And we're down to two little used Irish Stations and two other pictures from different stations in the same town that I was in towards the end of this week.
Which are ....
(Drum role, trumpets sound) now that we're in July
NenaghOn the Limerick to Ballybrophy line; two trains a day take this line which is the most heavily subsidised passenger route per passenger in Ireland. The best part of two hours with (from memory) five intermediate stops - including Roscrea (which I associate with the film Phimomena with some horror) and Roscrea which is the largest town in North Tipperary.
Rosslare StrandThe penultimate stop on the Dublin to Rosslare Europort line; I stayed at Rosslare Strand in a B&B many years back - a pleasant little place with long sandy beaches a few miles from the port. The line from Dublin's Connely street starts out with some 4 trains an hour as far as Bray, but then peters out to an hourly service to Greystones and just 5 s day (on the busiest day!) carrying on south. South of Gorey, the line has been looked at for closure ... it's a classic case of Big City to hardly-used destination terminus - and no matter where it were to be cut back to, if that were south of Greystones it would leave the vestige under threat. There's an amazing section of street running reminiscent of Weymouth just to the south of Wexford station.
IET▸ to Weymouth Harbour, anyone - the trains in use on the Irish line are modern and fast! With proper connections and organisation there could be a significant tourist trade of foot passengers on the Fishguard - Rosslare route, but at present it seems to be unpromoted and difficult (I stayed in Rosslare Europort for the night).
Coatbridge CentralCoatbridge SunnysideCentral Station is on the "main" Motherwell to Stirling (via Cumbernauld) line that used to take West Coast expresses from London bound for Perth and beyond. I travelled that way in my youth on the "Clansman" Euston to Inverness service; in those days just about the only service there at a station that was a closure candidate. These days, the original station building at road level on the west side is offices / specialist shop, and the entrance is on the east side - an extrance hidden away behind the viaduct and up a drive, with the "
BR▸ " double arrow hidden from view if you 're standing at the old building. Pletform level is bus shelters; the subway (no lift) which I pictured is in need of
TLC▸ . Services are much better though - hourly electric trains from Cumbenauld run via Motherwell and Hmailton to Glasow Central Low Level and on to Dalmuir and / or other destinations in the west of the City. They're slow, infrequent and indirect compared to the service from Sunnyside, but they are
not unused.
Sunnyside Station is on the main line east from Glasgow Queen Street Low Level - cut back to Airdie under Beeching, extended back to Drumgelloch and now all the way back to Edinburgh. Plentiful trains, to the extend that alternate trains have different stopping patterns and that makes good sense - but everything stops at Coatbridge Sunnyside and indeed it was a very pleasant spot on a sunny Friday morning. I didn't have much time to stop though - on my way to work in Coatbridge that day.
Hope you've enjoyed the quiz / seeing some pictures of places that perhaps you've not been to. Time to put the plug on this thread (feedback comments still welcome) ... from Coatbridge again:
I will be writing up further in my diary board at
http://www.firstgreatwestern.info/coffeeshop/index.php?board=53.0 - you need to sign in to read that - new users can register
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