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Rolling blog: Back in Britain…

31 Thursday Jan 2019

Posted by Paul Bigland in Air Travel, Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel

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Air Travel, Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel

06:20.

It’s a bit of a shock to the system but we’re back in the UK after flying in from Houston. We’ve actually had a very good flight. Our plane was well over half empty. The food was very good and crew were friendly and helpful, my only observation was that this was an 11 year old 777-224 (N69020 for the aviation geeks) so the seat-back entertainment system was rather clunky.

We arrived nearly an hour ahead of schedule after an easy flight. It’s the first time I’ve flown out of Houston and across Texas, so I was surprised to see just how green the state was. After a childhood spent watching cowboy films the last thing I was expecting was to see how green it was with huge tracts of pine forests, winding roads and arrow straight roads. We also crossed Louisiana and Arkansas only by then the clouds had rolled in. leaving little to see but this.

20190130_163917crop

Admittedly, US cities look rather spectacular when you fly over them at night…

20190130_184502crop

It was still night when we entered UK airspace and flew past Bristol and up the Thames valley before looping back on ourselves before lining up for our final approach to Heathrow, where we encountered mist and very low cloud. Now we’ve got to re-adapt to UK climate, which isn’t at its best. It looks like we’ll be returning to snow in West Yorkshire. We’ve a few hours to kill before then as our Grand Central service back to Halifax isn’t until 10:57…

09:16

We’ve braved the cold to get on the Piccadilly line tube to Kings Cross. In truth, it’s not a bad day to come back to. The sun’s shining and it’s a beautifully clear but frosty morning.

12:17

After brunch at the Parcel Yard in Kings Cross station we’re now speeding North through a Narnia style landscape courtesy of Grand Central trains (my first UK rail trip of the year). We ran out of sunshine North of Peterborough, swapping it for freezing with visibility down to a couple of hundred metres at most. Doncaster almost looked attractive in the frost (no mean feat) although the further West we get the more the frost’s fading. I don’t envy the guys we passed, working on the station platform extensions at Pontefract, they must be freezing – despite all their PPE.

19:17

We’re home, unpacked and knackered! Having travelled halfway around the planet on two flights, one of 12hrs 30m and the other of 7hrs 45m plus a layover of 2.5 hours as well as having crossed the international dateline has caught up with us. Now it’s time for bed and a chance to begin resetting our body clocks to UK time.
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New Zealand day 30: Auckland and area on our last full day…

29 Tuesday Jan 2019

Posted by Paul Bigland in New Zealand, Railways, Transport, Travel

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New Zealand, Railways, Transport, Travel

Yesterday was our last full day in New Zealand so we popped into the centre of town after Lisa dropped us at Papakura station where we caught a suburban train into Auckland city centre. It was my first trip on the local rail network. It wasn’t bad, the trains are comfortable, if a little slow and they’re certainly well used. Auckland traffic’s bad, so it’s no wonder people prefer to use the train if they can. Here’s the type we used, seen at Papakura.

dg318511. 565. papakura. north island. new zealand. 29.1.19crop

Once in town we caught the ferry to Waiheke Island which is a 40 minute journey. The weather was glorious – ideal for the trip – as you can see from this picture of the changing Auckland skyline and harbour which I took en-route.

dg318430crop

Waiheke is an attractive little island with lots of activities (cycling, walking etc) as well as less taxing ones like visiting wineries, lying on beaches or sampling some of the local seafood in one of the many restaurants.

dg318459. waiheke island. north island. new zealand. 29.1.19

The place is popular with tourists. So much so that we were told that in the summer many of the residents rent out their homes and go and live on their boats! Ones bigger than this one, anyways!

dg318454crop

Our day  out ended when we met up with Lisa again and drove to Karioitahi Beach, near where she lives. It’s a black sand beach popular with locals as its great for beach activities.

dg318518

New Zealand day 28: Waiuku (near Auckland).

26 Saturday Jan 2019

Posted by Paul Bigland in New Zealand, Railways, Travel

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New Zealand, Railways, Travel

We’re having a slow start to the day here in Waiuku, where we’re staying with an old friend of mine from my teenage years in Southport. It’s the first time Lisa and I have seen each other since my sister Ruth’s funeral nearly 15 years ago. How time flies…

We’d actually got a full programme planed for today but the early sunshine soon deserted us and the day was mostly cloudy with a few spots of rain. One thing we did manage was to visit a few local sights. I’m still amazed by how many preserved railways there are on New Zealand and I was delighted to find that Lisa had one on her doorstep – the Glenbrook Vintage Railway. We paid a visit earlier this afternoon and I was impressed by the size of the operation. Not only do they have a lovely little railway, they also have impressive workshop facilities where they’ve a number of locomotives being restored. The line’s only 7.5km in length, but it makes for a relaxed trip – especially if you travel in the Parlour car where you get coffee and cakes included in the fares. Here’s a few shots from our visit.

dg318242. parlour car. glenbrook vintage railway. north island. new zealand. 27.1.19crop

Travelling in style in the Parlour car.

dg318274. 480. waiuku. glenbrook vintage railway. north island. new zealand. 27.1.19crop

This locomotive was built as WG 480 at the hillside workshop, Dunedin for the NZR in 1910 as a 4-6-4 tank locomotive. The Wg class was designed to meet the need for a more powerful locomotive for the haulage of suburban trains chiefly at Auckland and Wellington. Twenty were produced at the Hillside workshops between 1910 and 1912. The Wg class proved to be very useful locomotive and soon saw a wide variety of duties including haul-freight trains and mail trains.

dg318301. ja 1250. pukeoware workshop. glenbrook vintage railway. north island. new zealand. 27.1.19crop

Ja 1250, a 4-8-2 express locomotive undergoing a boiler overhaul at Pukeoware Workshop.

dg318335. 480. glenbrook vintage railway. glenbrook. north island. new zealand. 27.1.19crop

480 running round its train at Glenbrook

dg318338. somersault signals. glenbrook vintage railway. glenbrook. north island. new zealand. 27.1.19crop

A lovely old signalbox and a fine collection of somersault signals at Glenbrook station

dg318342. 480. glenbrook vintage railway. glenbrook. north island. new zealand. 27.1.19crop

480 waiting to run a service from Glenbrook to Waiuku.

 

Rolling blog: New Zealand. Day 18. The Tranzalpine to Greymouth & onward to Franz Josef glacier.

16 Wednesday Jan 2019

Posted by Paul Bigland in New Zealand, Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel

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New Zealand, Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel

08:05.

We’re aboard the Tranzalpine train, ready for the 08:15 off and one of the great railway journeys off the world. The train’s swankier than the last time I did the trip in 1999. There’s plug sockets and headphones nowadays, but one thing missing is the delicious West Coast Whitebait you used to be able to buy on the train. That said, there’s two modern buffet cars and observation coaches. This trains essentially two coupled together. I’ll post pictures when I can, but here’s a taster – the interior of our coach (F).

14:50.

We’re now in Greymouth after a superb trip. I’ll blog about it in detail later as there’s lots to mention, but right now I’ll leave you with these pictures. The first’s from the train as we climbed up to Arthur’s Pass.

dg316580. 5229. 5402. tranzalpine. east of arthur's pass. new zealand. 17.1.19crop

This one is as we head towards Greymouth.

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Here’s a couple of the stunning scenery you see from the train.

dg316581crop

dg316608crop

21:18.

It’s been a great day. After picking up our hire car in Greymouth we drove down the West Coast as far as Franz Josef glacier. I’ve not been here for 30 years, so I was shocked to see how much the glacier has retreated. We don’t have broadband with enough oomph to upload the pictures I’ve taken today, so I’ll add them to this blog as soon as possible. One irony was realising that the backpackers that we’re staying in is the same one as last time I was here. At least some things don’t change – although in those days you didn’t get young girls travelling sporting bags of make-up, false eyelashes and a ‘trout pout’!

New Zealand day 14. Blenheim blogging.

12 Saturday Jan 2019

Posted by Paul Bigland in New Zealand, Railways, Transport, Travel, Uncategorized

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New Zealand, Railways, Travel

After yesterdays wine tasting we’ve had an easy day exploring the sights of Blenheim after a lazy start due to the indifferent weather. For once, instead of the scorching sun, the day started under heavy cloud and low temperatures which was a great excuse to catch up on social media and events elsewhere in the world whilst drinking lots of coffee. When we did venture forth we headed over to the Marlborough museum which deserves more visitors than it gets, but then the name doesn’t really do it justice. They have some very interesting information on the origins of the wine industry as well as local Maori history and memorabilia on the Victorian settlers – not to mention a fascinating display on some feisty women who were part of the New Zealand suffrage movement.

The museum site’s home to one of the terminal stations on the 2ft gauge Blenheim Riverside railway which runs 5.2km along a river valley to terminate under a viaduct carrying the main line from Picton to Christchurch in the centre of Blenheim. Here’s a few shots of the line.

dg316066. brrs no 1. brayshaw park. blenheim. new zealand. 12.1.19crop

dg316072. brrs no 1. blenheim. new zealand. 12.1.19crop

The railway passes through Riverside park in Blenheim.

dg316084. brrs no 1. blenheim. new zealand. 12.1.19crop

After our railway fix we headed out to amble along the Wairau Lagoons Walkway, a 3 hour round trip that takes you out through the wetlands of the Wairau estuary to the wreck of the ‘TSS Waverley’.

dg316123. wreck of the t. s. s. waverley. wairau lagoons walkway. blenheim. new zealand. 12.1.19crop

dg316099. wreck of the t. s. s. waverley. wairau lagoons walkway. blenheim. new zealand. 12.1.19crop

dg316127. wairau lagoons walkway. blenheim. new zealand. 12.1.19.crop

Choices. Turn left and you can get to the wreck in 1hr15. Turn right and it takes you 1hr45. Guess which way we went?

Tomorrow we move on from Blenheim and head down the road to Kaikoura, where we’ve booked to go swimming with dolphins…

 

 

 

Rolling blog: The longest journey begins with the first step…

27 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by Paul Bigland in Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel

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Railways, Rolling blogs, Travel

That said, ours began with a hiccup! We were planning to leave Halifax on the 08:23 train to Leeds, then catch a London train, but Northern cancelled it! We’re now on the 08:43 to Leeds which means our plans to get to Farnham for lunchtime have gone out of the window. Mind you, it’s a strike day on Southwestern Railway, so nothing is certain at that end either. Today is a day to travel with hope rather than expectation!

Hopefully this stuttering start to our odyssey means we’ve exhausted the bad luck at the beginning and can look forward to plain sailing in New Zealand…

09:32.

Our interchange at Leeds was pretty painless as LNER’s 09:45 was waiting for us in the platform. Today it’s being worked by a Class 90 hired-in from DB.

Getting a table seat to work at wasn’t too much of a problem either as this isn’t the busiest of trains. I must say, I like the new electronic reservation system LNER have installed as it’s much easier to read.

10:52

We’re currently speeding down the East Coast Main Line in the same murky weather that’s dogged us for days despite a brief flirtation with blue skies and sunshine South of Doncaster which lifted the spirits as well as the visibility!

11:25.

After a stop at Peterborough our unreserved coach is now almost full with people returning to London after the holiday. Looking around, I notice that out of the eight people I can see, 7 of us are using smartphones, whilst the young Asian lad sat across from me is reading a weighty JG Ballard compilation. Sadly, one young girl is using her smartphone to engage in a mind-numbingly phone call which is mostly a recitation of everything she’s eaten and everyone she’s met over Christmas.

12:50.

After a hop across London on the tube we’re pulling out of Waterloo on the 12:50 to Salisbury as far as Woking. As it’s a strike day there’s no direct service to Farnham.

These diesel units are showing their age now despite their refurbishment. They also seem remarkably noisy, more so than their Northern cousins. That we still have DMUs operating out of Waterloo in this day and age is sad. OK, the line’s not electrified all the way to Salisbury, but how about replacing them with 3rd rail bi-modes for now until a business case can be made for stringing wires up West of Basingstoke?

The weather’s thrown another curve ball. London’s sunshine’s given way to fog to the West, with visibility down to a couple of hundred metres.

13:31

Everything’s gone to plan. Our connection at Woking was fine. We even had chance to grab an (expensive) sandwich from the station cafe that’s been taken over by Starbucks. Now we’re aboard a Siemens Desiro that’s been fitted with the new SWR seat moquette, replacing the attractive SWT red with a patterned dark blue. The carpets received similar treatment. It’s not bad but it does show up the dirt!

Tilford. 15:50.

We’ve kept ourselves occupied since arriving in Tilford. ‘Tilly’, the Platt family dog needed walking, so we volunteered as we were happy to get some exercise after sitting on trains all day. Mist still hung around the river, making it a really atmospheric amble.

Now we’re relaxing at the wood cabin Dawn’s parents have rented before the family all head out for an Italian meal. I wonder if it’s Norwegian wood?

The festering season approaches…

23 Sunday Dec 2018

Posted by Paul Bigland in Musings, Railways

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Railways

Not that we’ve been doing much festering today – even if we didn’t set foot outside the front door until 15:30. Dawn’s been busy working from home, trying to clear her desk ready for our new Zealand trip. I’ve been equally occupied with paperwork and scanning old slides. So, here’s a look at the results of my scanning labours.

The pictures I’ve been scanning today are from the Crewe locomotive works open day in August 1996. Even in those days, the works was a shadow of its former self. It still employed a few thousand people, but nothing like the 25,000 of its heyday. Even so, it was an interesting place to visit – especially as the railways were in the early days of privatisation. The works was full of withdrawn or stored locomotives kept as a source of spares or awaited scrapping as well as various locomotives being overhauled or repaired after accidents (a far more common occurrence then than now).

You can find all 62 pictures in this gallery, but here’s a few tasters.

05971. 47466. Crewe works open day. 17.8. crop

47466 is one of a long line of withdrawn Class 47s at the works (47439 is to its left) . Many of them were cut up in March the next year by contractors MRJ Phillips. The parcels and passenger work they’d been used for had been in decline for several years. 466 had been withdrawn as long ago as December 1991. Notice how faded the BR blue paintwork is on the loco compared to a 47473 on the right. 

06006. 08921. Crewe works open day. 17.8crop

The colour of things to come…08921 was being overhauled and repainted in the new livery of privatised company EW&S. Some components for the overhaul would have come from classmates dumped in the yard outside.

06030. Inside the bogie shop. Crewe works open day. 17.8crop

Inside the bogie overhaul shop, work that was gradually drying up as less and less locomotives were being used on the national network and modern equipment didn’t need as much maintenance.

06118. 08849. Stored. Crewe works open day. 17.8crop

08849 was one of a long line of stored or withdrawn shunters present at Crewe.  Once over a thousand strong and ubiquitous across the network, these locomotives had been in decline for decades as local goods yards and the need for shunters was far less.

05992. 86604. Crewe Works. 17.8.96.

86604 freshly overhauled and repainted in Freightliner livery. Who could have predicted then that this locomotive would still be working for (the now privatised)  Freightliner in 2018, 53 years after they were built!

 

 

Slowly but surely, the old slides are getting scanned…

20 Thursday Dec 2018

Posted by Paul Bigland in Photography, Railways, Travel, Uncategorized

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Photography, Railways, Travel

It’s a painfully slow process, but I’m determined that 2019 will see the majority of my old railway back catalogue scanned and available on my Zenfolio website – although the travel pictures will have to wait a little longer! The past couple of months has seen me slog through a several hundred slides from 1996 onwards. Right now I’ve got as far as July, having uploaded or replaced another 40 images today. My plan is to continue my way chronologically through the years up the point I stopped taking slides and went digital, which was on the 20th February 2004, almost 15 years ago now! With the benefit of hindsight I’d wish I’d done it sooner – but hey ho!

These old pictures show just how much the railway scene has changed in the past 22 years. They’re all from the very early days of privatisation, when the railways had been ‘sectorised’ but not everything had been franchised. The first passenger service to be privatised was SouthWest trains in February 1996. This is adding another layer of complexity to scanning as the pictures are split up into different galleries on my website that are dedicated to each operator, so I’m having to do a lot of historical referencing as well. Here’s a few examples of today’s batch.

05865. 31421. Springs branch TMD. Wigan. 08.7.1996crop

A shot taken from a passing intercity service of the former Transrail depot at Wigan Springs Branch. Transrail was one of six companies the BR freight division had been broken up into as a way of introducing internal competition. In the end it, Loadhaul, Mainline Freight, Railfreight Distribution (RfD) and Rail Express Systems (RES) were bought by  American company Wisconsin freight which marketed them as English, Welsh and Scottish Railway (EWS). Many of the old BR locos you can see in the picture were actually stored.

05887. 3202. Herne Hill. 30.06.1996crop

A Eurostar set led by 3202 snakes through Herne Hill in South London. These services would run for another 11 years, until High Speed 1 and St Pancras International opened in 2007.

05925. 31455. 31255. Wolverton. 14.7.1996crop

A pair of class 31s work an engineers train during track relaying work on the West Coast Main Line North of Wolverton. These old locomotives would sit idle during the week as they were kept purely to work these trains. That meant their reliability was poor, often leading to engineering work being disrupted. Note that the adjacent pair of tracks remains open. This would never be allowed today due to the risks it passes to track workers, who can be seen ahead of my Euston-bound Intercity service.

Panorama on Hs2, what a damp squib!

18 Tuesday Dec 2018

Posted by Paul Bigland in Hs2, Politics, Railways, StopHs2

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Hs2, Politics, Railways, StopHs2

After much hoo-ha from the tiny anti Hs2 campaign who did their best to build up the programme, Panorama aired at 19:30 last night. The 30 minute episode, titled “Hs2; Going off the rails?” was billed by Hs2 antis as a smoking gun that would herald the downfall of the project as it would ‘lift the lid’ on the (supposedly) massive cost overruns and shaky finances.

The reality? It told us nothing new at all. Not a single thing.

The main thrust of the programme was an interview with a former employee of H2 who’s turned “whistleblower” and made all sorts of allegations that Hs2 had grossly underestimated the costs of purchasing land and property needed to build the line. None of these allegations were new, they date back to 2015. In fact, they’d been investigated by the National Audit Office who published their report into the matter back in September (link). The full report is 36 pages long and looks into all aspects of land and property purchase. Here’s the opening.

Part One Introduction to HS2 Ltd’s acquisition of land and property 9

Part Two The cost of land and property 16

Part Three Performance of HS2 Ltd’s land and property function 27

Appendix One Our investigative approach 32

So, what were the NAO’s conclusions and key findings?

Key findings
1 The estimated cost to acquire land and property for Phase One has increased significantly since the start of the programme.

2 The estimate has increased for a range of reasons, such as scope increases and the introduction of additional compensation schemes.

3 HS2 Ltd’s estimate of the cost to acquire land and property has improved, and now provides a reasonable basis for monitoring the cost of the property acquisition programme

4 HS2 Ltd forecasts that costs will remain within available funding, but it is still very early in the property acquisition programme

5 The Department deposited an estimate of the cost to acquire land and property, and a list of the property it expected to acquire, with the hybrid Bill, as required by Parliament

6 The property acquisition programme is currently on track but there is a long way to go and risks remain

7 HS2 Ltd’s land and property team has become better established since 2015

8 Only half of advance payments to claimants have been completed within the required three-month period from HS2 Ltd receiving a claim request

Now, the headline “half” of advance payments needs putting into perspective. Here’s what else the NAO said.

” Under compulsory purchase, HS2 Ltd is required to pay claimants 90% of HS2 Ltd’s valuation of the property within three months of receiving a claim, or the date of possession, whichever is later. The remainder is then paid upon agreement of the final value of the property. Between March 2017 and August 2018 payments have been later than the three months or forecast to be later in 52 out of 108 cases. HS2 Ltd has analysed the causes of delays. It considers that in 35 cases, the main reason is that claimants have not provided the required information in a timely manner. HS2 Ltd considers that the remaining 17 cases have been caused, at least in part, by HS2 Ltd (paragraphs 3.14 to 3.15).

So, just 17 cases of delays (out of 108) due to Hs2 Ltd, in other words 15.74%. Undoubtedly room for improvement, but hardly the scandal some try to pretend.

The NAO then go on to their concluding remarks
9 It is understandable that concerns have been raised with us about HS2 Ltd’s land and property acquisition programme given that it affects so many individuals and businesses. Although HS2 Ltd has made efforts to improve its land and property function since 2015, there is work to be done to support claimants to receive timely compensation where they are due an advance payment.

10 While HS2 Ltd’s estimate of the cost of land and property has increased significantly over time, cost estimates, particularly in this sort of major land acquisition programme, are inherently uncertain and subject to change as more information becomes known about both the design and operation of the railway, and the nature of the land and properties required. HS2 Ltd’s current estimate is within its agreed funding envelope from HM Treasury and provides a reasonable basis from which it can monitor the potential cost to compensate property owners and tenants affected by the construction of the railway. However, it is still very early in the property acquisition programme and too soon to determine with certainty what the final outturn will be.

So, no evidence of corruption, malfeasance or any other shenanigans. The NAO report is measured and balanced. It highlights the difficulties for such a major project as Hs2, pointing out that, “in order to build Phase One of the railway, the government will need to acquire approximately 70 square kilometres (more than 17,000 acres) of land along the route of the railway. HS2 Ltd estimates that it will have to compensate between 6,000 and 10,000 claimants who have land and property interests affected by the route, including property owners, leaseholders and tenants, and issue and process up to 50,000 compulsory purchase notices between 2017 and 2023”

All of this puts Panorama into perspective. As well as the ‘whistleblower’, they had a short interview with Surveyor Michael Byng, who trotted out his (long known about) claim that Hs2 would spend it’s entire budget on building Phase 1. No evidence was offered to support his claim, which wasn’t explored in any detail and it was rebutted by Hs2’s Chief Executive, Mark Thurston, and err – that was it. All a bit of a waste of time really.

The final part of the programme involved interviewing several people who were complaining that Hs2 wasn’t offering them enough money for their homes so was ‘robbing’ them, or that payments were late. None of them were new, in fact most of them had been featured in the media regularly over the past year. Such as this one.

All in all, Panorama was nothing more than a rehash of old stories and allegations – hardly a smoking gun that was going to bring down the project. The NAO had already addressed and dismissed the main complaint, and the fact they could find just 5 from 6,000 to 10,000 claimants who were complaining was never put into perspective.

You could almost sense the disappointment amongst the remaining Hs2 antis. StopHs2 didn’t even get a look-in and the reaction on social media was muted. Hs2 didn’t trend on Twitter and there was no ‘Twitterstorm’ just a few dozen people tweeting their outrage – many of whom were the usual suspects! The Stophs2 Facebook page was equally muted. Here it is this morning. Just 16 comments and 172 shares!

stophs2 FB

The reaction to the programme on social media and elsewhere reflects what I’ve been saying for a very long time. The anti Hs2 campaign’s a busted flush. Its influence is as insignificant as the actual number of people still protesting and programmes like this are no smoking gun. If his is the best they can go, it’s all over bar the moaning. Stop Hs2 is dead. Ironically, Joe Rukin himself gave the game away with this pompous but utterly misguided tweet

rukin. 17 dec

“Thousands” of people on Stophs2’s mailing list? Not tens of thousands or hundreds of thousands, just thousands – despite 6.5 million people living on the route of Hs2?

On another matter, a little bit of other news slipped out unseen yesterday. Remember the High Speed 2 Action Alliance? They used to be the main Stophs2 group until they gave up the ghost way back in 2016 after a long and futile campaign of legal challenges, including Judicial Reviews. Their last action was to allege a failure by the United Kingdom to comply with its obligations under article 7 generally, and article 7 in conjunction with article 6(3) and (4) of the Aarhus Convention by failing to ensure public participation in relation to the decisions issued by the Secretary of State for Transport on 10 January 2012 in the Command Paper “High Speed Rail: Investing in Britain’s Future – Decisions and Next Steps”

Yesterday, their legal people, Landmark Chambers, announced they’d failed as there was no breach, thus driving the last nail in the coffin of Hs2aa!

A Favour…

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New Zealand, here we come…

17 Monday Dec 2018

Posted by Paul Bigland in New Zealand, Photography, Railways, Travel

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New Zealand, Photography, Railways, Travel

Today I put the finishing touches to our plans to visit New Zealand and booked the last set of accommodation for our month-long tour in December – January. It’s going to be an epic trip (and an expensive one thanks to Brexit and the devaluation of Sterling). I’ve wanted to revisit the country for donkey’s years. I was there in 1999 during an 18 month around the world trip. We’ll be visiting some of the places I saw then plus many new ones. Last time I made the trip entirely by public transport, this time we’re hiring a car to travel around the South Island – although we will be taking a trip on the Tranzalpine train from Christchurch to Greymouth which is one of the world’s great railway journeys. We’ll also be visiting one preserved railway near Dunedin, but the rest of the holiday will be taken up with outdoor activity and sightseeing as we’ve got a very busy schedule but then there’s no point in travelling half-way around the world just to sit on your bum!

One aspect I I’m really looking forward to is the chance to shoot more pictures. New Zealand’s a stunningly beautiful country but going through my slide archive I’ve been surprised at how few I took during six weeks there in 1999. I suspect that’s because it was towards the end of our trip and I was conserving rolls of film as Fuji Velvia was a rare (and expensive) commodity in that neck of the woods (and we still had Fiji and the Cook Islands to visit). Still, here’s one or two to whet your appetites.

T8899. Franz Joseph glacier. New Zealand 1999.crop

The Franz Josef glacier on the South Island seen from a helicopter just before we landed and went hiking on the glacier itself.

FR0644. No 7145. Kaikoura.NZ. 1999.crop

An intermodal train from Picton to Christchurch passes Kaikoura on the East coast of the South island. This line was closed after a devastating earthquake but re-opened earlier this year.

T9075. Queenstown. S Island. New Zealand. 1999.crop

Looking across Lake Wakatipu at sunset, Queensland, South Island

Expect a host of pictures from both North and South islands and regular blogs. It’s going to be good to take a break from the madness of Brexit before the sh*t really hits the fan.

Another change since 1999 has been in the ease of finding places to stay. Then, the internet was just taking off. I remember using dial-up in a post office in Yogjakarta, Indonesia to try and book a hotel, and how frustrating it was (but also exciting because of the possibilities). Now, I’ve been browsing properties via Booking.com and AirBnB from my smartphone!

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