I found
this leaflet and
this page on FGW▸ 's site , which amazingly does not mention Okehampton. Nor does a search on
http://www.thetrainline.com/ reveal the existence of any train to Okehampton. FGW's timetable number 34 does list the times (no point in showing the URL because it will cease in a fortnight), and if you persevere on the Devon County Council site, you will eventually find your way to the Journey Devon site mentioned above. The Dartmoor Railway site also publicises the Sunday trains from Exeter, but in a kind of "Oh, by the way" sort of method - see
their timetable , and please correct me if I'm wrong about their efforts to attract visitors by rail.
Mrs FTN! and I rode the line from Crediton, where we have a daughter and a grandson, to Okehampton, where we do not knowingly have either, last Sunday (2 September). Even she enjoyed it, despite the cloud and drizzle. I figured that the major stumbling block to reopening the line for general use is the distance (uphill) from town. Fabulous glimpses of high peaks and valleys are of no consequence to Mr 9 to 5. But it was a lovely journey, not slow on the way up, despite the obvious climb, and not quite white knuckle on the way back.
We have decided that we will one day hence expend a further ^7.50 each, on a nicer Sunday, and get on the
Tarka▸ line at Umberleigh. We will change at Crediton for OKE, then get the bus from there to Gunnislake, followed by a nice ride back to Plymouth (stopping at Bere Alston to divert to Tavvy, who can say?), then probably pay for a ticket back to Exeter St D rather than take the free bus route. Life is too short for that.
The Dartmoor Sunday Rover exists only with the support of Devon County Council. I would love to see the Dartmoor Railway and FGW be able to offer a joint tourist ticket to enable any holiday-making family get from wherever they are in Devon to the nearest station by bus, and then to Meldon via Okehampton and Dartmoor Railway, all with one ticket that you can buy at any newsagent in Devon.
They do it in Denmark, and Germany, and Holland, and Belgium (obviously), and Sweden, and Norway, and...