Pendre Works - Past, Present & Future

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  • Опубліковано 9 бер 2024
  • In the build up to the launch of the "Preserving Our Past, Building Our Future" Redevelopment Project and the 75 Appeal, Luke & Ian take a look around Pendre to delve into its past, present problems & some potential solutions for the future, bumping into a few friendly faces along the way.
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КОМЕНТАРІ • 33

  • @derekp2674
    @derekp2674 4 місяці тому +11

    Thanks very much Luke, Ian and team. It was great to have a guided tour of Pendre and learn about its history and current usage.
    I really enjoyed volunteering during the recent Spring Outdoor Week and will be back for more very soon.

  • @onetrackmind3558
    @onetrackmind3558 4 місяці тому +3

    Talyllyn in dark blue coat looks lovely.

  • @DMCRailways
    @DMCRailways 4 місяці тому

    A really great video. It was very nice to see around the railway maintenance and workshop areas, hear the history and meet staff. :)
    I've been following you on Instagram but hadn't realised and now I have a lot to watch from your UA-cam :)

  • @MCMorrado
    @MCMorrado 4 місяці тому +10

    With locomotive fireboxes that are too knackered to be used safely in an engine, have you ever considered using one as a pizza oven? I watched that video of a guy making pizza using a steam locomotive's firebox and I think it would be genius if the Tallylyn Railway took old fireboxes and cleaned them up to be used as coal or wood fired pizza ovens to be cooked on the shovels for a more authentic flavor.
    I can already imagine a fine pizzeria on the railway with its own welsh spin on things :)

    • @BrentSudric
      @BrentSudric 4 місяці тому

      Imagine they do go ahead with that idea and place it on a spare wagon chassis: Portable Pizza/Pasties!

    • @MCMorrado
      @MCMorrado 4 місяці тому

      @@BrentSudric My god, that's genius!

  • @harrisonallen651
    @harrisonallen651 4 місяці тому

    All the support goes to you and the railway staff Luke

  • @DennisLora2001
    @DennisLora2001 4 місяці тому

    Amazing video well done guys I really like it

  • @TheDCDuncan
    @TheDCDuncan 4 місяці тому

    I remember plans for a new workshop and carriage facilities in the trading estate just east of Pendre crossing. This must be more than thirty years ago. It's a shame nothing came of that plan.

  • @LetsMakeTracks2023
    @LetsMakeTracks2023 4 місяці тому +7

    12:23 who did that? 🤣🤭

  • @reviewinggala1878
    @reviewinggala1878 4 місяці тому +1

    I'm not sure why no.6 didn't fit in the south shed

  • @Tencentsthetug
    @Tencentsthetug 4 місяці тому

    Question could some of you guys go to ducksford and save the narrow guage ther they don't run the trains they have☹

  • @terrier_productions
    @terrier_productions 4 місяці тому +3

    With the fact that No1 is in the loco shed, is she nearly finished??

  • @mattskey1
    @mattskey1 4 місяці тому

    Time sure does fly for 160 years

  • @sem-zs3nl
    @sem-zs3nl 4 місяці тому +1

    12:23

  • @ryleeculla5570
    @ryleeculla5570 4 місяці тому +1

    Does the talyllyn railway run any freight services or only passengers

    • @TalyllynRailway1865
      @TalyllynRailway1865  4 місяці тому +11

      We don't run any revenue earning freight services - but we do run re-enactment goods trains to show how they used to be run, and we have almost daily engineering trains that run up and down the Railway fixing things!

    • @ryleeculla5570
      @ryleeculla5570 4 місяці тому +1

      @@TalyllynRailway1865 oh ok but I must ask back in the 1800s or when ever the railway was in its hay day did it serve a quarry?

    • @TalyllynRailway1865
      @TalyllynRailway1865  4 місяці тому +9

      ​@@ryleeculla5570 The Railway was built to serve a Quarry! In 1865 the Railway opened and transported slate from the Bryneglwys Quarry down to Tywyn Wharf Station, where it was transferred to Standard Gauge and taken to a port to be shipped around the World.
      The Quarry had a collapse and shut in December 1946, and then slate trains stopped shortly after.

    • @derekp2674
      @derekp2674 4 місяці тому +3

      The goods services to (and from) the village of Abergynolwyn were also an interesting feature, with tracks running down an incline and then to the backs of the various houses.

    • @ryleeculla5570
      @ryleeculla5570 4 місяці тому

      @@TalyllynRailway1865 so wait their was a transfer station for skate with the talallyn and a standard gauge railway huh seems like hit entertainment based the wharf off this so said transfer station or yard but by some water

  • @IN_THIS_DAY_AND_AGE
    @IN_THIS_DAY_AND_AGE 4 місяці тому +1

    Keep spending the millions.

  • @heritage0001
    @heritage0001 4 місяці тому

    Just throwing two ideas in, beyond the gates you could throw in a passing loop but have a shed covering it, the shed would be 40 metre long so you could a set or two in and it means a morning service could start at nantgewernal offering people travelling from the east a road trip to Tywyn town to find the car park is full and to offer a easier day out. One con of the idea is nant (going to refer to it as nant now) would need a car park upgrade to accommodate more vehicles. The work shop situation is simple to draw up an idea of as you could combine the workshops and possibly the paint shop if the first idea isn’t a success. This idea would have the site on that but of land that you mentioned, the paint shop would be a single row with about 32 metres by 4 metres with a permanent divide to the workshop. The workshop would be a 2 row shed with 3 metres clearance of either row, it would be the same length as the paint shop to allow for the multi project aspect that was raised, it would also allow for the larger stock to be repaired and moved moved out as quick as they got in.
    Of course these aren’t 100% flawless but just a general idea. I do hope that the building externally represents its surroundings and history with the use of slate and isn’t like most modern additions to other heritage railways where its like an eye sore to the setting.

    • @ejparrott
      @ejparrott 4 місяці тому

      Nant has no road access, do you mean Aber?

    • @heritage0001
      @heritage0001 4 місяці тому

      @@ejparrott yeh

  • @mmandmcb14
    @mmandmcb14 3 місяці тому +1

    I can see that 6 steam locos can't fit in one shed.

  • @musiqtee
    @musiqtee 4 місяці тому +1

    Effectively, yes… But please, don’t rush towards the purely “economic” effectiveness that’s literally fracturing both societies and people in everyday life.
    Time is a poor asset when “saved”, especially for volunteers who don’t invoice by hours. Sure, everything external to heritage railway operations is victim to the so called market, but time used and cherished within the organisation is pure gold - giving meaning to work, otherwise lost to “productivity” demands.
    Seen that way, the amenities needed for accommodation should indeed be adequate and safe, but not necessarily “modern”? There’s a certain whole experience working with bygone knowledge and tools (and colleagues with deep insights), and also living part of it in an environment that’s a little bit “slower” than the hustle we sometimes need to escape from.
    That aside, I really wish for all the plans and funding to come together, as the value of heritage establishments are simply unmeasurable in money alone.
    Best wishes from a 🇳🇴‘Ian with no heritage railway close by…

  • @Philc854
    @Philc854 4 місяці тому +10

    A partly interesting update. The talk through the 'past' (particularly the historic photos) was helpful, though the 'cottage' was rushed through or missed and "wallpaper hunt" skipped (I would have liked to have known more). The 'present' mainly consisted of moaning about the shortfalls of the current engineering space. And the 'future' was revealed that you don't yet have a plan, with a brief mention of property options. Not very illuminating. What came across was the current piecemeal nature of structures around Pendre yard, with some quite historic elements obscured or not emphasised. Perhaps you ought to consider how the FR is currently re-developing Boston Lodge to not only improve facilities, but also strengthening the presentation of the heritage of BL for future public guided visits. I look forward to seeing what happens at Pendre. BTW, two further points: 1. The so-called 'Dutch barn' referred to was in fact a pole barn; Dutch barns are something different; and 2. Interviewees should never look to camera, only the presenter at the beginning or end of each interview to explain to the audience the next item. It also helps if those providing an explanation are not frequently interrupted with a repeat of what has just been said. I hope this is all taken as positive feedback to improve future videos, which I otherwise greatly enjoy watching.