Western 52
Established Member
If clearing weeds and bushes is now such a major issue, will we get to the point where lines become hazardous to operate? Have any lines had traffic suspended due to being too overgrown?
4th and 5th photos down on this report from the Branch Line Society suggest 'yes'.If clearing weeds and bushes is now such a major issue, will we get to the point where lines become hazardous to operate? Have any lines had traffic suspended due to being too overgrown?
Now we know where the phrase "branch line" came from.4th and 5th photos down on this report from the Branch Line Society suggest 'yes'.![]()
But were it is possible and legal, cut / trim it!When it gets in my way as a photographer!
There is absolutely no shortage of access.I look at it separately. The civils should have worked this one out a generation ago, when the concept of line blocks came in, and devised appropriate methods for clearing vegetation, ensuring redundant rails and offcuts are removed, and all the rest of the stuff that is found "inconvenient". They are engineers. That word derives from the Latin, ingenious. Which is someone with the capability to come up with solutions. Not whiney-whiney excuses.
It's already a struggle to get the current maintenance carried out under the existing access, and access is more restricted than it was just a couple of years ago with the removal of red zone working (even if large scale tree cutting cannot be done red zone it made access far easier). If you want more work to be carried out in the existing access then more staff is needed, and we've just lost a load...There is absolutely no shortage of access.
This weekend, as with every other, huge parts of the network are under existing, pre planned engineering closures.
Some of these blocks are huge for example Three Bridge to Brighton and Lewes or Norwich to Sheringham and Yarmouth and Lowestoft.
There is no shortage of daylight line closures already if they wanted them for cutting back the bushes.
There is more train free, daylight access than ever and pretty hard to argue given these possessions often now extend 10/20/30 miles continuously that nobody can get trackside in a van and deal with it. Lack of staff and money may be another issue.It's already a struggle to get the current maintenance carried out under the existing access, and access is more restricted than it was just a couple of years ago with the removal of red zone working (even if large scale tree cutting cannot be done red zone it made access far easier). If you want more work to be carried out in the existing access then more staff is needed, and we've just lost a load...
How are you coming to that conclusion? Very, very much not my experience.There is more train free, daylight access than ever
Rubbish!!There is more train free, daylight access than ever and pretty hard to argue given these possessions often now extend 10/20/30 miles continuously that nobody can get trackside in a van and deal with it. Lack of staff and money may be another issue.
As has been explained, weekend, after weekend, 52hr continuous closures all over the network.Rubbish!!
Could you evidence this statement please? In particular with a comparison to a 5- or 10-year benchmark?There is more train free, daylight access than ever and pretty hard to argue given these possessions often now extend 10/20/30 miles continuously that nobody can get trackside in a van and deal with it. Lack of staff and money may be another issue.
I really can't agree with that assertion.There is more train free, daylight access than ever and pretty hard to argue given these possessions often now extend 10/20/30 miles continuously that nobody can get trackside in a van and deal with it. Lack of staff and money may be another issue.
Yes, of course, but that's generally if, say, a tree/branch falls, rather than normal condition vegetation just growing across the line to that extent, which would not be permitted (or would it?!).Um, it can also damage rolling stock. There are the obvious reasons, but also braking systems or other under-frame components/systems, such as AWS, TPWS, ATP, ERTMS/ETCS detectors/aerials.
Once, a colleague of mine was asked to climb under a stabled train to cut out a small branch or it may have been a small tree or similar, because it was a cause for concern.
Falling vegetation can and does cause point failures. Leaves, twigs, branches, you name it, it’s found a way to fowl a point so that detection cannot be obtained.
Hope it wasn't, for example, Bromsgrove!Seen yesterday at a local station, a member of station staff with a leaf blower blowing leaves from the platform onto the running line!
Carshalton Beeches...? Or, with leaves down, and a nod to your forum name - (Rail)-cars halt on beeches.No, not Bromsgrove, but a two-word station with an arboreal name. The second word begins with 'B'
The Schedule 4 payments payable in compensation for such access have ballooned. You can argue in the margins about methodology, but £116m in 2011/12 to £368m in 2019/20 speaks for itself.Could you evidence this statement please? In particular with a comparison to a 5- or 10-year benchmark?
Can you elaborate, given that there is more exclusive access for engineering than before?I really can't agree with that assertion.
Tell that to Platform 8 at Sheffield. Won't be long before we have a Stagecoach Tram in Platform 8, if the buddleia is anything to go by. Sheffield is just as busy as ever, and you, talk tripe.....There is more train free, daylight access than ever
As I have said and evidenced, access to do the work when there are no trains is not the problem. There is more engineering access being taken than any time in recent memory - probably since the mass closures following the Hatfield derailment.Tell that to Platform 8 at Sheffield. Won't be long before we have a Stagecoach Tram in Platform 8, if the buddleia is anything to go by.