Avon Valley Railway and the SS Great Britain

Started by MinZaPint, June 19, 2015, 05:39:18 PM

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MinZaPint

Stayed a couple of days with an old friend who lives in Saltford between Bristol and Bath, knowing I liked trains he suggested a trip on the AVR which is just round the corner from him, spotted this little fellow



with it's history



The Station with a nice little shop



motive power for the day



and from the front



coach from "The Pines Express"



We also went to Bristol, these trucks are used to carry passengers when the dock railway is running, we had to walk!



and so to one of Brunel's finest











If you should go do visit the "Facilities" appropriately in the bowels of the ship!









I obviously have no idea of what was provided for the ladies!

and from the bow



A very interesting ship well worth a visit but do allow plenty of time as there is a lot to see and the free audio guide is a bit of fun  :thumbsup:

Cogito Sumere potum alterum

ChrisWV10

Never think of Bristol as somewhere to visit but hadn't thought of the SS GB ... I can feel a weekend excursion coming on...

C.

simong

Great walks along the line side towards Bath too.

Papyrus

Wow! I am very impressed.

I've seen SS Great Britain once, literally the week after it came back from the Falklands, still covered in seaweed from the South Atlantic. It was my one and only visit to Bristol. Looks like I need to go and have another look. Thanks for the post!

Chris

Newportnobby

Great pics, David :thumbsup:
In the second one - why would they want to collect tin ???

cjdodd

 Bristol is an amazing place to visit, ok I am slightly bias but hey

Railwaygun

Is the Sentinel shunted a fireless loco ? Otherwise it looks a bit odd!
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ozzie Bill.

There is just so much of Brunel in and around Bristol. Think Temple Meads, Box tunnel and Clifton Bridge. I still think a fictional line running from Avonmouth, between the new cut, past the floating harbour and the Great Britain, through Temple Meads then on to London, perhaps with some GWR wide gauge historical would be a fabulous line and a great homage to an incredible engineer.
Course, I might also be a bit biased, being a Bristol kiddie myself!
Cheers, Bill.

Bealman

As we have come to expect from you, David, great stuff. I for one always enjoy your travelogues.  :thumbsup: :beers:

George
Vision over visibility. Bono, U2.

trkilliman

Another Bristolian here. We now live in Cornwall but spent 52 years in our home City. It is awash with Brunel designs, especially in the Central part of the City. I spent many years at Royal Mails main sorting office adjacent to Brunels Temple Meads Station. There is a whole network of tunnels underneath the station that were used for transferring mail between platforms for the TPOs. Such a sad day when the TPOs ceased. Anyway, the central area of Bristol is a great place to visit, albeit short on model shops that cater for our scale to any degree. So, ther thee biss my luvvers.

Bealman

Stopped briefly at Bristol back in August 2013 with the intention of seeing the Clifton Bridge, but couldn't find it so had a pint in a pub in the CBD instead...  :uneasy:
Vision over visibility. Bono, U2.

D1042 Western Princess

The AVR is on my 'to do' list, but can fully endorse the SS "Great Britain" as a MUST DO when in Bristol.
We had a fabulous day there last year and still didn't see everything in the ship.
The nicest, although probably not the fastest, way between Temple Meads and the ship is by the frequent water buses which pick up just outside the station and drop off at the ship.
If it's not a Diesel Hydraulic then it's not a real locomotive.

D1042 Western Princess

Quote from: Papyrus on June 19, 2015, 09:07:33 PM
Wow! I am very impressed.

I've seen SS Great Britain once, literally the week after it came back from the Falklands, still covered in seaweed from the South Atlantic. It was my one and only visit to Bristol. Looks like I need to go and have another look. Thanks for the post!

Chris

I saw it then too. Yes, it has changed - enormously!
If it's not a Diesel Hydraulic then it's not a real locomotive.

Calnefoxile

Quote from: Papyrus on June 19, 2015, 09:07:33 PM
Wow! I am very impressed.

I've seen SS Great Britain once, literally the week after it came back from the Falklands, still covered in seaweed from the South Atlantic. It was my one and only visit to Bristol. Looks like I need to go and have another look. Thanks for the post!

Chris

Another piece of trivia is that my cousin was the tug boat skipper that towed the SS Great Britain up the Bristol channel. He knows the channel like the back of his hand as he was also the skipper of a minesweeper during his Naval reserve days.

Cheers

Neal.

D1042 Western Princess

Quote from: ozzie Bill. on June 20, 2015, 06:40:31 AM
There is just so much of Brunel in and around Bristol. Think Temple Meads, Box tunnel and Clifton Bridge. I still think a fictional line running from Avonmouth, between the new cut, past the floating harbour and the Great Britain, through Temple Meads then on to London, perhaps with some GWR wide gauge historical would be a fabulous line and a great homage to an incredible engineer.
Course, I might also be a bit biased, being a Bristol kiddie myself!
Cheers, Bill.

Slightly off topic (sorry Mods) but passengers were amazed when I would tell them that in 1848, with the Broad Gauge, trains would get from Paddington to Didcot (53 miles) in around 48 minutes. The time in 2014 was 45 minutes!
A Broad Gauge line, with Rovers and Fireflys, rather than the silly overhead 'knitting' (I've never been a fan of electric trains - other than model ones) might not be such a bad idea!
If it's not a Diesel Hydraulic then it's not a real locomotive.

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