I knew I should have worn shorts…

After a busy day taking pictures of the Sussex Power Supply Upgrade for a client client I’m heading back to Yorkshire. It’s been a fascinating day for a number of reasons. I’ve learned more about the investment that’s being made in our railways and had the chance to explore towns I’ve never visited before.

The Sussex PSU is a multi-million pound project to strengthen power to the 3rd rail on sections of the Sussex coast line in order to allow more (and longer) trains to run. Feeder stations are located in several sites and I visited Goring-on-Sea, Adur (near Shoreham-by-Sea) and Heatherwick. Although the equipment installed at each site is similar, each site presented its own challenges and solutions, whether that was building a haul road through a school, across a flood plain, or building sheet piling to form a raised level site alongside an embankment. Of course, each site had unique environmental considerations too and every efforts been made to mitigate the impact of this vital work.

Whilst the weather was ideal for pictures, it wasn’t as kind when you’re wearing full PPE and carrying a sodding great camera bag. It was a little ‘toasty’ at times, making me wish I’d left my jeans at home and worn shorts under my PPE instead.

The day ended in Shoreham-by Sea, which was a real find after the disappointment of Worthing. It’s a pretty little place. Well, if you ignore the harbour area with its scrapyard and stay in the old town anyway. The old town is lovely, it’s full of quirky old buildings, pubs, alfresco dining cafe’s and shops. I’d certainly come back again and use it as a base to explore the area.

Rolling blog: Back on the rails…

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I’m currently heading South once more as I have another commission on the South coast tomorrow. Sadly, this means I’m stuck in a train when the sun’s blazing and I’d rather be out and about with the camera. Hopefully I’ll have chance to grab a few shots later.

I’ll also have the chance to sample Southern and GTR train services again. To say it’s been a torrid time for the industry following the May timetable change would be an understatement. I’m not going to go over the reasons why as they’ve already explained in detail by my colleagues on RAIL magazine. My observations would be that as well as the managerial and political failures there’s also been a huge PR failure. The fact is that Northern did themselves no favours at all with a bunker mentality that meant they refused to put up any Directors for media interviews to explain the problems until it was too late and the narrative had been set.

Whilst I have sympathy for rail staff caught up in the problems, I also have huge sympathy for passengers. My nephew tells me that he lost his job due to the impact of delays. Clearly, the railways failed in their primary duty, to get people (reliably) from A to B so I hope the lessons are learned. I believe the railways will, but I’m not so sure about their masters in Parliament and the DfT…

One of the ironies of the situation is people complaining that what happened shows our railways are badly managed and run-run down when the truth is – the root of many of the problems was delays in commissioning new investment in both infrastructure and trains!

I hope when the dust finally settles, people will start to appreciate the major investment the railways are enjoying.

Update. 19:13.

Due to the VTEC service in front of us being cancelled my Grand Central train had a fast clear run into London and arrived 15 minutes early. This allowed me to make a dash across London by tube to Victoria in time to catch an earlier service to the South coast in the shape of the 18:24 to Littlehampton. Needless to say, this 8 car trains rammed! It was wedged departing Victoria and positively sardine-like after leaving Clapham Junction! Our call at East Crodon eased matters slightly but I was interested to see that nearly as many suits got on as off, which says something about the way the towns changing nowadays.

As we head for Gatwick I cast an eye over my fellow passengers and – sure enough – of the 16 people in this section of the coach 12 are staring at screens on smartphones, laptops or ipads! One’s on the phone and another female passenger’s reading a book. One chap’s sleeping, but i’ve no idea about the last guy as all I can see is the back of his balding head!

Unfortunately, the stunning weather I’d enjoyed through Yorkshire and into Cambridgeshire has given way to unappealing heavy grey cloud by Gatwick Airport. There’s still no seats available, but the squash has eased to leave just six passengers standing in the adjacent vestibule.

19.13.

Finally, after pulling away from Haywards Heath a handful of seats became available and the vestibule was bereft of standees. By the time we called at Burgess Hill the light was so bad that the station lights had come on automatically. At 19:18! In June!

19:26

We’re leaving Preston Park on the outskirts of Brighton and space has eased considerably. The train’s still busy (and still profitable) with a seat occupancy of around 60% – although this is about to reduce as we’re pulling ino Hove as I type! After swapping a few commuters for leisure travellers it’s down to 50%. As we’re coach 2 of 8 there’s a fair few folk moving forward as stations here have short platforms.

19:42.

I’m now at Lancing. It’s hard to believe this place once had a railway carriage and wagon works that employed over 1,500 people! It closed in 1965 and i’m hard put to guess where it stood.

22:22

I’m now esconced in my room in the Burlington, a Victorian seafront hotel after arriving in Worthing, checking in and setting off to explore the town. Well, at least t3he beach was attractive!

To be fair, so’s the pier that you can see behind me, but after that it all goes downhill…

I headed back to the main comnercial street to look for a bite to eat and see what the place had to offer. The answer is – not much! OK, there’s a few restaurants and plenty of fast-food joints, but what the place is lacking in is any life. Here’s tbe main shopping area.

Not exactly buzzing, is it? Worthing suffers the same malaise that many small towns do, the main street is nothing but shops it’s not mixed-use. So once the shops close it’s deserted. The other thing I noticed was the lack of pubs and bars. I only saw one ‘proper’ pub (which didn’t look very inviting) and a shop converted into a bar. I’ve never known anything quite like it. Even the promenade is free of pubs or cafe’s. The only one is in my hotel – and half of that’s sheeted off because they’ve got the decorators in (in June?).

What I can’t figure out is why (when you see what the town has to offer) so many hotels were booked up. People can’t be coming here for the nightlife!

There’s an underlying air of poverty about the place too, with a fair few street-drinkers and rough sleepers, but then this part of the world has long had a reputation for DSS hotels. The South coast isn’t always as affluent as some people think. I must admit that what I’ve seen so far won’t have me rushing back. Still, at least I’m being paid to be here! So on that note I’ll bid you goodnight.

The Brexit can is kicked farther down the road…

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There’s shambles, then there’s the Brexit shambles, which is taking things to a whole new level none of us have ever seen before. The UK has now added the dubious accolade of being home to the EU’s fudge mountain, because today’s Government communique contains more of that particular confectionary than a Rowntree’s warehouse!

After a day of speculation over the future of David Davis (will he or won’t he resign over a backstop date) he stays and a compomise is reached.

More fudge.

The revised paragraph now reads

“Time limiting the agreement

26. The UK is clear that the temprorary customs arrangement, should it be needed, should be time limited, and that it will be only in place until the future customs arrangement can be introduced. The UK is clear that the future customs arrangement needs to deliver on the commitments made in relation to Northern Ireland. The UK expects the future arrangement to be in place by the end of December 2021 at the latest. Thete are a range of options for how a time limit could be delivered, which the UK will propose and discuss with the EU”.

So, that’s clear then! A ‘time limit’ that is only an expectation is no time limit at all. And what if there’s no solution found by then?

I feel desperately sorry for the EU negotiators that this is the sort of rubbish they’ve got to deal with. How do you work with a UK government that hasn’t got a clue what it actually expects to get out of Brexit, but keeps coming up with things it can’t have or which have already been turned down. It must be as maddening for them as it is for us. The only difference is that we’re the poor sods lumbered with the consequences.

Meanwhile, it’s clear our Government still haven’t a clue what to do about the Irish border!

It’s hardly surprising that more and more Brexit Leaders are starting to make their excuses. Some of the voters who were conned by them are starting to realise this too as more and more bad news turns up without a Brexit unicorn in sight.

May you live in interesting times…

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– as the old Chinese curse goes. Well, ‘interesting’ they are, although that feels a bit like having a cabin on the Titanic right now. Because, let’s face it – Brexit is lurching fom shambles to shambles. To say there’s no positive news on the potential outcome is an understatement. Both the Govt and opposition are punting ‘new’ options that have been been rejected by the EU before, but ‘cakeism’ persists.

Now it looks like the Government is about to be thrown into chaos as a senior member has announced he’s resigning. That’s right, Paul Dacre’s leaving as Editor of the Daily Mail! Oh, apparently some bloke called David Davis is likely to follow. For all the good Davis has done i’d suggest his replacement should be the tub of lard ‘Have I got news for you’ used as a stand in for Roy Hattersley many years ago.

What a f*****g shambles.

More Brexit leaders jump ship…

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As the absolute shambles that is Brexit heads for the rocks more of its architects are jumping ship or making their excuses.

This week we’ve seen Lord Lawson, one of the leaders of the Leave campaign, apply for French residency! It’s not much of a surprise as (when he’s not screwing the UK up) that’s where he’s lived for many years. It’s a classic example of putting up two fingers to the plebs he conned into voting for Brexit. He’s exercising a right he’s denying to everyone else- the ability to live or work in the EU.

Meanwhile, pathological liar Nigel Farage is rowing back from all his claims that Brexit would be a success. Now he’s saying that he never claimed at all! On his LBC chat show, he claimed that “I never promised that it would be a huge success”. What a brass balled liar!  A few minutes on Google will produce plenty of evidence that this is exactly what he claimed, but then that’s Farage all over. He know he can claim anything and his supporters will swallow it whole.

https://twitter.com/twitter/statuses/1002472366629322752

Meanwhile, David Davis has admitted that there’s still no solution to the Irish border question. He conceded that technology cannot be used to police the border. So what’s his new fantastical ‘solution’? A ten-mile wide ‘buffer zone‘! Talk about making it up as you go along…

And there’s still no sign of the Brexit land of milk and honey these charlatans promised the poor people who were conned into voting Leave, exactly the opposite. Now restaurant chain Carluccio’s is looking at closing 30 restaurants as a result of Brexit increasing costs.

brexit

Anyone found one of the Brexit fundamentalists fabled unicorns yet? It seems that fewer and fewer people have faith they exist, as this chart of YouGov polls shows;

yougov brexit

So, how’s this claim working out for you Jeremy?

corbyn jobs frame

Goggle-eyed!

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Having got back from America I’m busy trying to sort out all the pictures that I took. It’s proving to be a marathon task – if for no other reason than trying to research the captions. Oh, that and the jet-lag, it’s funny how that hits you sometimes and other times not.

Still, I’ve managed to get a few hundred pictures uploaded onto my Zenfolio website. You can find them here.

I’m hoping to have the task finished by the weekend as I have to be bright-eyed and bushy tailed by Monday as it’s another busy week that’ll see me off up and around the UK again. The next couple of months are going to be very hectic, so expect all sorts of blogs from all sorts of places!

Time to go home…

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We’re sat at JFK airport waiting for our American Airlines flight to Heathrow after a great week exploring New York and celebrating Dawn’s 50th birthday. It’s been a fascinating trip that I’ll write more about later. I’ve also got a huge backlog of photo’s to sort out too as the camera’s been kept busy over the past few days. Yesterday we took a ferry trip right around Manhattan, which proved to be far more interesting than I expected. Dawn also booked for us to go to the top of the Empire state building, which I’d never visited before. Despite the hazy weather it was a fabulous experience.

Flying home is always tinged with sadness. You never really want a trip like this to end, but American Airlines have done their best to make it an even more dispiriting experience than usual. Dawn tried emailing them to check about food allergies (foolishly, I’d forgotten to do it when we booked the trip). They never got back to her. Yesterday I checked in online only to find that – if we wanted to sit together, AA wanted to charge us between $75-150 a seat for the privilege! They seem to be a Transatlantic version of Ryanair now. At JFK the AA staff insisted we had to use machine check-in and wouldn’t let us talk to counter staff (so there was no chance to ask for a seat change). Not only that, but the machines then tried to sell us ‘priority boarding’ for another $40 apiece! To say I was less than impressed would be an understatement. I’ve never encountered this on any of my trips to India or Southeast Asia. I’m told this practice is spreading amongst airlines. All I can say is that I’ll be making sure that I’ll be avoiding any long-haul airlines that are tempted to ‘ching’ passengers in this fashion.

Once, flying had a certain cachet, it was an exciting, even glamourous experience. Not any more…

DG297810

Our plane. A Boeing 777-223 (ER), No N760AN being prepared as AA142, the 10.10 to London Heathrow.

UPDATE: 30th May 2018.

Credit where it’s due, our AA flight to the UK was a really good flight! Despite the fact we’d both been allocated middle row, B numbered seats (one in front of the other) we managed to sit next to each other due to the number of other passengers who’d also been split up all playing musical chairs to swap seats! I can’t help wondering how much extra revenue this policy creates compared to the ill-will it causes. What I can’t fault was the condition of the plane or the service. Although the airframe was 16 years old the interior was far more recent, the seats were comfortable, the legroom reasonable and the facilities (electrical and USB sockets) were good. The seatback TV screens were excellent, with really good definition whilst the entertainment system had a wide variety of films and other programmes on offer. The cabin crew were a also a delight. Unlike many crews, they were all older (and more experienced) women who were both extremely helpful and polite. This combination made the time on out six and a half hour flight fly by – literally! Mind you, this was aided and abetted by the large glasses of wine the Stews were happy to serve!

As our flight didn’t land until late in the evening I’d booked us a hotel near the airport so that we could get our heads down before heading North this morning. Right now i’m typing this update from the 10.52 Grand Central service to Halifax, which could be an interesting journey as the East Coast Main Line’s up the spout again. It seems that a lightning strike took out signalling in the Newark area earlier this morning! As we’re on a DMU we’re could be diverted via the GN/GE joint line from Peterborough to Doncaster via Lincoln. Luke Barty, our Train Manager is doing a sterling job trying to keep passengers appraised of the situation, although he doesn’t know himself which route we’ll take yet. To his credit he’s not hidden behind the meaningless ‘operational incident’ phraseology loved by GTR, instead he’s spelled out to passengers exactly what’s happened and what’s going on.

In the end we stayed on the main line to join the queue of trains being hand-signalled through Newark. Whilst this happened Luke talked to the passengers like adults and explained exactly what was going on whilst apologising for the fact that he couldn’t (yet) establish how late we would be. It was a text-book example of how to talk to passengers when things go wrong.

(12.20) BEST LAID PLANS…

Poor Luke! Just as he was making an announcement to passengers after passing through Newark, our train suddenly swung to the Right and it became obvious that we were being diverted via Lincoln after all – just on the shorter diversionary route! To his credit, he coped with aplomb.

We’re now crossing the Lincolnshire flatlands under misty skies. Still, neither Dawn or I are in a hurry. We have coffee and a plentiful supply of biscuits, wifi and a view, so we might as well enjoy the experience…

New York, New York!

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After a pretty good flight with BA from Gatwick we’re starting our first full day in the city. As a veteran of long-haul flights to SE Asia the seven and a half hour flight was a doddle. Our Boeing 777-200 was dated but comfortable and the crew were really good, the only annoyance was the entertainment system. The seatback screens were tiny. The choice of films was good but the system kept dropping out or freezing every few minutes which made films unwatchable. I’d been looking forward to catching up on a few of the new releases so I found it really frustrating. Still, first world problems eh?

I’ve not been to New York since 2006 but Dawn’s never visited. To say she was excited was an understatement. She was almost bouncing up and down in her seat when we got the big yellow taxi from JFK to central Manhatten! As we passed through Times Square all I could hear was “Oh, wow!” On a loop!

When we flow in the weather was dull and wet, that’s now clearing and the city’s expecting to be baking in full sunshine from later this morning. I’ll post a few pictures later as time permits. Right, now we’re off to hit the streets…

11.30.

We’re currently sitting in Grand Central station, taking the weight off our feet whilst soaking up the atmosphere. This is what it’s like now.

DG296832. Grand Central station. New York. 23.5.18

I’ve started a New York gallery on my Zenfolio website. Here’s a link if you want to see the full selection of pictures as they’re taken I can’t add them all to my blogs.

Meanwhile, I’m rather dubious about this quote we came across. I’m not sure U-bends can compete with the mysteries of time and space…

DG296753. Fake quote. New York. USA. 23.5.18

Rolling blog: New York bound…

After doing a very good impression of a blue-arsed fly this past week it’s time for a slight change of tempo. The pair of us are swapping the rural delights of West Yorkshire for the hustle and bustle of metropolitan New York in order to celebrate Dawn’s half-century in style!

I’m not sure how much time I’ll have to blog, but I’m sure that a few words and pictures will come out at some points throughout the week.

Right now we’re on an absolutely rammed Grand Central train down to London. When this service started back in 2010 you’d be lucky to get 25- 30 passengers on a 5-car train. Now, even 42 seat First Class is full before Doncaster! This means the pair of us are doing a Jeremy (Corbyn) and sitting on the vestibule floor – only on this train there really are no free seats!