The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
- tom_tom_go
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Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
If you search for that camera on YouTube there are review videos including footage showing the quality the camera can record.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Brilliant video Andrew, though like you say, the blooming dog is a nuisance though.
A bit of a yappa...
A bit of a yappa...
ROD
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Never realized the extent of your line, video shows it to good effect. Was going to suggest a slow goods might have been better than the Express, but I read your explanation so understand.
Grant.
PS I'd be running a battery loco up and down the fence line till either the dog owner got sick of the barking, or the dog may get fed up!! Just a thought.
Grant.
PS I'd be running a battery loco up and down the fence line till either the dog owner got sick of the barking, or the dog may get fed up!! Just a thought.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Morning all,
It's another fine day here in Bristol, so I took advantage of my present more flexible working arrangements to run an early morning goods train. It's the only time of day when Penlan bank and station get much light, and I fancied making the most of it.
I've not run the Baldwin for ages, possibly several years, so it was a pleasure to get it out of its box and finally run it with a fairly accurate Welsh Highland goods rake. It seemed a little stiff after a period out of use, and the batteries in the transmitter are clearly on their last legs (the second half of the run was accompanied by the beeping presumably designed to warn you that your model Spitfire's about to crash into a primary school playground), but it went pretty well, and I was pleased with the photos, particularly the last one.
It's taken ten years, but I reckon I'm getting there with the Welsh Highland atmosphere. Might try for another run after work...
Cheers,
Andrew.
It's another fine day here in Bristol, so I took advantage of my present more flexible working arrangements to run an early morning goods train. It's the only time of day when Penlan bank and station get much light, and I fancied making the most of it.
I've not run the Baldwin for ages, possibly several years, so it was a pleasure to get it out of its box and finally run it with a fairly accurate Welsh Highland goods rake. It seemed a little stiff after a period out of use, and the batteries in the transmitter are clearly on their last legs (the second half of the run was accompanied by the beeping presumably designed to warn you that your model Spitfire's about to crash into a primary school playground), but it went pretty well, and I was pleased with the photos, particularly the last one.
It's taken ten years, but I reckon I'm getting there with the Welsh Highland atmosphere. Might try for another run after work...
Cheers,
Andrew.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
That is a lovely used looking consist, and loco. That last pic. is a beauty I agree, I can feel the radiant heat of the sun.
Glad you got your priorities right and enjoyed the sunshine.
Grant.
Glad you got your priorities right and enjoyed the sunshine.
Grant.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Beautiful, Andrew. I agree the last shot really does it.
Philip
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Thanks, glad you like the pictures.
I fuelled, oiled and watered 590 at lunchtime, ready for another run after work.
In the meantime, here's that last photo again, but with a filter (called "burlesque"!) applied:
Quite nice, I thought...
Cheers,
Andrew.
I fuelled, oiled and watered 590 at lunchtime, ready for another run after work.
In the meantime, here's that last photo again, but with a filter (called "burlesque"!) applied:
Quite nice, I thought...
Cheers,
Andrew.
- Soar Valley Light
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Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
HI Andrew,
Lovely shots, all of them. The railway has settled into the landscape.
I love the filtered shot. It really does remind me of photos of WHR stations, the proportions look spot on. I've got 'The Welsh Highland Railway: A History' by Alun Turner on the chair beside me and the cover picture proves the point.
Andrew
Lovely shots, all of them. The railway has settled into the landscape.
I love the filtered shot. It really does remind me of photos of WHR stations, the proportions look spot on. I've got 'The Welsh Highland Railway: A History' by Alun Turner on the chair beside me and the cover picture proves the point.
Andrew
"Smith! Why do you only come to work four days a week?
"'cause I can't manage on three gaffer!"
"'cause I can't manage on three gaffer!"
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Thanks Andrew, glad you like it. And thanks too for the mention of the Alun Turner book - I thought I had a copy of all the Welsh Highland histories but didn't know about this one, I'll track down a copy.
The fun carried on after work...
590 and its goods train had finished the morning's duties at Clarach, where steam was raised once more...
...before taking the goods down to Penlan and depositing it in the siding there...
...and heading light engine down to Trefechan, where a passenger train awaited.
The rest of the afternoon's running consisted of a return working to Clarach:
On the return trip I felt a few drops of rain. The sky looked threatening, and I was keen to to get the rolling stock away. It lives under the house, in a storage space accessed through a little door next to Penlan station, so I performed a speedy run round followed by a very fast run through the tunnel and up the bank. Highly unprototypical, but lots of fun, and it sounded great. And you can't grow up on Thomas the Tank Engine without wanting to recreate The Express every now and then!
Hope you enjoy the pictures,
Andrew.
The fun carried on after work...
590 and its goods train had finished the morning's duties at Clarach, where steam was raised once more...
...before taking the goods down to Penlan and depositing it in the siding there...
...and heading light engine down to Trefechan, where a passenger train awaited.
The rest of the afternoon's running consisted of a return working to Clarach:
On the return trip I felt a few drops of rain. The sky looked threatening, and I was keen to to get the rolling stock away. It lives under the house, in a storage space accessed through a little door next to Penlan station, so I performed a speedy run round followed by a very fast run through the tunnel and up the bank. Highly unprototypical, but lots of fun, and it sounded great. And you can't grow up on Thomas the Tank Engine without wanting to recreate The Express every now and then!
Hope you enjoy the pictures,
Andrew.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
I did, thank you.
Grant.
PS I think you're going to be reluctant to return to normal work !!
- Mitch stack
- Trainee Fireman
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Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
hey Andrew, is your line end to end or a loop?
mitch
mitch
Mitch - Cockatoo Creek Tramway
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Yep!
Clearly there are some awful things going on, whether in hospital wards or tiny garden-less flats, but I must confess that aside from not being able to see family and friends, the slow pace of life kind of suits me as it is right now!
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Hi Mitch!
It's sort of both - it goes all the way round the edge of the garden, but climbs all the way, so the two ends don't (can't!) meet up. It's actually just about a spiral, because the upper terminus sits on top of the tunnel that leads from the lower one. In the second picture in the sequence above, the tracks at the top of the picture are the upper station, while the one at the bottom is a siding from the lower one, about a foot below. There's a map of the line on this thread somewhere, five or six pages ago, maybe.
Sometimes I wish I had a continuous run, but I was thinking just yesterday that I miss it less and less. The set up I have really lends itself to the sort of running I was doing yesterday - short-ish, defined and pre-determined operations, designed to finish well before the gas runs out!
Cheers,
Andrew.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Brilliant shot photos Andrew. You're weathering of the rolling stock is superb. A real working environment scenes I would love to run.
ROD
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Really nice Andrew.. Love the loco..
Could you take some wide shots of the line and share? Sounds quite interesting layout you have there.
Could you take some wide shots of the line and share? Sounds quite interesting layout you have there.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
I'll try to remember to do that - will need to tidy up the garden a bit first though!
In the meantime, here are a few shots of a post-inspection run yesterday evening...
Cheers,
Andrew.
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Good pictures, thanks.. It's going to take that bolster wagon a while to load up all the wood in the background!!
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Eeek! Just went outside to sort a few things out before the rain starts and found that I'd left poor Russell in the garden for all of last night and most of today! In its box, but in the middle of the lawn! It's a good job the neighbours are honest...
Re: The (Windmill Hill) Welsh Highland Railway
Flipping heck, that could have been a very costly mistake Andrew. Still alls well now and your Russell is safely back in the house.
I have done that with my cordless drill when we lived in our bungalow in Longton, like you, luckily it was that really hot summer in 2018..
I have done that with my cordless drill when we lived in our bungalow in Longton, like you, luckily it was that really hot summer in 2018..
ROD
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
Life is so easy when I run my trains.
https://gardenrails.org/forum/viewtopic ... 41&t=11364
https://www.youtube.com/@fairywoodlightrailway
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