we're soon back on the single track.
Feniton - single track - looks like it could be redoubled; lots more getting on the train. Seats remain, but people travelling together are hunting for seats together. Train manager in "does anyone want any tickets" rather than "check all tickets" mode. Whimple skipped ... Feniton and Whimple are alternate stops on the single line. But we did call at Cranbrook. As yet, it feels like a utilitarian modern construct, with countryside around - though houses visible over the hill. Big car park, plenty of free space, but not realistic to pass any judgement on Saturday.
And so onwards - now some standing, though of their choice as seats remain open too. More the metro train now; only a tiny proposition have been on from Salisbury. As we arrive into Pinhoe with two platforms, the next London train pulls out - it has been waiting for us as we run in 6 minutes late.
6 carriages ... the majority off at Exeter Central. "Six accidents so far this year on these stairs" says the advert, and I'm not surprised as the gate line blocks them - people standing on there, including those not headed for the gate line, but the other platform.
I got off at Central ... the line drops away and turns sharp right towards St. David's. Headed for Exmouth - I think the last line in the SW I have not travelled on.
Queuing to get onto the bridge at Exeter Central.