I've just passed through the affected area again and to my eyes there seemed to be less water than there was yesterday - was I seeing things or is that indeed the case?
I went through this morning about 0700 (heading towards Reading) and if anything I thought the water looked a little more widespread in the affected area - nothing on the tracks but certainly in the area of the signal cupboards.
Problem is it's groundwater which is if anything less easy to deal with - chances are as fast as you pump it, more will bubble up as the ground is saturated - that said there was no sign of anyone doing anything nearby, and the diesel pump I noticed yesterday seems to have disappeared.
Still plenty of saturated sandbags around doing nothing useful - that said, 0654 from Taplow-Reading was bang on time with 6 coaches and got into Reading only about 10 mins late so no complaints there.
The water levels rise and fall during the day, last night when I went through it was nearly at the top of the rails but Network Rail where then starting the process of what looked like pumping some water away.
Attached to this post is the full train plan, for services affected by problems at Maidenhead, for Friday 14th February.
We've actually had a train plan pretty much since Day 1 of the flooding and then one published every day since with minor tweaks and alterations where things haven't worked or needed improving. We still don't know what we are doing until we book on but have managers in the messroom with a laptop and printer who are assigning work on a daily basis. Our workloads have not yet been planned in advance as yet.
The problem comes late evening when there are fewer staff rostered and drivers can't complete turns within their booked days.
Here's a question that we've been discussing in the office today and I'm hoping someone on here can answer...........in times such as these with only 20% or so of trains running, what do all the "spare" train drivers do?
Are they temporarily redeployed in Customer Service or similar roles, or is it just a case of waiting around for a train that they can drive?
Thanks
We haven't had many "spare" drivers. Yesterday the messroom was virtually empty apart from managers running around! We have a lot of new trainee drivers starting with the company so they've basically used this time to get experienced drivers in classrooms to train them to become instructors, we've got drivers learning new traction, safety briefs, assessments, simulator training and other bits and bobs going on.
Sitting around for a whole 10 hour shift is a lot harder than it sounds! The majority of drivers would rather be doing something as the day goes a lot quicker.