flixtonman
Member
- Joined
- 18 Oct 2013
- Messages
- 46
The replies on here so far are mostly one-way: there is no arguable case for utilising heritage or preserved railways for anything other than their existing purpose, and no case at all for transporting perishable or frozen foodstuffs by any rail routes.Well, as somebody who usually goes into a supermarket a couple of times a week, I've not seen 'gaps' in the display or consistently missing products. The fact you're citing frozen suggests a different issue altogether, because frozen items are at least protected from perishing. It's more likely that there is a shortage at source of the items, possibly down to a poor harvest last year.
Either way, rail is absolutely NOT the solution for food shipment though, nor is it the way forward for small consignments, despite what you seem to think.
However, to refine the argument a little, is there a case for re-instating a few of the abandoned 'intra-city' rail lines? By this, I mean those suburban lines which spread out in all directions from our city centres but lost out to buses and, later, cars. Might they provide a railhead outside city centres for non-perishable goods, and reduce the volume of HGVs delivering such goods to our city centres. Some of the railheads might be no more than a few miles from a mainline, and would reduce the need for freight trains to take up paths through our city centres. I'm sorry to take a long time to make a simple point, but I guess I am saying: should we consider establishing freight railheads a few miles further out from where they now are?