Monday, 8 June 2026

Even Older Than fbb!!

 125 Years!

On Saturday 6th, there was a "do" at the iconic bus depot in Queens Road, Manchester. Sheffield correspondent Roy trotted over the Pennines and provided fbb with some pictures of the omnibological jollity.

The building opened in 1901 as Manchester Corporation's tram depot ...
... surprisingly full of trams.
The Open Day leaflet continues the story into Corporation buses times ..
... and the change to SELNEC PTE and further to Greater Manchester but still a PTE. But privatisation loomed and Queens Road became a base for Greater Manchester Buses North ...
... which then became First Bus.
The Open Day leaflet gives a full history.
The above timeline encapsulates the somewhat tortured history of municipal buses and the latest phase is now in place with the un-privatised Bee Network.
In the tendering process, First Bus lost Manchester North to Stagecoach whilst Stagecoach lost South to Metroline. So Queens Road is now a Stagecoach Depot!
There was a reminder that we live in an age of sub contracting and outsourcing.
How many bus companies these days have their own tow trucks? First Bus acquired one from the PTE ...
... whilst Lancashire United had this magnificent beast ...
... possibly WW2 surplus! These days, company owned and self- operated tow trucks are rare.

The Manchester Bus Museum is next door and was a joint sponsor of Saturdays event. 
So you could enjoy Manchester's buses in all over red with narrow stripe ...
... but also one with a highly recognisable body style in the original livery which graced the Mancunian highways before economy trumped a quality image.
There were Bee Network buses, of course ...
... as you would expect at a working depot.
Not just buses reminded visitors of the practicalities of running a bus garage.
But the highlight for fbb was Stagecoach buses in "heritage"  liveries.

We saw phase 2 SELNEC with district names in the logo.
There was G M Buses South ...
... and memories of vicious competition along the Wilmslow Road.

fbb is sure Roy had a great day, and thanks him for the excellent pictures. It is very obvious which are from Roy's camera.

Tomorrow, at last, a somewhat revived fbb aims to return to Wuhan via London.

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For the next few days, in a snippet on each blog, fbb will outline the possible reasons, the experiences and the possible consequences of the last week or so. The squeamish or hospital phobic should not read this diary!

EIGHT DAYS INSIDE (The Intermission 1)

To add to the angst, both fbb and Mrs were beset by heavy colds and a lack of enthusiasm for almost everything. So what turned out to be a potentially serious internal bleed was somewhat hidden. The coughs and sneezes may have hidden the diseases.

Melena made an occasional appearance but less violently than previously. 

So it was that on Tuesday 26th May, Mrs fbb was able to battle with the electronics and secure her chubby hubby an appointment with a real live doctor. The fbbs thought he was Dr Carr, but he wasn't.

Sunday, 7 June 2026

Weekend Variety ...


... Political Posturing

There may be trouble ahead!

Keir Likes Trams!

Sir Keir Starmer has said he is determined a tram network in West Yorkshire "does happen and happens quickly".


Tracy Wants Trams!

Well, one route would be a start!
The orange one!

Tracy's Buying Buses, Loadsa Buses

The Prime Minister backed up calls by the region's mayor Tracy Brabin ...

Does she wish we would all
forget Coronation Street?

... that a planned mass transit system should be in the form of a tram, rather than an improved bus network.

Keir Wants Votes

Speaking on a visit to York, he said: "The mayor of West Yorkshire is absolutely passionate about this. She wants a tram and I think that's right, so let's just get on with it now."

Brabin said: "It is always good to have the prime minister on your side by saying 'tram' rather than 'mass transit'."

Tracy Wants Cash!

"That is how you unlock growth, by improving transport. You know mass transit has been under way for a number of years but we are now committed, working with government to deliver that tram network," she said.

"This is part of my Weaver Network, that integrated transport system that is part of bus franchising but also a tram, and bicycles, electric bikes, and I know that government want to work with us to get it delivered at speed." 

Tracy Wants Cash, Loadsa Cash!

 Would You Vote For Andy?

Happy Andy?

fbb has a slight suspicion that, were he a voter in the Makerfield constituency, and were he a passionate supporter of the Labour Party (he is neither), he would NOT vote for Andy in the by- election.

That's because Andy has no deep desire to represent the people of Ashton in Makerfield in the House Of Commons. He just wants to be Prime Minister.

It is worth reminding ourselves that nobody votes for a Prime Minister at any parliamentary election. Anyone who prognosticated politically "that the nation elected Keir Starmer to be Prime Minister", is 100% wrong.

It is drivel! Like all the other MPs he was elected as the MP for Hollborn and St Pancras and nothing more.

First, Andy has to be chosen as the Labour Party candidate for election as MP for Makerfield.

He has wangled that, but no one quite knows how.

So, to become PM, Andy has to be elected as MP for Makerfield; he has to resign as Mayor of Manchester; he has to have the support of 50 MPs to stand in an election to be Leader of the Labour Party. He then has to garner enough votes from Labour Party Members, Union Members and Labour MPs to be elected as Leader.

Then the King has to invite him to form a Government. Then he has to gain enough support from MPs to create a viable working Government.

Only then might he get  to be Prime Minister.

There is no guarantee that he will leap over the next hurdle and be elected MP in Makerfield

There are 13 others who want the job, most of whom have absolutely no chance of winning!

Either way he will cease to have any involvement in yellow buses adorned by bees.
Until then (more like IF then) he is still boss of the bees.

Burnham urges mayors to move fast on buses.

There’s few policies that you can introduce that get more noticed than changing the colour of every bus,’ Greater Manchester mayor tells podcast.

Hmmmm?

Paint the buses (and trams) yellow and everything will instantly be wonderful?

Andy Burnham has urged UK mayors to take control of their bus networks as quickly as possible, arguing that the benefits outweigh the transition costs.

He said bringing Greater Manchester’s buses into the publicly controlled Bee Network has been highly visible and popular, helped by rebranding buses ...

... with yellow paint and a furry insect (?) ...

... and reducing fares. Burnham believes bus franchising can help address the cost-of-living crisis by making public transport more affordable and accessible.

Reducing fares? Increased local taxation? Increased government subsidy and of grants?

Hmmm?

Andy Is Spending Cash, Loadsa Cash

He expects other city regions, including Liverpool, Leeds, Sheffield and Newcastle, to follow Greater Manchester’s model, making public control of bus services a major UK transport trend this decade.

Andy (or his succesor) Wants Cash, Loadsa Cash!

Richard's Got Money Problems

Richard Parker, West Midlands Mayor

We hear somewhat less from Richard than from Andy, Steve and Tracy. Of course he wants to run buses in the West Midlands ...
... but maybe he us waiting to see how the Three Up-front Busketerrs get on before he gets in too deep. So the PTE is left to speak out.

Travel West Midlands Wants Cash, Loadsa Cash

TfWM warns half of bus network at risk

Escalating fuel costs and wider operating pressures have prompted TfWM to seek extended support to maintain services ahead of move to franchising

Transport for West Midlands (TfWM) wants to extend its Bus Network Support Grant until November, warning that up to 49% of commercial bus services could be withdrawn without continued subsidy.

TfWM estimates service cuts would affect more than 65 million passenger journeys this year, while existing support has protected nearly 400 million journeys since 2021 and helped maintain network stability ahead of bus franchising.

Rising operating costs, particularly diesel prices, are increasing financial pressure on operators, with TfWM concluding that subsidy remains necessary even if fares rise by 25%.

The proposed funding package would require operators to maintain services, share data and support regional transport plans, while TfWM argues that a temporary subsidy is the most practical way to preserve the network during the transition to franchising.

It's All Going Jolly Well For Franchising!

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For the next few days, in a snippet on each blog, fbb will outline the possible reasons, the experiences and the possible consequences of the last week or so. The squeamish or hospital phobic should not read this diary!

EIGHT DAYS INSIDE (Wednesday 20th May)

It's all about Melena? And that'not the name of a nurse.

If you get a bleed in the upper digestive tract, your body eats the blood - it is ingested. But there is a waste product called melena which is black, oily and horrible. Unfortunately the rest of your digestive system does not like melena. It rejects it violently.

Hence fbb's waste disposal explosion.

But he didn't know that at the time.

Wisely, as it turned out, the fbb's cancelled their holiday starting on 21st.
So they hoped the fbb interior nasty would go away.

It didn't but became much less but remained nasty.

Saturday, 6 June 2026

Kite Flyung At Bank Top & Bodmin

Convalescence Considerations
Your elderly blogger is back home after a challenging eight days in hospital in Exeter. Recovery may be slow and energy levels are at best in the orange!
fbb intends to continue a daily posting, but qualtity and quality may vary according to his well-being index, whatever that might be. Long series of blogs requiring lots of research are unlikely for a week or so.

In the good old days he might have spent that recovery time in a Convalescent Home ...
... but the facilities at fbb mansions are surely more conducive to recovery. The grub is most definitely bigger and better!

Kite Flying ...
... At Bank Top.
Approx 45 years ago, the fbbs rented a holiday cottage at Bank Top near Rosedale Abbey in North Yorkshire. The booking was shared with Sheffield chums Peter and Janice and their children.

Here is Bank Top (bottom leftish) ...
... at the top of the partly 1 in 3 road known as Rosedale Chimney ...
... scary both up and down in the fbb's Mini Traveller Estate!

Bank Top was a long gone mining community ...
... once busy and bustling ...
... but now just a row of cottages at the top of a steep hill. The mining business was served by train ...
... with mysterious kilns and chimney still visible today.
The system closed in the 1920s. Wagons were steam hauled ...
... with a short incline rope-hauled en route.

Chum Peter brought a kite to "entertain the children" but more likely to entertain himself. 

The holiday cottage had no electric, open fires and limited plumbing; but one bonus was a hoard of approximately 500 wire coat hangers.
So one blustery evening (mostly they all are at Bank Top), out came the kite. It kited spectacularly in the moorland breeze. Then fbb had a jackpot idea. Why not hang a few wire coat hangers (hook on bar) on to the kite and see if it would still fly.

Wow did it fly!

Eventually the kite rose majestically into the evening sky with about 30 hangers as a tail!

Then the string broke and off into the setting sun sailed kite and attached hangers never to be seen again.
Overnight, somewhere on the moors, sheep may have been intrigued as 30 wire coat hangers fell from the planet Zog into heather clad moorland like aerials from a UFO

BUT ...

... incidents like this gives a powerful illustration of a colloquial meaning of "kite flying". It is a "spectacular project" proposed with boundless enthusiasm, but very likely to crash ignominiously to oblivion.

And Bodmin!
Many readers will be familiar with long-standing plans to fully reopen the former Exeter to Plymouth Southern Railway route from its current terminus at Okehampton ...
... to Plymouth. The work needed to reopen on an existing track bed and by pass built in sections is viable as this 'Railfuture' scheme illustrates.
Amongst other things, the reopening would provide a diversionary route for trains west when the sea defences at Dawlish fail, as most certainly they will.

So when fbb found this on line ...
... he confidently expected to read of yet another study for the above plans.

How wrong he was!

This is for a whole new-build line between Okehampton and Bodmin!

Yer what?

This shows, roughly, the route of the former main line from Okehampton to Plymouth via Tavistock. 
The dual carriageway road is the A30 running east west across the top if the map.

Now read on!

study into whether a multibillion-pound rail link through Cornwall would work has been hailed as a "huge step forward" by campaigners.

They said the proposed line would link Okehampton, in Devon, to Launceston, continuing onto a new station near Bodmin and joining the existing Cornish mainline.

Cornwall Council said it would now look at a more detailed study into the scheme - admitting it had the potential to improve rail resilience and open up the opportunity for more freight trains.

However, it warned the railway would be unlikely to be in use until the 2040s at the earliest.

Hmmm?

As the man says above, the new line will follow the A30 ...

... via Launceston to Bodmin Road station (now Bodmin Parkway) ... 
... where it would rejoin the GWR main line.

How much?
Time to get the kite out!

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For the next few days, in a snippet on each blog, fbb will outline the possible reasons, the experiences and the possible consequences of the last week or so. The squeamish or hospital phobic should not read this diary!

EIGHT DAYS INSIDE (Prologue)

It might have started with a toothache! 

In the days running up to the first May Bank Holiday, fbb had a very sore tooth - some readers may remember. Remarkably (God is good that way!), the pain vanished for the old folks' May fellowship meetings and disappeared until an extraction on May 19th.

The pain over that bank holiday weekend was mitigated by Ibuprofen and/or Paracetamol in modest doses well below guidance on the packet.

The tooth was extracted painlessly and all seemed dine and dusted.

BUT on Wednesday 20th ...