Normal working has resumed.Delays from Peterborough northbound due to flooding around Bytham
Normal working has resumed.Delays from Peterborough northbound due to flooding around Bytham
Almost every time it rains that tunnel gets flooded. They usually halve the service and divert via Bath Spa which adds 45 minutes if the train makes it or otherwise gets turned at Reading.
I’ve got to travel from Cardiff to London now to do emergency rail replacement, fingers crossed it doesn’t take all evening![]()
Appears to have shut the Fast but Slow still open at 1600-ish.Flooding reported at Madeley (between Stafford and Crewe)
It was flooding there 40 years ago when we lived a couple of miles from it.Almost every time it rains that tunnel gets flooded. They usually halve the service and divert via Bath Spa which adds 45 minutes if the train makes it or otherwise gets turned at Reading.
I’ve got to travel from Cardiff to London now to do emergency rail replacement, fingers crossed it doesn’t take all evening![]()
Blown away or floated away?The wind here on the south coast is dreadful. Several bins have now vanished down our road
Well that’s a good question… we will find out when the tide goes out what remains on the shingle!Blown away or floated away?![]()
If it’s anything like it is where I live good luck with that. Roads are flooded.South Western are giving blanket approval for passengers who are stranded to get taxis!
It’s more aimed at people who would be starting there journey who could possibly replan.Issuing "Do Not Travel" warnings after everyone has got to work, and just before they start their evening commutes, often with no alternative routes, is rather farcical.
It will be typical British weather once you average it out over the course of the whole winter. For example, most reputable weather websites are predicting a dry spell of nearly two weeks once we get today's rain out of the wayHave they?
According to the Met Office many areas received twice the amount of rainfall in Dec than is normal, and I think Aberdeen three times. That is not "typical British weather"
Yes, it is. Henk was only named this morning, the intensification was so unexpected. To quote the Beeb, from https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-67861206:Is it me, or is this turning out far worse a storm than was forecast?
"The storm, which will track across mid-Wales through to Lincolnshire, was named much later than usual - only hours before the impact was due to be felt.
This was down to its small size and because it was still developing early on Tuesday morning.
Early forecasts were for gusts of around 70mph but some computer models were suggesting a stronger swathe of winds, while others weren't - leading to uncertainty.
But as higher resolution models confirmed the potential for stronger wind gusts, there was greater certainty in the forecast and its potential impact."
River heights at Worcester. Its be the river gate into the cathedral close. The highest one is 1672.Extreme events are more frequent , but this is not an example of an extreme event and the last couple of weeks have been typical British winter weather. Climate Change is not an excuse to defund infrastructure and pretend the inevitable results have got nothing to with the government.
I agree in principle but sometimes nature throws-up unexpected events. I'm sure the TOCs would have preferred to have issued that warning last night rather than have full trains suck between stations but the Met Office and TOCs would have got even more flack if they'd warned everyone not to travel and this was a non-event.Issuing "Do Not Travel" warnings after everyone has got to work, and just before they start their evening commutes, often with no alternative routes, is rather farcical.
Is it me, or is this turning out far worse a storm than was forecast?
Would that bridge have been maintained by Network Rail , or considering the vintage look of the station, by some kind of "Friends of Okehampton" group?
The council. Okehampton was only reopened in 2019, and the council retained responsibility for the two disused platforms and the (unused) footbridge.Would that bridge have been maintained by Network Rail , or considering the vintage look of the station, by some kind of "Friends of Okehampton" group?
Also on Rdg-Bsk line so no diversionary route to BasingstokeFrom what I can tell, there's about seven lines blocked by fallen trees in the Farnham/Farnborough area.
Screw trainspotting, I want to go treespotting!