This is a test of GDPR / Cookie Acceptance [about our cookies]
Really irritating test - cookie expires in 24 hour!
Great Western Coffee Shop
20.7.2025 (Sunday) 15:39 - All running AOK
Recent Public Posts - [guest]
Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363400/30464/30]
Posted by stuving at 15:37, 20th July 2025
 
13 - I think must be Poznań, Poland. More so as I now see (annoyingly, having located it) that the earlier pictures of PKP Pt47-65 (and friends) include one with a station nameboard in, and also tell us it was a Saturday (relevant to it being Poznań)

Re: Limpley Stoke B3108 bridge damage repair - 21 July to 31 August 2025
In "Portsmouth to Cardiff" [363399/30451/20]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 15:10, 20th July 2025
 
From the BBC:

Residents told to plan for six-week road closure



Residents and motorists are advised to check before they travel ahead of a full road closure lasting six weeks.

The B3108 Lower Stoke in Limpley Stoke, Wiltshire, will be closed from 06:00 BST on Monday for Network Rail to carry out essential repairs to the railway bridge over the road. The work is due to be completed by 18:00 on 31 August.

Wiltshire Council said diversions would be in place and pedestrian access under the bridge would continue, but overnight closures might be introduced.

Councillor Martin Smith, cabinet member for highways, said: "We understand this closure will cause disruption, but these works are vital for public safety and the continued operation of the railway."

The council will monitor the impact the closure has on traffic, particularly in the surrounding villages. The authority will take "appropriate action" to mitigate any major issues, Mr Smith added.

The closure will also affect the D1 FirstBus service. Throughout the works, the service will take a more direct route between Bradford on Avon and Bath via Sally-in-the-Woods.

A free shuttle bus, operated by Beeline, will transport passengers travelling to and from Bradford on Avon. It will run between the town and Winsley Village during daytime hours from Monday to Sunday.

Passengers travelling to Bath from Winsley can take the shuttle to Bradford on Avon before changing to the D1 or D1x at Christ Church. Those heading to Trowbridge can change at the Bradford on Avon Town Bridge.

The D1 will continue to serve Winsley village and Winsley Road during the evening from 18:05 and all day on Sundays and public holidays. However, the diversion route will take longer, so passengers are warned there may be some delays to their journey.


Weekend Trip - gremlins at work (11-13 Jul 2025)
In "Across the West" [363398/30472/26]
Posted by Hafren at 14:47, 20th July 2025
 
TL/DR: An account of last weekend's travels, now I've had a chance to cool off (literally and figuratively), perhaps a bit of a rant, some things the industry got right, and many more things that they need to do better if we're to encourage rail travel!

For context, conditions were best described by the term 'heatwave'. Air Con working correctly on CDF-PMH: 0/3. (I think some of the Southern trains had AC issues as well, but focussed on the GWR ones here!)

I travel from Wales to SE England several times a year, and often have to make the choice between Reading/London (quicker) and Salisbury (cheaper). I have a reputation for telling people about cheaper, more esoteric routings, but over the last couple of years I've tended to go via London, because of time constraints on the outward journey, or simply because it's convenient using the 'proper' retail outlets at Paddington on the way home, rather than the more basic offerings at interchanges on the other routes, or having to make a late night shop when I get home. But this weekend I had a bit more time to spare on both legs, so I went for the Salisbury option. I don't begrudge the London route being somewhat more expensive (intercity speed/frequency premium through Swindon and cross-London transfer) but I think the the absolute cost of all options is something to be berated, especially as I don't want to mess around with advance fares. The Salisbury option is a bit annoying because only certain journeys have a via Salisbury fare, so a split is often needed, although in way that's not a huge issue as I can split at Salisbury to use a Network Railcard.  Interestingly, some of the Salisbury splits seem to be so esoteric that the fare-splitting sites don't find them!

On this occasion I went for a split at Salisbury followed by an NSE-railcard route Barnham fare - significantly cheaper (but still much more that I'd like to pay) but very slow compared to going via London!

When travelling via Salisbury I prefer to take the 2x158 diagram (I think 1330 CDF-PMH) but in order to arrive at the right time I needed the train before it (3 car 166). The day before I read of issues with stock availability and made sure to check for issues on the day, and considered running an hour earlier for more leisurely connections (but a very long overall journey) - which actually pushed me back onto a journey that appears to be another 2x158 booking. 158s are a bit long in the tooth but I quite like them for long-distance travel, as long as the formation is long enough!

Note all these little choices and inconveniences that I'm fairly happy to make, but an uninitiated traveller certainly wouldn't want to deal with.

That morning (or possibly late on the evening before) I saw the preceding 2x158 had become 1x158, so I decided to give that a miss. I still left SWA half an hour earlier, subject to the TFW offering being 5 car. As it turned out the 1230 CDF-PMH was part-cancelled, and now a BRI-WSB journey. I decided to aim for it anyway, by taking the planned earlier connection from SWA, giving me time to travel to BRI. I would probably end up stuck at WSB and waiting an hour, but at least that breaks up the waits, and creates a buffer, and may offer options via SAL (but in the end didn't - given need to travel via Barnham funnelling my route options).

More little pieces of planning that 'normal' travellers don't want to make!

A side point re the TFW journey. 5-car (great improvement on a few years ago) 197. Quite busy - I dread to think how it would have felt on the 2/3 car diagrams that were normal not long ago. I ended up mis-planning (should I need to plan with this granularity?) which door I used to board, and wasn't by a luggage rack, so I had to drag my luggage to the next vestibule, where the luggage racks are. Two big issues with the 197s as long-distance trains are toilet provision and luggage rack provision. A big advantage of single-saloon express stock is that there is generally a luggage rack at every saloon-vestibule interface. WIth 1/3-2/3 door stock, there's a choice of two sets of seating from each vestibule - annoying if available seats are one way and the luggage rack is the other. I could make more comments on the 197s but back to the bigger issues of the day!

Went to BRI for the remnant of the CDF-PMH train. It was a 3-car 166, and being reduced to BRI-WSB was lightly loaded. Great! Nice and comfortable... but sweltering. Windows were open, as the dreaded tell that air conditioning wasn't working.

Got to WSB and waited the hour (hour and a bit in the end, IIRC) for the next train. 4 car 158 - win some (preferred formation), lose some (now an hour later than planned). I thought I might end up standing with luggage as the rack was fairly full, but I found some space and also found a pair of seats.

Several announcements apologising for lack of air conditioning. Apparently this car was the only one where it was working, but the guard had opened one window as it wasn't really coping well; he left the rest shut so the AC had some hope of achieving something. It was made clear that bottles of water were to be found at end ends of each car.

Original plan was to make a connection into Sussex at Fratton, but with a bit of additional delay it looked hairy, so I went with a connection at Southampton, as connection was still in platform - bit of a rush. Fortunately the GWR train being signalled through pushed enough delay onto the Southern connection to make the race over the bridge work. Late afternoon type journey so busy 4 car - stood for a bit, then found a seat, but it was a variant of 377 without much luggage space, so I hogged a seat for my bags. With leisure travel being such a big part of demand these days, luggage rack provision needs to be looked at, even on 'local' trains - only 'proper' suburban journeys don't need it as much! Ended up reaching destination over an hour late, so nice financially, but meant I had to re-plan pickup. I realised I could have made a slightly better connection with a change at Brighton, but it was tight, so I didn't risk it.

Return journey on the Sunday... bustitution on part of the Brighton Main Line, so it turns out that this was a good occasion to be going the other way! However Journeycheck was crawling with crew-shortage cancellations and part-cancellations, especially on the Westbury axes. Weymouth a no-go but some Portsmouths sort of running - but most part-cancelled, leaving a patchy set of usable trains. Fortunately crew-related cancellations are often set in stone early in the day, so I was able to plan reasonably well.

Typically connecting onto the PMH-CDF service means a change at Fratton or Fareham/Southampton, but sometimes I go right down to Portsmouth Harbour if there's time (subject to RTT showing the working to Portsmouth going through without disturbance), so I can tgake a seat before departure, rather than scramble on at Fratton or wherever, especially if its likely to be busier. I planned things so that I'd connect at PMH with what looked like the only viable train - even this terminating at BRI, requiring a long wait for a connection via BPW. It turns out that the GWR train *to* Pompey was starting at Fratton (ironically described on Journeycheck as Reinstated - but with almost all stops removed!); RTT showed an ECS running, so looks like it had a driver but no guard on that journey, with guard joining at Fratton. It seemed to be 'sticking' at Fratton when I checked RTT, but that worked out well; my Southern train was a bit late (such that I nearly reverted to a Fratton change to avoid risk) and terminated at Fratton, and the GWR train provided the connection to PMH. So it worked out perfectly.

The GWR train was a 3-car 166. The CIS was saying it had terminated, which caused confusion with passengers who had just been kicked off of the Southern train. The simple touches of communication often irritate me more than the actual delays/cancellations. Surely it's better to turn it off than let it display wrong information!

The air conditioning didn't seem to be working. The train had 'caught the sun' and felt like it had heated seats!

Down to PMH, picked up passengers there, and the PMH-BRI journey commenced. THings were looking a bit better. It was well-used but not too crowded, but that's often the case before SOU, where it was likely to pick up a lot of passengers displaced by previous cancellations. Which it did. Then the anncouncement came from the guard... back cab at 40°, "I'm seeing double", unable to take the train further. Passengers gradually left hte train (at least the CIS was now accurate in saying it wasn't going anywhere) and crowded the platform. Next PMH-CDF cancelled, and even if it ran I'd have been wary of more issues arising (and it being severely crowded), so I went to look for staff to authorise travel via Reading. (I don't think I'd have accepted 'no' by this point, of course!) When I passed the back cab, the guard was in bad way, with platform staff (I assume) supporting as he staggered, before appearing to collapse. I wasn't too impressed by at least one nearby passenger pointing the phone camera that way.

It might have been helpful to send passengers to the other side (Plat 1?) - both to provide some space for the guard, and to direct people to travel via BSK (for SAL) and RDG (for BTH/BRI/CDF).

Very crowded XC train to RDG, followed by OK GWR journey back to SWA. By the time the incident had played out and connections had been made, I ended up on the last PAD-SWA train (bearing in mind a bit earlier on Sunday) - so it's a good thing I hadn't tried to travel later! Ended up at SWA after midnight - manageable as I don't live far from the station, but meant I lost sleep and wasn't at my best at work the next day; passengers needing to find a bus/taxi home, relying on someone to be awake to pick them up, or simply not comfortable with late night walking would have been caused more than a touch of inconvenience.

Not many options for buying additional food and water for the extra 2-3 hours' travel on a Sunday evening. From SOU to RDG the only in-station shop I found (didn't want ot mess around with finding a local shop, esp carrying luggage) was the WHSmith on the RDG station bridge. 

The RDG-SWA train was diverted SWI-BPW, and had an order to make an extra stop at BTH and BRI. I assume this was to plug a gap in the local trains on the WSB-BRI axis, which were now essentially suspended.  The CIS wasn't aware of this, but the TM made an effort to make an announcement following auto-announcements to ensure passengers had correct information. This should be the default action! I'm not sure this was announced at RDG when the XC train arrived (or even if it had been decided at that point); it would have been a nice touch as it meant a shorter wait for displaced BTH/BRI passengers who had come up from Southampton.

I made my bed that weekend when it came to my route choice, but that's not really the point! I know the network and was able to make contingency plans on the fly, but as my phone's battery level showed it means a lot of time spent keeping an eye on things and thinking about best options. For me the main stress was the possibility of missing a last train home, but for many the whole thing would have been an ordeal.

It worked out well financially though. I claimed 1hr Delay Repay on the outward journey, and was awarded 2hr for some reason (presumably I'd made a connection that was officially too tight); for the return journey I claimed 2hr which was confirmed, but I hit the ticket price cap and was only awarded a bit, which isn't a problem - I got all my money back in the end.   In fact, as part of the journey was on my season ticket, the amount received slightly exceeded the amount paid for the tickets bought specfically for that journey. A positive note is that the claims went through very quickly and I've received the money well within a week. It's worth noting there were consequential costs (e.g. buying additional provisions, late night arrival - some may have extra taxi costs or whatever, and being home at a ridiculously late hour) which I suppose were covered by my claim given the ticket cost was fairly high, but perhaps wouldn't have naturally been covered if someone had been compensated for a much lower fare.

This must have been a very expensive weekend for GWR. Perhaps some investment would be worth it simply to reduce these costs in future!
• Delay Repay - in many cases total ticket refunds.
• Delay minutes, performance penalties etc?
• Additional costs likely where last connections missed etc - most likely some long-distance taxis would have been provided!
• Diversion - would XC have been paid when ticket restrictions lifted, for example?
• Knock-on issues - e.g. passengers at BSK told to wait for next train to RDG if they couldn't board XC train - possible Delay Repay costs for XC there.
• Any costs associated with staff member being taken ill.
• I understand some taxi cover was provided that evening when it became clear that evening travel wasn't going to happen.
• Intangible costs - reputation damage etc.

As a little aside, the Southern trains on the Coastway were rather busy. Most 4/3 car as either locals or split of London trains. I think Coastway service is somehwat reduced post-Covid, but key centres like Brighton and Chichester mean there's a lot of demand. Obv I was travelling late afternoon outward and SUnday afternoon on return, so busy times anyway, so may not be totally representative of daytime trains, but it still seems there could be improvements there.

Re: Timetable colours
In "The Lighter Side" [363397/30471/30]
Posted by grahame at 13:19, 20th July 2025
 
I suppose I should not answer my own question - here are some examples, though, of how ontimetrains colours performance after the event.


Re: Timetable colours
In "The Lighter Side" [363396/30471/30]
Posted by eXPassenger at 13:05, 20th July 2025
 
BBQ charcoal for summer Sunday services.

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363395/30464/30]
Posted by stuving at 12:59, 20th July 2025
 
9. St. Malo. Obviously!

It *is* - but not sure it's that obvious to everyone - perhaps I left a station sign or destination board in situ - but can't see it.
Obvious in the sense that we know you were both there, it is a small terminus built in the last 20 years (I remember it being done and how much glass it includes), and I even vaguely remember the platform tracks being lettered rather than numbered.

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363394/30464/30]
Posted by grahame at 12:20, 20th July 2025
 
9. St. Malo. Obviously!

It *is* - but not sure it's that obvious to everyone - perhaps I left a station sign or destination board in situ - but can't see it.

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363393/30464/30]
Posted by stuving at 11:57, 20th July 2025
Already liked by grahame
 
9. St. Malo. Obviously!

Timetable colours
In "The Lighter Side" [363392/30471/30]
Posted by grahame at 11:43, 20th July 2025
Already liked by Mark A
 
From the Bala Lake Railway ...

Today we are running our Orange timetable ...

What colours should be assigned to GWR timetabled for various days?

Re: Thames Valley infrastructure problems causing disruption elsewhere - 2025
In "Across the West" [363391/29650/26]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 11:35, 20th July 2025
 
Cancellations to services between Reading and London Paddington

Due to a safety inspection of the track at Hayes & Harlington fewer trains are able to run on the line towards London Paddington. Disruption is expected until the end of the day

Re: Rolling stock swap?
In "Across the West" [363390/30470/26]
Posted by grahame at 11:33, 20th July 2025
 
It would certainly make sense to do that.

Other factors can sometimes be in play though, including:

...

I'm also noticing a 75 minute gap between the two trains leaving Exeter - perhaps only the 5 car was actually available at / for 08:30?

P.S. Don't worry about which board, GBM - "Across the West" is a catchall for things that don't neatly fit anywhere and we can always shift topics as they develop.

Re: Rolling stock swap?
In "Across the West" [363389/30470/26]
Posted by IndustryInsider at 11:10, 20th July 2025
 
It would certainly make sense to do that.

Other factors can sometimes be in play though, including:

*  Fuel levels
*  Due an exam
*  The depot the unit ends up at that night so that the right number of length units are there for the next day

Rolling stock swap?
In "Across the West" [363388/30470/26]
Posted by GBM at 10:37, 20th July 2025
 
Apologies to the mods.
I don't know where/which area this should go in.


I've noticed this on journeycheck quite a bit over many months.

As on today
09:46 Exeter St Davids to Bristol Parkway due 11:22
Facilities on the 09:46 Exeter St Davids to Bristol Parkway due 11:22.
Will be formed of 9 coaches instead of 5.
AND
08:30 Exeter St Davids to London Paddington due 10:59
Facilities on the 08:30 Exeter St Davids to London Paddington due 10:59.
Will be formed of 5 coaches instead of 9.

To my simple mind put 5 cars on the Exeter-Cardiff service, and 9 on the Paddington.

It's happened over several months, sometimes the 9 car is on a Exeter-Penzance shuttle, and the 5 car on perhaps a Weston-Paddington service.

Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025
In "London to the Cotswolds" [363387/29711/14]
Posted by Worcester_Passenger at 10:09, 20th July 2025
 
10:00 Worcester Shrub Hill to Great Malvern due 10:15
An additional train service has been planned to operate as shown 10:00 Worcester Shrub Hill to Great Malvern due 10:15.
Last Updated:20/07/2025 07:58

Re: Words fail me, or a sense of humour failure
In "The Lighter Side" [363386/30463/30]
Posted by Bob_Blakey at 09:08, 20th July 2025
 
The description of these vehicles as 'rolling coffins' - at 1m 4s - was possibly an indication that this was not to be taken seriously!

Re: Words fail me, or a sense of humour failure
In "The Lighter Side" [363385/30463/30]
Posted by broadgage at 08:54, 20th July 2025
 
Like a pacer, but slower and with much less capacity.

Re: C2C Nationalised - 20th July 2025
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [363384/30469/51]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 08:20, 20th July 2025
 
C2C nationalised - as reported on The BBC

Rail services between south Essex and London have become publicly owned for the first time since the 20th century.

Operator c2c, which runs services between Fenchurch Street and Shoeburyness, was nationalised on Sunday.
It became part of Great British Railways, set up by the government to oversee the rail system in England, Wales and Scotland.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said passengers had been suffering "spiralling costs, fragmentation and waste".

Ministers have been allowed to take rail companies back into public ownership when their existing contracts expired.

Opinions vary as to the benefits ...

Alexander said public ownership would tackle "deep-rooted problems" experienced on the railway.

She added: "A unified network under Great British Railways will take this further with one railway under one brand with one mission: delivering excellent services for passengers wherever they travel."

The government hoped nationalisation of all services in Britain would bring savings of up to £150m, while also reducing delays and cancellations.

David Burton-Sampson, the Labour MP for Southend West and Leigh, said it would bring a host of benefits for passengers.

"What they will notice in the longer-term is a better service, a more consistent level of ticketing and hopefully a continued improvement in punctuality," he added.

However, shadow rail minister and Conservative Norfolk MP Jerome Mayhew previously said he feared nationalisation would end up costing taxpayers more money in increased costs for leasing rolling stock.

He said the government was "risking" successful operations for "ideological reasons".


Alexander also clarified on the BBC that nationalisation won't bring lower fares, given the amount of taxpayer subsidy still being ploughed into the railways.

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363383/30464/30]
Posted by grahame at 08:19, 20th July 2025
 
Or Swanage for 19?

No, Wareham was right ... one of the older pictures in my series.  Very unfortunate indeed that a similar scene is not seen every day.

C2C Nationalised - 20th July 2025
In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [363382/30469/51]
Posted by grahame at 08:17, 20th July 2025
 
C2C nationalised - as reported on The BBC

Rail services between south Essex and London have become publicly owned for the first time since the 20th century.

Operator c2c, which runs services between Fenchurch Street and Shoeburyness, was nationalised on Sunday.
It became part of Great British Railways, set up by the government to oversee the rail system in England, Wales and Scotland.

Transport Secretary Heidi Alexander said passengers had been suffering "spiralling costs, fragmentation and waste".

Ministers have been allowed to take rail companies back into public ownership when their existing contracts expired.

Opinions vary as to the benefits ...

Alexander said public ownership would tackle "deep-rooted problems" experienced on the railway.

She added: "A unified network under Great British Railways will take this further with one railway under one brand with one mission: delivering excellent services for passengers wherever they travel."

The government hoped nationalisation of all services in Britain would bring savings of up to £150m, while also reducing delays and cancellations.

David Burton-Sampson, the Labour MP for Southend West and Leigh, said it would bring a host of benefits for passengers.

"What they will notice in the longer-term is a better service, a more consistent level of ticketing and hopefully a continued improvement in punctuality," he added.

However, shadow rail minister and Conservative Norfolk MP Jerome Mayhew previously said he feared nationalisation would end up costing taxpayers more money in increased costs for leasing rolling stock.

He said the government was "risking" successful operations for "ideological reasons".

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363381/30464/30]
Posted by eightonedee at 07:50, 20th July 2025
 
Or Swanage for 19?

Re: Hidden cost of flying - airport drop off fees
In "Buses and other ways to travel" [363380/30458/5]
Posted by grahame at 07:48, 20th July 2025
 
From The BBC

It's a hot and sticky Friday in the middle of the summer holidays and cars are flooding onto Edinburgh Airport's approach road.

There are few places to stop, but in almost every lay-by a steady stream of drivers await friends and loved ones touching down from their holidays.

They are all parked in a half-mile radius from the entrance to the terminal building in a bid to beat so-called "kiss-and-fly" charges in the official drop-off zone.

Research by the RAC, released this week, found that more than half of the country's busiest airports have raised drop-off fees in the last 12 months.

Seeing comparisons between flying and train costs from time to time that recommend Manchester to London via Ibiza or Poznan to get it cheaper ... do such comparisons include the costs of getting to and from the airport?

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363379/30464/30]
Posted by Fourbee at 07:47, 20th July 2025
Already liked by grahame
 
19. Wareham (maybe!)

Re: Shortage of train crews on Great Western Railway - ongoing discussion
In "Across the West" [363378/18719/26]
Posted by TaplowGreen at 07:36, 20th July 2025
 
Cancellations to services between Reading and Basingstoke
Due to a shortage of train crew between Reading and Basingstoke fewer trains are able to run on all lines.
Train services running to and from these stations will be cancelled. Disruption is expected until 11:00 20/07.
-
We're sorry for the delay to your journey this morning. Due to a shortage of train crew on our route between Reading and Basingstoke, we are unable to run the train service this morning.

Cancellations to services between Maidenhead and Marlow
Due to a shortage of train crew between Maidenhead and Marlow the line is closed.
Train services running to and from these stations will be cancelled. Disruption is expected until 12:30 20/07.

We're sorry for the delay to your journey this morning. Due to a shortage of train crew on our Maidenhead to Marlow line, we are unable to run the train service this morning.

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363377/30464/30]
Posted by grahame at 07:03, 20th July 2025
 
14 down and 10 to go ... identified so far ...

1. Metz, France - Chris from Nailsea
2. Taunton - Chris from Nailsea
3. Melksham - Oxonhutch
4. West Ealing - stuving
7. Ebbw Vale Town - Chris from Nailsea
8. Rosslare (Europort) - Chris from Nailsea
10. Reykjavík - Chris from Nailsea
11. Beauly - Mark A
12. Metz - Merthyr Imp
14. Trakia, Lithuania - stuving
15. Bodmin Parkway - PhilWakely
16. Midleton (Ireland) - stuving
20. Somewhere on the Molibahn - eightonedee
24. Strasbourg, France - JayMac

Re: Gunnislake services cancelled Sat July 19 2025
In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [363376/30468/25]
Posted by Trowres at 23:20, 19th July 2025
 

First the good news:
Incident cleared: Saturday 19 July 2025 at 19:02

Then the bad news:
(Reported 22:29; updated 23:10)

Due to a fault with the signalling system between Ivybridge and Liskeard all lines are blocked.
...
the signalling between Ivybridge and Liskeard including Plymouth station and the Gunnislake Branch has failed.
_
What are we doing about it?
-
Engineers are starting investigations.

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363375/30464/30]
Posted by stuving at 22:26, 19th July 2025
Already liked by Chris from Nailsea
 
14. Trakai (Latvia)

Yes, and no ...


Lithuania?

So it is. Good job I've got the pre-op for my cataract next week ...

Re: 2025 - Service update and amendment log, Swindon <-> Westbury
In "TransWilts line" [363374/29726/18]
Posted by grahame at 22:25, 19th July 2025
Already liked by Mark A, GBM
 
We have been factually logging failures ... some feedback from local social media that points to the consequences ...   last weekend when the return train from Weymouth did not run beyond Westbury

Also my husband who wrote post did not mention
Our day started at 9 and ended at midnight
We are pensioners
Yet both our sympathies went to young families with tearful children
Half term next week
The Weymouth Sat trip be children’s dream
Train trip …Just make sure end of day a different scenario could occur

and

I took that train one day last year. On the way the train was delayed heavily and absolutely rammed. Standing room only all the way to Weymouth on one of the hottest day of the year. On the last train home the carriages lost power so crawled back all the way home really slowly with no air con. Didn't get home til gone midnight. Not much fun with a child. I vowed never to chance the train again

and

Our train to Weymouth got terminated half way and we were left on a platform in the middle of nowhere that had no facilities for about 5 hours in the blazing sun. Just told to wait for the next train. We had 4 children under 8 at the time. Vowed never to get the train there again. By the time we got there we had to come home again!

and

Congratulations to whoever gave train drivers a massive salary increase - the result of which is that they no longer wish to work weekends (hence a shortage of staff)

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363373/30464/30]
Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 21:45, 19th July 2025
Already liked by grahame
 
14. Trakai (Latvia)

Yes, and no ...


Lithuania?

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363372/30464/30]
Posted by grahame at 21:32, 19th July 2025
 
14. Trakai (Latvia)

Yes, and no ...

Re: The variety that is rail travel.
In "The Lighter Side" [363371/30464/30]
Posted by Oxonhutch at 21:20, 19th July 2025
 
6: Canal Street, New Orleans. Opposite the Hyatt Centric

 
The Coffee Shop forum is provided by customers of Great Western Railway (formerly First Great Western). The views expressed are those of the individual posters concerned. Visit https://www.gwr.com for the official Great Western Railway website. Please contact the administrators of this site at admin@railcustomer.info if you feel that the content provided by one of our posters contravenes our posting rules. Our full legal statment is at https://www.greatwesternrailway.info/legal.html

Although we are planning ahead, we don't know what the future will bring here in the Coffee Shop. We have domains "firstgreatwestern.info" for w-a-y back and also "greatwesternrailway.info"; we can also answer to "greatbritishrailways.info" too. For the future, information about Great Brisish Railways, by customers and for customers.
 
Current Running
GWR trains from JourneyCheck
 
 
Code Updated 11th January 2025