Other than the random delays (and lack of communication from staff) sounded like a good day
2 more of the Welsh 230s into your book at least is always a bonus
Oh yes, it wasn't too bad at all. It ticked off a few things from my lists, so that's pretty good

Every trip ticks something off, and as you'll see in the latest trip report that applied yesterday too. I've added more things to do to my list, of course, but they're adventures for next year
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06/10/2023 - Tech's 20 Year Enthusiast Anniversary, Part 3
Welcome one and all to the finale of my 20 years of railway enthusiasm anniversary celebration! The trip was in jeopardy 28 hours before it began, thanks to the start of a cold. Thankfully, during the day that cleared up with medication and lots of rest after work, and I finally fell asleep later than desired. The alarm at 0415 was not terribly welcome, but the majority of preparation had been done the night before, so it was a relaxed start to the day. This week I was in receipt of much more sleep than the trip to Corby, so that much I was grateful for!
Eventually I finished getting ready, and with coffee in hand I was slower than expected on the walk to the station. Strava still reported it as an average speed of 4.7mph though, maybe I was imagining it and I just felt it was slow? I had been doing a lot of running recently after all, and even with 11 months to go I was not prepared to ease up too much on the preparation for the Swansea Bay 10K in September 2024. I'd got two 5k runs, admittedly with a handful of short stops but not as often for catching my breath as I have done, this week and I was on something like 28km out of 100km for that running challenge on Strava. I'd never achieved that in the past, and I was determined to do it. Even if I never manage it again, I wanted that badge of honour!
Anyway, after collecting my bargain Advances, I was on the 0547 to Manchester Piccadilly. On this occasion, it was in the hands of 158830 and I was soon settled in for the 114 and something mile journey to the North West's best city. A very subjective opinion, granted! I wasn't very energised yet, so for the first part of the journey I had one of my favourite albums on, 2003's Hardcore Til I Die. I won't bore anyone with my favourite songs on it, but there are some of my all-time favourites on there and they certainly get me all awake and ready to go! Usually these days, I reserve it for high-intensity exercise sessions, back in the day I'd play the album on the way to/from work on a portable CD player!
I could fill this trip report with nothing but nostalgia, very easily, but for now let's focus on the here and now. Having a 158 to Manchester is nostalgia in its own right, having done many journeys on 158s in years gone by before the 175s arrived on Arriva Trains Wales services to/from Cardiff. I want to say that happened in 2006, but I may be wrong, and now in 2023 the 175s are almost extinct on Transport for Wales (TfW) services, following the arrival of the new Class 197s. In 2025 the 158s will also be gone, but that's nostalgia for another day.
I often wonder what it would be like to go back to 2003, and enjoy the railway I fell in love with, but to be honest with modern values and ethics I don't think I could do it. Yes it would be nice to enjoy a simpler time, the days when a Nokia 3310's battery would last for days on end, but there's so many things I wouldn't want to go without. Things like smartphones have made information so much easier to get, wayfinding is so much easier, the ability to have e-tickets and not have to rush to a TVM or ticket office when you see a move you want to do, all sorts of things like that. However I'd hate to go back to a time when recycling wasn't a big part of daily life, when emissions were absolutely awful, noise pollution was a bigger issue and, crucically for me, going back to that era would mean being the me with lots of excess mass again. I'd also not have a (relatively) healthy lifestyle in general, nor would I want to be that immature again. So there's plenty to be grateful for, eh?
0703 and I was a little way north of Wem, the daylight was slowly arriving and I was by now more than ready for some more food and a coffee. I also needed to decide on the actual plan for the day, there were options aplenty as I was booked on the 1930 from Manchester Piccadilly. I had a little over 11 hours in Manchester, and I'd already seen not that many 195s floating around that I wanted. With only 3 active Metrolink trams on my wants list, that meant a lot of hanging around but it was a potential option before a Greater Manchester Rail Ranger day. I also had my eyes on a quick visit to West Yorkshire, as well as a Lancashire Day Ranger. Then I looked at the forecast, and that had changed quite a lot since the previous check. Suddenly all the cardio options were out of the window and I wasn't terribly keen on being outside for long!
So even at 0743, I had no real plan for the day. With no catering on board, my most immediate plan for Manchester was to source food and coffee. After that, I felt confident in my making an informed choice on the day, and of course I'd then see what the weather was actually doing! Arrival at Manchester Piccadilly was 10 minutes late at 0823, due to overhead line damage in the Longsight area. My first move was to Pret, and as it was not raining at that point I strolled over to Piccadilly Gardens. 3.9mph so I really wasn't rushing, clearly!
I had quite a bit of time to spare before Vegan Shack opened at 0900, and just before then a winner tram was observed heading to Ashton-under-Lyne. I was not sacrificing my food for a tram, and got a breakfast muffin and 3 beautiful hash browns. £7.50 but money exceptionally well spent on a 'sausage' patty, grilled tofu and 'cheese' all in a toasted muffin. That on its own is £5 but oh so good! That was my first try of tofu and it was amazing! The hash browns were amazing too, I highly recommend Vegan Shack for breakfast as well as lunch/dinner items now!
I went on a slightly faster stroll to St Peters Square next, to see what if any trams of interest were out. Sadly, none were present in my time there, not helped by some issue between St Peters Square and Deansgate-Castlefield, the queue of trams was ridiculous! I had given up and joined double duds 3050+3051 to Piccadilly, the queue stretched back to the former Moseley Street tram stop! I arrived on the other platform at Piccadilly with 3 minutes to spare, taking winner
3131 to Piccadilly Gardens. By some measure, that is probably my most regular leap in my Metrolink mileage log!
Next up was a re-positioning move to Manchester Victoria, and I decided to run over to there following the tram line. It's not very far, but it all mounts up, on drier streets I'd have gone faster but I was satisfied with my pace. A plan was now in place, and I went to the ticket office for an off-peak day return to Hebden Bridge at £12 and a West Yorkshire Daysaver (Train Only) for £9.10. The latter was previously known as a West Yorkshire Day Rover, and for the price it was regarded as good value. Ideally, I'd have been on a train heading east earlier on, but I'd have not had my excellent food or scored that tram, so I couldn't complain really.
With a £4 medium black americano from Starbucks in my hand, I made it with not long to spare onto winner
195121 on the 1021 to Leeds. I realised I could have bought to Todmorden, and saved a bit of money, but it is what it is! This was my first venture into Yorkshire for almost a year, which is way too long to be outside of a pretty part of the world! I chose to alight at winner station Sowerby Bridge, as there was a nice connection onto a train to a station that got denied on my last attempt some years back, due to flooding. However, as I pondered when I'd come back for the Rochdale Canal, upon boarding 158871+158786, I decided to alight at winner station Mytholmroyd instead.
Yes, that meant I had decided last minute to alight and walk along the Rochdale Canal back to Sowerby Bridge. It wasn't all that far, so since the weather was being unpredictable I'd at least try for it. Having recently done some of the Worcester & Birmingham Canal, and a while back some of the canal between Pontypool and Newport, I was happy to report that this was my favourite walk of recent times. A beautifully scenic part of the world, and the rain was on and off, as was my coat, but it was absolutely worth it. The towpath is mostly wide, with a decent surface but not too much of it was tarmac. It's not really one I'd recommend doing in wet conditions, some of it did get muddy, but in good quality footwear it's actually quite nice.
I had to have a look around Sowerby Bridge itself when I got there, which felt like a rather nice little town, and the cycling shop with Team GB clothing in the window did distract me somewhat from my mission. If it would have fitted me, I'd have no doubt been in to find out how much it would cost! I stopped just outside the Jubilee Refreshment Rooms, next to Sowerby Bridge station, and I see the man in there has not only a weird sense of humour but also sneakily made it a large coffee, not a small one. 30p is 30p, and I just didn't like his attitude. I don't think his friend, a much more sensible person, thought his comments were very appropriate either! The coffee wasn't even that good, and at £2.90 I felt ripped off to be honest.
Thankfully, I never need to return to his place and I was soon on a pair of throaty 158s, in the form of 158791+158795. I looked at many options, but I chose to take them all the way to Leeds in the end. I was going to dash into the city, but then an announcement reminded me of those 'new' stations between Leeds and Shipley. They've been there for years, but I still hadn't done them, which was finally being changed! 333006 took me to winner station Apperley Bridge, and the weather was a bit rancid there, so I dived into the shelter on the Leeds-bound platform on my +19. There were trip report notes to catch up, so it was a good time to do that. My next move, back to winner station Kirkstall Forge, was aboard 333002 which was my penultimate 333 to get for haulage. So it was nice to get it again! It would be a very tight +2, which I really wanted to make as it would get me a winner! As the train left Apperley Bridge, it was 2 minutes late, so the Danger Music was 100% playing in my head!
Sadly, the connection didn't make and I had 29 minutes of free time. So I went for a small run, which would have been a bit longer except for one problem. No, this wasn't something to do with injury or whatever! No, this was even more frustrating. I stopped to take my coat back off, and something told me to check my inner pocket. Try as I might, even a thorough empty of everything ended in the same result. My Co-Op card was missing, no biggie as such as I barely use it, but my TfW Sale Advance had also gone missing! I can only imagine it fell out somewhere during the in-and-outs of my coat earlier in the trip, which was seriously mood-killing! The expense of a new ticket back from Manchester wasn't a pleasant thought, and this trip had suddenly cost me a lot more money than planned.
To be fair, it could have been worse, but I wasn't really in the mood for much now. I ran back to the station, and even tried reprinting my tickets on the machine. To no surprise, it didn't let me do that, and all because TfW won't even email you a PDF copy unless you register with them! I seem to recall I was in too much of a rush to book tickets to remember if I was registered with them or not, and now it had cost me £36.40 on a last minute Advance. Which was definitely better than £48-something for a walk-up ticket, and as I had the option to get home ASAP, I booked the 1730 from Manchester Piccadilly. I just had to hurry up and get back across the Pennines, which would have been easy but I chose to first jump on 333014 to Shipley.
I had good reason, and that was to chase after the 331/1 I missed earlier on. When I'd first made plans to head to Yorkshire, 3 of the 5 331/1s I wanted were out, but the other two went back to bed for most of the day as it turned out! I soon found a way to pass the time, and winner
331110 took me to Leeds. After being held outside of the station, it was 4 minutes late into Leeds at 1500. I just about managed to find time to get a meal deal from Boots, and sourced a couple more bits from Sainsburys, before squeezing onto winner 195014 on the 1512 to Manchester Victoria via Bradford Interchange. The journey was scheduled to take until 1629 to reach Manchester, which would give me a solid hour to get to Piccadilly. That would be plenty of time I predicted, and this service was scheduled to be quite fast in places. Non-stop Bradford to Halifax, then non-stop to Hebden Bridge, with only calls at Todmorden and Rochdale after that.
Is it just me, or is that male announcer voice really unfriendly-sounding, perhaps even a bit angry, on the CAF trains? I end up doing my best to block him out with music whenever possible, I just can't stand that voice! I finally got a fold-down seat at Bradford Interchange, and I always forget just how pretty this part of Yorkshire is. Once I'd devoured the chickpea curry naan that I usually get in Boots, and got some Dr Pepper in me, I found YouTube recommending Bangarang by Skillrex. Some big beats in that high-energy song! I hadn't heard that for a few years, and it brought back memories from my excessive alcohol consumption days. More importantly though, it helped boost the mood significantly. The trip into West Yorkshire had not exactly gone to plan, I'd got some good results from it but it was meant to just be better than that. This was the finale, the end of the celebration of 20 years and the development of my hobby. It was meant to end better than this, to end with a bang!
Arrival was 1 minute late at 1630, and I had to decide how to best use my time in Manchester. As it turned out, I elected to go running and once I got to St Peters Square I took a short break. This turned out to be a good decision, as winner for everything
3140 rolled in from the west on a Victoria via Market Street service. It may not have much distance on the clock, but I have it in the book. I just want 3027 (currently long-term out of use) and 3136 to finish the 147-strong Metrolink M5000 tram fleet for haulage. Once off at Market Street, I could have done multiple things, but I decided upping my running distance for the month made the most sense. I also wanted new coverage, and that's what I got!
I set out via Oldham Road, eventually looking at the map and realising I was going a little bit out of my way, and found my way to the Rochdale Canal. I hadn't yet decided if I was going to counting running and walking coverage as their own separate things, or if I'd count them as one unified goal on my OS maps. That was a decision for another day! I had to miss out part of the canal towpath at one point due to construction work, but it wasn't a long diversion. At Ducie Basin, I made my way up to the streets and ended up with 2.23 miles on the clock. I'd considered making it a 5k, but I wanted to rest a bit and rehydrate properly before the 1730 to Cardiff Central.
The inward working eventually arrived and doing the honours was 158823. I even managed to get a table seat somehow, and eventually it was away at 1749. More time was lost on the way south, being 22 late by Nantwich. After initial concerns that the 158 was not in good health, it had proved me wrong with some rather noisy performances. All 5 bananas were gone by Stockport, and by now I was looking forward to getting to bed to be honest! 158 racket is all fine and good, but it had been a long day and by 1848 the darkness was nearly total across the sky. The weather was not amazing, but it could have been a lot worse eh?
So, how was the day overall? Despite the obvious frustrations with ticketing, and delays meaning I would get back later than desired even with the revised schedule, it was a modestly productive day. 2 winning trams, 2 195s and a 331 as well, plus plenty of 158 action and 4 station scores. A rather enjoyable power walk was certainly the highlight of the day, and yes I absolutely wanted to go back and finish the job as soon as possible! It would definitely need to be a multiple effort task, Mytholmroyd to Manchester is quite the distance after all!
Was it the finale I wanted? Not especially, but it could have gone much worse. I had been tempted to make it a 4-part mission, but I didn't think that was a good idea. The finale would be what it would be, and the next trip was already being lined up. Equally, the next day off was being considered as a candidate for an easy day, as in one that doesn't involve lots of travelling. There was no doubt in my mind that it was likely to change by the time Sunday came along!
The trip from Shrewsbury onwards was spent chatting to an off-duty TfW catering crew member all the way to Hereford, the time flew by and I arrived 24 minutes late at 2014. Somehow, I found the energy to run back to base, it wasn't a terribly fast one but it was fairly consistent with my average running pace so I guess that's what matters the most right now. As long as I'm strong enough to do the Swansea Bay 10K in 2024, without stopping and being too tired for much else afterwards, that's the goal. Ideally, I'd like to get to half-marathon distance capabilities too, but that's a whole other level of training and I was not ready to commit to that!
Post-trip update: As I finish typing this the night after, I'm happy to report that I made the most of the weather and got my first ride in weeks done. Just under 10 miles, nothing much but it all counts. I also got just under 3.7 miles of running done, so I was on 43km of running in 7 days. I was well on the way to smashing the 100km running challenge, and I was promised fantastic unseasonably hot weather for the next day off. Perhaps unsurprisingly, that meant a full day of outdoor activity was being planned!
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Photos do not include even half of the ones I wanted to include, but for now here's a good few:
1) Trams in the St Peters Square, Manchester, area
2) 158786 at Sowerby Bridge
3) 397011 at Manchester Piccadilly
4) A view from the footbridge at Manchester Piccadilly, the 185s were 185113+185115
5) A view facing south at Manchester Piccadilly, this one featuring a 390 which I didn't get the number of
6) Big delays and cancellations, due to overhead wire damage at Longsight, were causing epic crowds for Avanti services, as observed in this photo from the footbridge
7) 158823 at Hereford
8) With the forum doing its usual amazing job of putting photos in order (a lot of sarcasm there), this photo is of 3131 at Piccadilly's Metrolink city-bound platform