As some of you may know, we live in Clifton (Cumbria). Most days, at around 14:30, we're visited by the Log Train.
It's enormously long and- obviously- packed full of recently cut logs. It parks on the down freight loop for around half an hour (I think it must wait for a series of Avanti and TPE passenger trains to overtake) and I always like to imagine the driver has a (well earned) tea break whilst they're parked up. We love the Log Train.
It must come down from somewhere in Scotland (we've seen it pass through Carlisle station from the Glasgow side) but we'd love to know a bit more about it (where it comes from, where its going, etc).
How on earth does a single locomotive pull something that heavy? The drivers must be so skilful- when the train departs it seems to do so without so much as a single jerk.
I'm sure you lot will have chapter & verse. Any info appreciated....
It's enormously long and- obviously- packed full of recently cut logs. It parks on the down freight loop for around half an hour (I think it must wait for a series of Avanti and TPE passenger trains to overtake) and I always like to imagine the driver has a (well earned) tea break whilst they're parked up. We love the Log Train.
It must come down from somewhere in Scotland (we've seen it pass through Carlisle station from the Glasgow side) but we'd love to know a bit more about it (where it comes from, where its going, etc).
How on earth does a single locomotive pull something that heavy? The drivers must be so skilful- when the train departs it seems to do so without so much as a single jerk.
I'm sure you lot will have chapter & verse. Any info appreciated....

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