Tuesday, 22 April 2025

A Week Of Variety Day 2

 The Sport Of Kings 2 (mini blog)

The history of Ashey station is very ordinary as we can see from Nick Catfords "Closed Stations" web site. The only additional detail to add is that in 1953 it was reduced to an unstaffed halt.

But between 1883 and 1929 the station was very busy indeed, but sadly for the Railway Company, only on a few days each year. Ashey was the site of the Island's popular and apparently successful racecourse.
The station also had a branch line, of sorts, marked as "tramway" on the above map. It was to the stone quarry in Ashey Down, diving under the road that led up the hill as shown on this map.
You would call it a short tunnel ...
...which led to the quarry. It is now firmly blocked up ...
... but the quarry itself can be accessed from nearby footpaths.
Mr Catford has amende the Ashey station map to show an Ashey Racecourse "station", about which nothing is known and no pictures remain. Did it really exist? One account says that railway carriages were parked in the quarry branch but, again, there are no pictures.

But the "races" were popular with the crowds, attracting the usual band of turf accountants (traders which an innocent young fbb thought sold turf!).
Publicity for the events was readily displayed on the Island and, possibly, further afield ...
... and the only sensible way to get there was by train!
In 1914 sixpence was a high price to pay for your programme. Train fares from the ferry at Ryde were about one shilling FIRST CLASS.

One picture does show parked coaches, used by some as a pekrsonal grandstand!
These vehicles are definitely parked on the up loop at Ashey station and not in the quarry branch.

But doubtless a good day was had by all and extra trains would convey the racegoers homeward and happy - including the especially happy bookies!
The line of the quarry branch is still visible today from a passing satellite ...
... curving away from the station (top centre) and crossing Ashey Road clad in undergrowth - but you would never know unless you knew!
Tomorrow, we will look at how the station has changed over the years.
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 The Easter Jigsaw 

Tears

The first person to see the risen Jesus was Mary of Magdala; the one who stayed behind when the embalming party fled in disarray and fear at the empty tomb.  

Sometimes you just have to half close your eyes and look beyond the words and beyond artists'' impressions and let the truth envelop you. 

These are the words from John's Gospel

“Woman, why are you crying?” came a voice from behind her.
She answered, “They have taken my Lord away, and I do not know where they have put him!”

Then she turned around and saw Jesus standing there; but she did not know that it was Jesus. “Woman, why are you crying?” Jesus asked her. “Who is it that you are looking for?”

She thought he was the gardener, so she said to him, “If you took him away, sir, tell me where you have put him, and I will go and get him.”
Jesus said to her, “Mary!”

And then she knew!

And she went to tell the other disciples ...
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 Next New Station blog : Weds 23rd April  

Monday, 21 April 2025

A Week Of Variety Day 1

A Full Diary (For Old Crocks)

Easter is a busy time for committed Christians, and the fbbs, despite being old, have had plenty to do with more on the way during Easter Week.

Monday 14th : Church Prayer Meeting

Tuesday 15th  : Church Fellowship Lunch

Friday 18th : Good Friday Service

Saturday 19th : Easter Event for Young People

Sunday 20th : Resurrection Day Service

Monday 21st : Church Prayer Meeting

Wednesday 23rd : Missionary Evening

The fbbs have commitments, some small and some large, at all these diary items and their May Fellowship Meetings are looming, with the monthly leaflets due to be distributed at the end if this week. 

Blogging may need to be curtailed as, whilst the spirit is willing, the flesh is getting weaker.

So a bit of a bodge for blogs this week, some mini, some midi but not many maxi!

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The Sport Of Kings (Part 1)

The Isle of Wight is not usually associated with horse racing. The celebrated noise-fest, a k a The Isle of Wight Festival does have one of its car parks on "Racecourse" Road ...
... which is at Binfield on the main road between Newport and Ryde.
Southern Vectis bus 9 will take you there ...

... more specifically half the 9s - the other half of the frequency runs via Staplers. (It's "Stap" (to rhyme with Snap "lers", by the way, not the device for clipping sheets of paper together).
There is very little about this "Racecourse" on-line, but plenty about another one as illustrated at the top of this post.

To get there you would need route 37 from Ryde ...

... and alight a few stops after Haylands School.
The stop is called Upton Cross ...
... and there it is. Then there is a very sharp right hand turn for the 37 ...
... followed by a blind corner not wide enough for two vehicles. And the 37 is usually double deck!
Anyway, having alighted from your 37 before the scary bit, you walk straight ahead where the bus turns tight and you are on Gatehouse Road.
Keep bravely on and you come to a junction where the well kempt road turns left. But you keep straight on down Station Road.
The surface deteriorates and looks less and less inviting ...
... but if your exploratory resolve is strong, you come to a set of gates on a railway line.
You have arrived at Ashey Station. You have not passed anywhere that might be Ashey which is not surprising as Ashey Station is not at Ashey.
The enquiring mind might wonder why the Isle of Wight Central Railway built a station in the middle of nowhere ...
... but it is one of three that filled the company's carriages with very few passengers! The current preserved Steam Railway runs from Smallbrook Junction (due south of Ryde) to Wootton (map above, centre).

The best explanation of why the station existed and serves nobody, is that it was a speculative build on the promise of some housing development that never developed.

But here it was, complete with passing loop, as portrayed in this delightful painting commissioned by the Steam Railway.
But it doesn't look quite like that today ...
... as we shall see in tomorrow's blog.
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 The Easter Jigsaw 

Spices

There had been an urgency to remove the bodies before the Sabbath, which started at sunset on the Friday.
Dead bodies were "unclean" and simply unacceptable while the festival was in progress. The final anointing with spices would have to wait until after the Sabbath.

Mark, the first to write a "Gospel", takes up the story.
Very early on Sunday morning, at sunrise, the women went to the tomb. On the way they said to one another, “Who will roll away the stone for us from the entrance to the tomb?” (It was a very large stone.) Then they looked up and saw that the stone had already been rolled back. So they entered the tomb, where they saw a young man sitting at the right, wearing a white robe - and they were alarmed.
“Don't be alarmed,” he said. “I know you are looking for Jesus of Nazareth, who was crucified. He is not here - he has been raised! Look, here is the place where he was placed. Now go and give this message to his disciples, including Peter: ‘He is going to Galilee ahead of you; there you will see him, just as he told you.’”

So they went out and ran from the tomb, distressed and terrified.

So no great elation because Jesus was risen, just distress and terror.

But it seems that one of the women hung around ...
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 Next New Station blog : Tues 22nd April  

Sunday, 20 April 2025

Sunday Variety

It's A Tale Of Two Sides!

Fear not, dear readers, fbb will not be bringing you up-to-date news from the Association Football genre (as above), the two sides are on the carriage shed roof at his Peterville model railway.
The roof was a butchering of five Airfix/Kitmaster platform canopy kits slightly extended in width. But the kits do contain a design fault. You have to install each glazing bar individually ...
... and the notch at each end is very tiny. In fact it can be dissolved away by an over exuberant application of adhesive such that the glazing bar drops out at one or even both ends. You can overcome this with a typical bodge; namely by glueing the bars to the clear plastic gazing sheet. Which can, and in fbb's hand, did make a mess.

So the plan is to replace brittle and mucky glazing and poorly fixed glazing bars; but only on one side of the roof. From normal viewing distance the "other side" is not fully visible. That far side will be "done" as soon as time, money and modelling commitment permit.

But how?

There are plenty of very posh and very expensive windows available ...

... but fbb needed lots and lots. And they didn't need to be posh!

In steps an on-line seller ...
... with a glorious trading name!

His windows were very simple laser cut from card ...
... and, as a bonus, they would fit the existing hole.
fbb's precision guess-o-matic measuring tool worked perfectly.

More as it happens.

Three Bridges ...
... named after bridges over streams that form tributaries to the River Arun, the village grew in importance with the development of a three way railway junction. Lines ran to Brighton (the main line), The Arun Valley (turn right from London) and to East Grinstead (turn left). The route to East Grinstead is now closed.
Maybe a blog will emerge in due course.

Then there are three bridges actoss the Forth of Firth near Edinburgh ...
... all three marvels of modern engineering.

But fbb has just picked up news of the three Pamban bridges.

Pamban? As we all know, this locality is part of an archipelago of islands that lies between India and Sri Lanka.
Probably because of politics and history, there is no bridge all the way across.
News that a new bridge had been opened recently sparked fbb's interest.
The new bridge is replacing the old and they are both rail bridges.
The old bridge has two bascule lifting sections, whereas the new bridge has a span that lifts.

And the third bridge? The very first road crossing opened in 1988.
So there are three bridges to Pamban!
Maybe another blog could emerge?

Ferry Back!
Over the many, many years that fbb has kept an eye on public transport matters, the ferry from Knott End to Fleetwood has staggered from closure to re-opening many times.
The ferry connects nicely with the Blackpool Tram terminus ...
... leaving from close by the tram stop.
It crosses the not very attractive estuary, depositing its customers on a long sloping walkway.
At low tide, the boat's crew have to hose down the ramp as it can be coated in very sticky slippy mud!
There are bus connectiobs available at Knott End, and the ferry cuts off a long round trip via Poulton-le-Fylde.
That's the route taken by the replacement bus service.
News breaks that the ferry is back after a four month absence. That's a long time and a costly time to run a replacement bus!

The problem, as ever, is the money!

Ferry Backers!
An Isle of Wight MP has been reading annual accounts for the two main Isle of Wight ferry companies.
Let's try and understand what he is complaining about. A brand new car ferry might cost £30 million. No company of the size of Red Funnel or Wightlink would ever have a sack of crisp £50 notes big enough to buy one.

So they borrow the money.
Shareholders loan the companies their money because they expect to earn interest on it in the form of dividends.

Both these loan sums appear in business accounts as debt.

If you buy a £300,000 house on a mortgage, you are in debt for that amount of money. When fbb bought his house in the late 1960s he was in debt to the tune of a massive £3.500, three and a half times his annual income. It was a bit scary.

Debt only becomes a problem, therefore, if you cannot afford the interest payments or ever pay it back. In which case the lender will take the property back, i.e. repossess a house or a ferry.

Like a mortgage, it may take decades to pay off the debt of a new ferry.

That is normal business practice.

The Question for the MP should be whether Wightlink and Red Funnel can afford the payments on their debt. If they can, no problem.

It they can't, BIG problem!

More Debt For Citylink
So the service 900 between Glasgow and Edinburgh is getting a fleet of posh 65 seat coaches.
The cost? A modest ...
Doubtless the accountants at Stagecoach, the company that runs the 900, have done their sums and they are all fit and ready to pay off the debt and its interest charges. It is unlikely that the mighty Stagecoach will go belly up - but it is alwats possible.

See also British Leyland!!

The 900 runs every 15 minutes seven days a week.
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 The Easter Jigsaw 

Nothing!

Of course a Resurrection is impossible. But that's the whole point. By definition God can do the impossible because that is what "God" means. It is also worth bearing in mind that over the nearly 2000 years since the Sunday of the Empty Tomb, no alternative explanation has been offered which fits the documented information.
The entirely fictional Sherlock Holmes said ...

"When you have eliminated all which is impossible, then whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth."

Over the next few days of these blogs we will examine some of the accounts of the Resurrection appearances of Jesus - and our readers are invited to think critically about them, using, for example, their brains.

But all the different accounts agree that every visitor to the tomb were NOT expecting to find it full of nothing; yet that is just what they did find.
You can visit the empty tomb today - it is one of Jerusalem's most popular "attractions". Because of the way the city has been bashed about politically and militarily over the years, no one can be 100% certain - but it does fit the descriptions from the very early first century.
Yet; those who visit, and there are plenty who do, often comment on the overwhelming serenity and sense of "good" that they feel when standing inside.
It is small but VERY special.
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 Next New Station blog : Mon 21st April