Last year, Zelo Street regulars may
remember a post about the Railway Touring Company’s marathon Great Britain tour, which had stopped
off at Crewe en route from a night stop at Preston to the next evening’s
destination, Bristol. Spending nine consecutive days on board a train making
its way around the UK behind a variety of heritage steam traction is still
popular, as it’s on again this year.
In fact, this is the fifth year of the tour, which at an
individual cost as much as £2,800 is definitely a non-trivial expense, but the
punters have arrived from across mainland Europe and north America to ensure
the train was well filled as it arrived at Crewe late this morning. There was
no hostess photo opportunity this time – so no interest for Mail Online – but hundreds braved the
rain just to see the train pass.
None of that kind of thing this year
So was it any different this year? Ah well. Those of an
anorak persuasion would easily identify the difference in locomotive type for
this leg of the tour, with last year’s Castle
class loco replaced by Britannia
class “Pacific” Oliver Cromwell, part of the National Collection as it was one of
the last locos to work a passenger train for BR back in 1968 at the end of
steam traction.
The return of Oliver Cromwell
Passengers could stretch their legs and appreciate just how
enchanting Crewe station is when the rain combines with a northerly wind, while
the support crew wheeled out the hoses and used the Platform 12 hydrant to
water the loco (typically, large steam locos go through 40 to 50 gallons of
water per mile). The stop, together with pathing the tour, meant a delay of
half an hour or so.
Water stop and pundit photo-op
Then, a few minutes after the whistle sounded to tell anyone
who was travelling to get back aboard, the signal cleared and Oliver Cromwell blasted out of Crewe
with her 420 tonne trailing load, taking the road towards Shrewsbury, Hereford,
the Severn Tunnel and then Bristol.
Departure
The tour goes from Bristol to Penzance and back tomorrow,
and then returns to London on Sunday via Gloucester, Stroud and Swindon. The
enthusiastic and the merely curious can see details of the route and the
schedule for tomorrow HERE
and Sunday HERE. Don’t
forget that more or less any vantage point will be occupied with snappers well
beforehand.
And on to Bristol ...
But go and have a look anyway if you’re in the area. You will not be alone.
We spent last weekend with a 10 yr old at Llangollen so that he could see Tornado again. It was delayed an hour and he fell asleep on the return journey
ReplyDeleteEvery holiday for the last 4 years has involved trains, steam, diesel or subway so he got his fix
We just hope (and pray) this phase is coming to a natural end.
Oh wait Flying Scotsman and Tornado are at Railfest NRM York.......