Recent Public Posts - [guest]
| Re: Derailment in Cumbria 3/11/25 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367695/31028/51] Posted by bradshaw at 09:14, 3rd November 2025 | ![]() |
Image on X/Twitter shows derailed unit, with crash structure performing as it is designed to do.
https://x.com/rail/status/1985269697265512568?s=61&t=VlafMC5gF9tidw36b1Y8JQ
| Derailment in Cumbria 3/11/25 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367694/31028/51] Posted by TaplowGreen at 09:02, 3rd November 2025 | ![]() |
BBC News - https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/live/czdrp8mm6jgt?app-referrer=deep-link
Glasgow to London train derails in Cumbria - no injuries reported but 'days of disruption' expected - BBC News
| Re: North Cotswold line delays and cancellations - 2025 In "London to the Cotswolds" [367693/29711/14] Posted by Worcester_Passenger at 06:23, 3rd November 2025 | ![]() |
Monday November 3
05:16 Worcester Shrub Hill to London Paddington due 07:24 will be started from Evesham.
It will no longer call at Worcester Shrub Hill, Worcestershire Parkway Hl, Pershore and Maidenhead.
It is being delayed at Evesham.
This is due to engineering works not being finished on time.
Last Updated:03/11/2025 06:09
This train is formed of the stock from last night's 21:50 Paddington - Evesham, which spent the night at Evesham and should have run empty to Shrub Hill at 04:20.It will no longer call at Worcester Shrub Hill, Worcestershire Parkway Hl, Pershore and Maidenhead.
It is being delayed at Evesham.
This is due to engineering works not being finished on time.
Last Updated:03/11/2025 06:09
It has departed from Evesham +33.
05:23 Hereford to London Paddington due 08:24 will be started from Worcester Shrub Hill.
This is due to engineering works not being finished on time.
Last Updated:03/11/2025 05:37
This train is formed from a set that is running empty from Stoke Gifford.This is due to engineering works not being finished on time.
Last Updated:03/11/2025 05:37
It passed Abbotswood Junction + 122 and will probably be about 20 late departing Shrub Hill.
The stock for 1P18 0713 Great Malvern to London Paddington, also empty from Stoke Gifford, has passed Ashchurch +36 and is on a 12 minute turn-round at Great Malvern.
It is beginning to become clear that a member of on train staff has acted selflessly to protect those they have a duty of care toward. I believe the training focuses on avoiding conflict. Just occasionally though the incident is so serious and immediate that there isn't time to talk, just act.
In what must have been a chaotic and horrific environment that bravery is to be applauded. That member of train crew is a hero. I really hope they pull through.

| Re: Another drop in bus event for North Somerset In "Buses and other ways to travel" [367691/30922/5] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 23:30, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
I have also added this latest date to our Coffee Shop forum's calendar. CfN.

| Barrage of fireworks launched at bus in Birmingham In "Buses and other ways to travel" [367690/31027/5] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 23:15, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:
A video posted on social media has shown a bus in Birmingham come under attack from fireworks.
Police said they were investigating and reviewing footage. It is unclear when the incident happened but it has been widely shared over the weekend.
The West Midlands force said there had been a number of fireworks-related incidents in the city centre since Friday night, with 10 people aged between 13 and 23 arrested.
Seven have since been bailed with conditions not to enter the city centre. Inquiries are continuing.
The force said fireworks had been thrown near New Street, with others launched at buildings and police officers in the early hours of Saturday.
No one was injured in the incidents according to police who added they would not tolerate "such appalling actions".
They said a visible police presence would remain around the city centre and that a dispersal order was in place.
Police said they were investigating and reviewing footage. It is unclear when the incident happened but it has been widely shared over the weekend.
The West Midlands force said there had been a number of fireworks-related incidents in the city centre since Friday night, with 10 people aged between 13 and 23 arrested.
Seven have since been bailed with conditions not to enter the city centre. Inquiries are continuing.
The force said fireworks had been thrown near New Street, with others launched at buildings and police officers in the early hours of Saturday.
No one was injured in the incidents according to police who added they would not tolerate "such appalling actions".
They said a visible police presence would remain around the city centre and that a dispersal order was in place.
| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367689/31016/30] Posted by grahame at 21:37, 2nd November 2025 Already liked by GBM | ![]() |
Ah ... fond recollections of a trip there, one wet August bank holiday, through a part-gridlocked Swindon on a bus and then a walk though a teenager-haunted underpass, and a twenty minute solitary wait in what wanted to be driving rain before the very welcome appearance of... a train, hurrah!
Mark
Mark
Parallels - or similarities - today.
The train from Melksham ran, and on time. 42 passengers on board - not bad for the first train on a November Sunday morning. Got to Swindon ... and followed the instructions to get a bus from Fleming Way.

Having confirmed that at the 16 to Blundson - the one recommended on the railway's site - does not run in a Sunday (and the train is only running on a Sunday - duh!) - I looked to work out what runs to the Tawny Owl at Taw Hill. Not easy - lots of routes and final destinations, all less than frequent on a Sunday, and a fun time was spent visiting their various stops and trying to work out intermediate stops and times.
Found myself a bus ... swiped on ... but in chatting with the driver he suggested a different one "I take an hour to get there and he's direct" ... so dropped back and off we set ... first stop turns out to be the (main) railway station! Anyway - through some of the 'burbs I hadn't been in before and we must be getting close. And - oops - I think we have overshot; stop names are little streets and not the areas, so for all the electronics telling me where we were, I was lostish. Which did result in a very pleasant walk back down a bridleway.

Waymarking leaves something to be desired in places, but a bit of common sense got me to the Tawny Owl, then under it and the track up to the station. Although online I had read that the railbus was running, the gate was locked with feasrsone spikes, signs taled about next trains being 27th and 28th September the Sundays in October and then Santa ... which did not bode well for 2nd November. No-one else around on the track to the station gate, and the time came and went for the train to arrive and it didn't. I was just about to give up ... Plan "B" to follow the old canal. When the railbus appears. I was, I confess, wary it was going to go back with the gate remaining locked, but the guard came down, took the chain off, and threw the entrance open. Phew!



| Re: School trip coach involved in a collision, Wheddon Cross, Somerset 17/07/2025 In "Buses and other ways to travel" [367687/30461/5] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 20:40, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
An update, from the BBC - somewhat belatedly, for which I must apologise:
Minehead Middle School coach crash victims all out of hospital

Almost a month on from a bus crash which killed a 10-year-old boy, police say those injured in the collision have all been discharged from hospital.
Oliver Price died of a head injury when a coach carrying Minehead Middle School pupils left the road near Wheddon Cross in Somerset and slid down a 6m (20ft) slope on 17 July.
The children and teachers onboard had been returning from an end-of-year trip to Exmoor Zoo when the coach flipped onto its roof and slid down a bank.
In total, 21 people were taken to hospital to be treated for injuries. Avon and Somerset Police say their investigation into the incident is ongoing.
A hearing at Wells Coroner's Court last month heard that Oliver had been found in his seat with his seatbelt on, and was declared dead at the scene by paramedics.
A full inquest is set to take place on 14 January next year and will look into the events of the day before the crash, the circumstances in which the coach left the road and Oliver's medical cause of death.
The inquest is due to hear from Oliver's family, adult passengers on the coach, witnesses, the coach driver, emergency service workers and a pathologist.

Almost a month on from a bus crash which killed a 10-year-old boy, police say those injured in the collision have all been discharged from hospital.
Oliver Price died of a head injury when a coach carrying Minehead Middle School pupils left the road near Wheddon Cross in Somerset and slid down a 6m (20ft) slope on 17 July.
The children and teachers onboard had been returning from an end-of-year trip to Exmoor Zoo when the coach flipped onto its roof and slid down a bank.
In total, 21 people were taken to hospital to be treated for injuries. Avon and Somerset Police say their investigation into the incident is ongoing.
A hearing at Wells Coroner's Court last month heard that Oliver had been found in his seat with his seatbelt on, and was declared dead at the scene by paramedics.
A full inquest is set to take place on 14 January next year and will look into the events of the day before the crash, the circumstances in which the coach left the road and Oliver's medical cause of death.
The inquest is due to hear from Oliver's family, adult passengers on the coach, witnesses, the coach driver, emergency service workers and a pathologist.
| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367686/31016/30] Posted by bradshaw at 20:11, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
CfN thanks but it was an educated guess. It is not a railway I have visited and the photo did not strike any chords on those I have visited. That led me to this one. Then it was a check using the OS Map app and Google Street view, there is a photosphere at that location. That the AC Railbus was operating today helped.
The A C Railbuses, W79975/6 ran the Yeovil shuttle from December 1964, going to Town until it closed in 1966 when they diverted to Pen Mill until transferred to Ayr in January 1967
| Re: London Liverpool Street station to shut for travellers over Christmas 2025 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367685/31021/51] Posted by Surrey 455 at 20:09, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
Waterloo is also disrupted over Christmas 2025 too.
The following is a summary. More details here: National rail
Wednesday 24 December - Trains will finish earlier than normal
Thursday 25 December & Friday 26 December - No service
Saturday 27 December & Sunday 28 December - No trains will run between London Waterloo and Clapham Junction
Monday 29 December to Friday 2 January - Reduced and amended service to and from London Waterloo
| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367684/31016/30] Posted by bobm at 19:49, 2nd November 2025 Already liked by GBM | ![]() |
Blimey, bradshaw: is there anywhere on the rail network that you don't recognize?


Should have had the courage of my convictions. I thought that was the location but dismissed it because of what looks like a platform in the left foreground. Looking at my own photos I can now see it’s the way the footpath from the park is built.
And I am a blooming member of the railway!
Agreed....but you try getting any uniformed officers out of Avon and Somerset HQ in Portishead between 4pm Friday and 8am Monday.......
That may well be true, but at this stage I think we should all be relieved the attacker chose to carry out this attack on this particular train, one that was staffed by a driver who was on top of their game and a hero crew member, who according to reports, is the only person in a life threatening condition after trying to stop the attacker.
From the Telegraph https://www.telegraph.co.uk/gift/47440d1947b15b4d
Train driver whose quick thinking saved lives is Iraq War veteran
LNER worker praised for making emergency stop at Huntingdon station moments after knife rampage began
The train driver whose quick actions helped save the lives of passengers in Saturday night’s knife attack is a Royal Navy and Iraq War veteran, The Telegraph can reveal.
Andrew Johnson, from Peterborough, diverted the London-bound train to Huntingdon station within minutes of being alerted to the mass stabbing, allowing armed police to respond.
Mr Johnson, who has been working as a train driver since 2018, is understood to have served in the Royal Navy for 17 years and was deployed to Iraq in 2003 during the second Gulf War.
He is understood to have ended his career as a Chief Petty Officer and having worked as a weapons engineer.
During the Iraq War, Mr Johnson is believed to have served aboard a ship tasked with clearing mines in the Tigris river.
Despite having left the Navy and becoming a train driver, Mr Johnson still regularly supports his former servicemen and was fundraising for the Royal British Legion in his local Waitrose just days before Saturday’s attack.
The 6.25pm LNER service from Doncaster to King’s Cross had departed Peterborough station at 7.30pm when the knife attack began.
Witnesses said people attempting to flee found that they ran out of train as others barricaded themselves in the toilets.
Train seats were soaked with blood during a scene that felt “like something from a film”, one passenger said.
Fellow train staff and members of the public have pointed out that the incident could have been even more serious were it not for the actions of the train’s driver.
A neighbour, who asked not to be named, said Mr Johnson had acted heroically.
“He’s a nice guy. I’ve known him for a while,” he told The Telegraph. “If he did the right thing and stopped the train, that’s a massive thing and he’s probably helped save some people’s lives.
“It’s a pretty bold thing to do. You don’t know what’s going on [in the carriage] if you’re a train driver.”
Mr Johnson is “shaken up” but receiving support, Nigel Roebuck, the North East organiser for rail union Aslef, said on Sunday evening.
“He’s good... he was clearly shaken up, you know,” Mr Roebuck told Sky News. “And obviously we didn’t kind of get too into detail about things.
“We just basically said you know where we are if you need us, the lines are open for us. And I think LNER have probably done the same with him.
“So he’s getting a great level of support, and that’s good, all we can do is make sure that he’s looked after.”
The Class 800 Azuma LNER service was scheduled to travel through Huntingdon at 125mph on a fast track that does not have access to a platform.
Olly Foster, who was on board at the time, said the first thing he knew of the attack was a passenger who ran past shouting: “Run, run, run... there’s a guy stabbing literally everyone and everything.”
Within minutes, LNER staff had declared an emergency, alerting passengers to the jeopardy through the train’s tannoy system.
The driver, crew and signallers diverted the train from its inner rail track to Huntingdon station’s platform-side rail so that emergency services could rapidly board.
It stopped in Huntingdon just 14 minutes after departing Peterborough, where armed police officers, paramedics and an air ambulance were ready to respond.
A taxi driver waiting at the station said the attacker, who was carrying a large kitchen knife, shouted “kill me, kill me” as he was tasered and wrestled to the ground by police.
Viorel Turturica, 42, told The Daily Mail: “A man dressed in black holding a huge kitchen knife in his hand runs past my car at 7.47pm. The police arrived seconds later and I could hear him shouting ‘kill me, kill me, kill me’ to them.
“They then Taser him, and as soon as he is down they say to him drop your weapon’,” he added.
Two British men were detained and are being held by police on suspicion of attempted murder. In total, 11 people were taken to hospital for their injuries and two of them remain in a life-threatening condition.
Shabana Mahmood, the Home Secretary, praised the “exceptional bravery of staff and passengers on the train”.
On Sunday, the RMT rail union also hailed the train’s staff for their role during the “horrific mass stabbing incident”.
Eddie Dempsey, the union’s general secretary, said: “I want to commend the professionalism, bravery and steadfastness of all the railway workers involved from the train crew to the driver and our members in operations, who quickly assisted in diverting the King’s Cross bound train into Huntingdon station, allowing the police and emergency services to take swift action.”
Mr Dempsey added: “I will be seeking urgent meetings with government, rail employers and police to ensure that we have the strongest possible support, resources and robust procedures in place to protect our members and the travelling public.”
LNER worker praised for making emergency stop at Huntingdon station moments after knife rampage began
The train driver whose quick actions helped save the lives of passengers in Saturday night’s knife attack is a Royal Navy and Iraq War veteran, The Telegraph can reveal.
Andrew Johnson, from Peterborough, diverted the London-bound train to Huntingdon station within minutes of being alerted to the mass stabbing, allowing armed police to respond.
Mr Johnson, who has been working as a train driver since 2018, is understood to have served in the Royal Navy for 17 years and was deployed to Iraq in 2003 during the second Gulf War.
He is understood to have ended his career as a Chief Petty Officer and having worked as a weapons engineer.
During the Iraq War, Mr Johnson is believed to have served aboard a ship tasked with clearing mines in the Tigris river.
Despite having left the Navy and becoming a train driver, Mr Johnson still regularly supports his former servicemen and was fundraising for the Royal British Legion in his local Waitrose just days before Saturday’s attack.
The 6.25pm LNER service from Doncaster to King’s Cross had departed Peterborough station at 7.30pm when the knife attack began.
Witnesses said people attempting to flee found that they ran out of train as others barricaded themselves in the toilets.
Train seats were soaked with blood during a scene that felt “like something from a film”, one passenger said.
Fellow train staff and members of the public have pointed out that the incident could have been even more serious were it not for the actions of the train’s driver.
A neighbour, who asked not to be named, said Mr Johnson had acted heroically.
“He’s a nice guy. I’ve known him for a while,” he told The Telegraph. “If he did the right thing and stopped the train, that’s a massive thing and he’s probably helped save some people’s lives.
“It’s a pretty bold thing to do. You don’t know what’s going on [in the carriage] if you’re a train driver.”
Mr Johnson is “shaken up” but receiving support, Nigel Roebuck, the North East organiser for rail union Aslef, said on Sunday evening.
“He’s good... he was clearly shaken up, you know,” Mr Roebuck told Sky News. “And obviously we didn’t kind of get too into detail about things.
“We just basically said you know where we are if you need us, the lines are open for us. And I think LNER have probably done the same with him.
“So he’s getting a great level of support, and that’s good, all we can do is make sure that he’s looked after.”
The Class 800 Azuma LNER service was scheduled to travel through Huntingdon at 125mph on a fast track that does not have access to a platform.
Olly Foster, who was on board at the time, said the first thing he knew of the attack was a passenger who ran past shouting: “Run, run, run... there’s a guy stabbing literally everyone and everything.”
Within minutes, LNER staff had declared an emergency, alerting passengers to the jeopardy through the train’s tannoy system.
The driver, crew and signallers diverted the train from its inner rail track to Huntingdon station’s platform-side rail so that emergency services could rapidly board.
It stopped in Huntingdon just 14 minutes after departing Peterborough, where armed police officers, paramedics and an air ambulance were ready to respond.
A taxi driver waiting at the station said the attacker, who was carrying a large kitchen knife, shouted “kill me, kill me” as he was tasered and wrestled to the ground by police.
Viorel Turturica, 42, told The Daily Mail: “A man dressed in black holding a huge kitchen knife in his hand runs past my car at 7.47pm. The police arrived seconds later and I could hear him shouting ‘kill me, kill me, kill me’ to them.
“They then Taser him, and as soon as he is down they say to him drop your weapon’,” he added.
Two British men were detained and are being held by police on suspicion of attempted murder. In total, 11 people were taken to hospital for their injuries and two of them remain in a life-threatening condition.
Shabana Mahmood, the Home Secretary, praised the “exceptional bravery of staff and passengers on the train”.
On Sunday, the RMT rail union also hailed the train’s staff for their role during the “horrific mass stabbing incident”.
Eddie Dempsey, the union’s general secretary, said: “I want to commend the professionalism, bravery and steadfastness of all the railway workers involved from the train crew to the driver and our members in operations, who quickly assisted in diverting the King’s Cross bound train into Huntingdon station, allowing the police and emergency services to take swift action.”
Mr Dempsey added: “I will be seeking urgent meetings with government, rail employers and police to ensure that we have the strongest possible support, resources and robust procedures in place to protect our members and the travelling public.”
| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367681/31016/30] Posted by Mark A at 19:06, 2nd November 2025 Already liked by GBM | ![]() |
Ah ... fond recollections of a trip there, one wet August bank holiday, through a part-gridlocked Swindon on a bus and then a walk though a teenager-haunted underpass, and a twenty minute solitary wait in what wanted to be driving rain before the very welcome appearance of... a train, hurrah!
Mark

| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367680/31016/30] Posted by grahame at 18:56, 2nd November 2025 Already liked by GBM | ![]() |
Taw Valley Halt, Swindon and Cricklade Railway, showing engine run round
Yes - now renamed "Swindon Mouldon Hill"








| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367679/31016/30] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 18:43, 2nd November 2025 Already liked by bradshaw | ![]() |
Blimey, bradshaw: is there anywhere on the rail network that you don't recognize?

| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367678/31016/30] Posted by bradshaw at 17:46, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
Taw Valley Halt, Swindon and Cricklade Railway, showing engine run round
| Metropolitan line shut between Baker St and Aldgate until 9 November 2025 In "Transport for London" [367677/31023/46] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 17:37, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:

A section of the Metropolitan line affected by a track fault will remain closed until 9 November, Transport for London (TfL) has said.
The problem with the line is at Baker Street and the services between there and Aldgate are being suspended for the week to ease pressure on the line while engineers work on the issue.
Minor delays are expected on the rest of the line. TfL suggested passengers change at Baker Street for Bakerloo, Circle and Hammersmith & City line services, or use the Jubilee line from either Finchley Road or Baker Street.
Travellers are also advised to allow more time and use the TfL journey planner.
| Re: Where was I today - 1.11.2025 In "The Lighter Side" [367676/31016/30] Posted by grahame at 17:00, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
Yesterday was very easy - how about today

| Re: Paddington to Bristol <-> service updates and amendments - ongoing discussion In "London to Swindon and Bristol" [367675/18525/10] Posted by Worcester_Passenger at 16:40, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
Sunday November 2
Successive trains had been cancelled this evening:
02/11/25 18:30 London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads due 19:58 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:01/11/2025 23:28
02/11/25 19:00 London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads due 20:32 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:01/11/2025 23:28
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:01/11/2025 23:28
02/11/25 19:00 London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads due 20:32 will be cancelled.
This is due to a shortage of train crew.
Last Updated:01/11/2025 23:28
But now sense has prevailed:
18:30 London Paddington to Bristol Temple Meads due 19:58 will be reinstated and will now run as scheduled.
Last Updated:02/11/2025 16:37
Last Updated:02/11/2025 16:37
This old BBC documentary film has just appeared on YouTube, recording the last days of the line between Kings Lynn and Dereham in 1968.
I thoroughly recommend it.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uke3Y43F-BQ
I thought it was a great watch - fascinating, evocative, nostalgic, and of course melancholy......
| London Liverpool Street station to shut for travellers over Christmas 2025 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367673/31021/51] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 14:56, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:

Liverpool Street Station will be closed for eight days between Christmas Day and New Year's Day for works to be carried out on its roof, Network Rail said.
It has urged people travelling over the Christmas period to check journey plans if travelling via the UK's busiest station.
Strengthening work will also be carried out inside the Bishopsgate Tunnel approach to London Liverpool Street, alongside signalling renewal work across Cambridgeshire.
Full services will resume from and to the station on 2 January, it added.
The engineering work taking place in Cambridgeshire will start on Christmas Day and last up to 11 days, Network Rail said, to deliver the second stage of the Cambridge re-signalling project and modernise the system. Signalling engineers will introduce a new control system to operate the signals for the section of railway between Cambridge North and Audley End.
"A new digital workstation at the Cambridge signalling centre will replace the 40-year-old signalling panel allowing signallers to oversee the operation of the network more efficiently," Network Rail said. "This work is also vital to allow the new station at Cambridge South to open early in the New Year."
An upgrade to the Meldreth Road level crossing in Cambridgeshire will see a full barrier CCTV system introduced too.
From 27 December to 4 January 2026, there will be no rail services between Royston and Stansted Mountfitchet and Cambridge and Cambridge North.
Rail services between Cambridge and Bury St Edmunds will also be affected during these dates, with rail replacement bus services in place between affected stations from Friday 27 December.
Network Rail, which is responsible for railway infrastructure, said all of its train services will not run on Christmas Day and Boxing Day and will finish early on Christmas Eve on some routes.
From 27 December, Greater Anglia services on the Great Eastern and West Anglia mainlines will run to and from Stratford, including Stansted Express services. The Stansted Express would operate a revised service to and from Tottenham Hale on Boxing Day.
Services to Norwich, Ipswich, Clacton-on-Sea and Braintree will run to and from Witham due to engineering work. Buses will run between Witham and Billericay to provide a connection with train services between Billericay and Stratford.
London Liverpool Street works include the strengthening of Bishopsgate tunnel, which will see the installation of steel support girders inside the tunnel and work to repair existing steelwork to prevent corrosion.
On the station concourse, roof panels will be renewed to allow more light into the station, improve the drainage system and renew seals "to make the roof resilient to more frequent and intense storms", said Network Rail. New ticket gates for platforms one to 10 will also be added.
Agreed....but you try getting any uniformed officers out of Avon and Somerset HQ in Portishead between 4pm Friday and 8am Monday.......
| Re: Multiple stabbings on a London bound train in Cambridgeshire - 01 Nov 25 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367671/31017/51] Posted by Mark A at 14:06, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
Another reason to be impressed at the actions of railway staff too - a bit fortuitious but the HQ for Cambridge Constabulary is pretty well adjacent to the railway station.
Mark
| Re: Multiple stabbings on a London bound train in Cambridgeshire - 01 Nov 25 In "The Wider Picture in the United Kingdom" [367670/31017/51] Posted by a-driver at 13:41, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
Two men were arrested EIGHT MINUTES after the first 999 call was made. 8 minutes.
| Re: Mid Cornwall Metro - Newquay, St Austell, Truro & Falmouth In "Shorter journeys in Plymouth and Cornwall" [367669/27102/25] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 13:31, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:
Buses replace trains as Mid Cornwall Metro project enters final phase

Train passengers are being reminded to plan ahead of the final phase of engineering work on a rail line.
Network Rail said passengers travelling between Newquay and Par would be affected by the work on the Mid Cornwall Metro project between Monday and Friday next week. It said buses would replace trains from Newquay to St Austell, while passengers at Par were advised to take train to St Austell and change for buses towards Newquay. Trains would still run from Par towards Plymouth and Penzance, it said.
Lee Goodson, Great Western Railway station manager for west Cornwall, said during the works no trains could stop at Newquay, Quintrell Downs, St Columb Road, Roche, Bugle or Luxulyan stations. "Trains will still run at Par on the Cornish main line but replacement buses will operate mostly between Newquay and St Austell," he said. "Most of these rail replacement services will stop at all stations, except for Par, but some will operate non-stop at peak periods. It's important that customers are aware these alternative travel arrangements will make journey times much longer, so please plan ahead."
The Mid Cornwall Metro project involves the restoration of a second platform at Newquay station, a new passing loop at Goss Moor and the installation of new digital signals.
Network Rail said from 2026 there would be hourly trains between Newquay and Par, doubling the current service. It said the enhancements would then be followed by direct trains from Newquay to Falmouth, via Par, St Austell and Truro.

Train passengers are being reminded to plan ahead of the final phase of engineering work on a rail line.
Network Rail said passengers travelling between Newquay and Par would be affected by the work on the Mid Cornwall Metro project between Monday and Friday next week. It said buses would replace trains from Newquay to St Austell, while passengers at Par were advised to take train to St Austell and change for buses towards Newquay. Trains would still run from Par towards Plymouth and Penzance, it said.
Lee Goodson, Great Western Railway station manager for west Cornwall, said during the works no trains could stop at Newquay, Quintrell Downs, St Columb Road, Roche, Bugle or Luxulyan stations. "Trains will still run at Par on the Cornish main line but replacement buses will operate mostly between Newquay and St Austell," he said. "Most of these rail replacement services will stop at all stations, except for Par, but some will operate non-stop at peak periods. It's important that customers are aware these alternative travel arrangements will make journey times much longer, so please plan ahead."
The Mid Cornwall Metro project involves the restoration of a second platform at Newquay station, a new passing loop at Goss Moor and the installation of new digital signals.
Network Rail said from 2026 there would be hourly trains between Newquay and Par, doubling the current service. It said the enhancements would then be followed by direct trains from Newquay to Falmouth, via Par, St Austell and Truro.
From the BBC:
A man in his 50s sustained multiple facial fractures following a serious assault at a Devon railway station.
He was injured at Polsloe Bridge Station, in Exeter, on Thursday at about 23:40 BST.
British Transport Police said a man got off a train and walked along the platform before jumping down onto the tracks. He then followed the victim up the stairs of the station and threw a glass bottle at him before a physical altercation took place.
Det Con Jon Stoodley described it as a "shocking act of violence" and appealed for witnesses or anyone with information to come forward.
BTP said: "The victim fell down the stairs, before the man stood over him punching and kicking him in the head. The victim remains in hospital with multiple facial fractures."
Det Con Stoodley added: "I'd also like to appeal to anyone who witnessed what happened or the events leading up to it to get in contact with us," he said.
"We know the victim may have spoken to a number of members of the public following the incident, and we'd like to speak to them as part of our investigation."
Anyone with information is asked to contact BTP.
He was injured at Polsloe Bridge Station, in Exeter, on Thursday at about 23:40 BST.
British Transport Police said a man got off a train and walked along the platform before jumping down onto the tracks. He then followed the victim up the stairs of the station and threw a glass bottle at him before a physical altercation took place.
Det Con Jon Stoodley described it as a "shocking act of violence" and appealed for witnesses or anyone with information to come forward.
BTP said: "The victim fell down the stairs, before the man stood over him punching and kicking him in the head. The victim remains in hospital with multiple facial fractures."
Det Con Stoodley added: "I'd also like to appeal to anyone who witnessed what happened or the events leading up to it to get in contact with us," he said.
"We know the victim may have spoken to a number of members of the public following the incident, and we'd like to speak to them as part of our investigation."
Anyone with information is asked to contact BTP.
| Royal Marines abseil into Waterloo Station for 'Poppy Day' - November 2025 In "Across the West" [367667/31019/26] Posted by Chris from Nailsea at 12:59, 2nd November 2025 | ![]() |
From the BBC:

Royal Marines have abseiled into Waterloo Station to help launch The Royal British Legion's (RBL) London Poppy Appeal.
Around 3,000 serving armed forces personnel are selling poppies in London on Thursday in the hopes of raising £1m for the RBL's Poppy Appeal.
The event, which is Europe's biggest one-day street collection, saw military bands perform for commuters at major stations. It was the 19th annual fundraising "Poppy Day" in London.
Rob Rinder, who joined collectors, said: "The poppy isn't just a symbol of remembrance, it's a sign of gratitude and unity, a reminder that our freedoms were bought at great cost, and that we each have a part to play in caring for those who served."














