Beyer Garratt loco footplate ride in Zimbabwe

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 23 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 25

  • @choirboyfromhell1
    @choirboyfromhell1 14 років тому +2

    Magnificent. A steam cab ride with Wildebeasts, Zebras and a spectacular sunset.

  • @TheMcraemer
    @TheMcraemer 7 років тому

    I often watched these amazing Garratts in the early nineteen-fifties as they passed through our town on their way south with endless columns of copper-laden trucks. More than half a century later, I still remember the sounds they made as they pulled out of the marshaling yard, and the smell of hot steam and coal that hung in the air afterwards. Many thanks for the movie.

  • @langmorerenoir7270
    @langmorerenoir7270 12 років тому +1

    Hi Buxton, I'm sure Bulowayo was BLR but BYO rings a bell.Firing a good 15th class was indeed brilliant, when the went they flew. Some Garrets came up from South Africa. I think they were classified 16A, They were totally clapped out, expect that is why SA "helped" out with the "war effort". The train left BYO for Sawmills (about halfway to TJ. and met with a train bound for BYO from TJ or Wankie. Crews exchanged trains and then went home. Tell you more if you are interested. Cheers.

  • @stuartmathe44
    @stuartmathe44 2 роки тому

    I feel like crying sometimes the collapse of NRZ is so sad nearly all my family worked of NRZ .Travelled a lot on these trains miss the old good days in Bulawayo .

  • @Dallas-Nyberg
    @Dallas-Nyberg 12 років тому +1

    Love these locos..... I see the cow catcher has done it's job! 0:09

  • @gillshaw-tw3kf
    @gillshaw-tw3kf 21 день тому

    Thank you

  • @ralph5407
    @ralph5407 14 років тому

    Excellent footage, glad to say I've been there and done it also with Geoff Cooke, 2010 and RTC 2007. My footage is on here as well.

  • @tonywolton
    @tonywolton 10 років тому

    Many thanks Buxton 4472 for the info.If Chinese working steam is now defunct, and from what I can glean from the net it is, are the Zimbabwe Garratts the world's last working steam locos? I often wonder if the last steamer on the planet will perform it's final duty and go without witness or ceremony.

  • @SS08947
    @SS08947 12 років тому

    9:12, RR on the window glass, brings back memories!

  • @buxton4472
    @buxton4472  12 років тому

    Thank you for your comments and recalling your days on RR. It must have been an incredible experience at that age to be firing a 15th Class out of BLR to TJ, Gwelo, West Nicholson, wherever... Gatooma is now presumably Kadoma. Were you working there as a fireman? If so, was it a signing-on point?

  • @langmorerenoir7270
    @langmorerenoir7270 12 років тому

    Your vid bought it all back! I "graduated" out of Bulowayo as an Engineman 4th Class around November 1972. I totally pissed off my first driver when I asked him to pronounce his yarpy surname when I got on the footplate for my first trip out of BLR as a trainee".
    What did he expect from a cocky 17 yo kid from Brighton? LOL. Got posted to Gatooma later. So good there, no night shift working.

    • @chunkyroo
      @chunkyroo 6 років тому

      Good Times, and we got to stay at the single quarters near the Bulawayo.

  • @duxberry1958
    @duxberry1958 8 років тому +1

    When i was a kid i went Cape Town to Broken Hill ,,,

  • @duxberry1958
    @duxberry1958 12 років тому

    my favorite loco,s

  • @henryostman5740
    @henryostman5740 8 років тому

    Was this standard gauge? Nice knuckle couplers, strange that Africa has them ahead of GB. A large locomotive to hand fire especially since it was made so late in the steam age, don't the Brits know about stokers?

  • @robertjm94706
    @robertjm94706 9 років тому

    YOUZA!! Someone must have ice water flowing through their veins! Not sure I could do that for so long.

  • @duxberry1958
    @duxberry1958 8 років тому

    Theres something about waking up in the morning and watching the sun rise from a window of a train in Africa ,,,

  • @duxberry1958
    @duxberry1958 12 років тому +1

    i lived in Wankie...

  • @duxberry1958
    @duxberry1958 12 років тому

    there is nothing like a African sunset

  • @duxberry1958
    @duxberry1958 12 років тому

    one minute the sun is up the next its gone

  • @tonywolton
    @tonywolton 10 років тому

    Excellent film. I dare say these men were poorly paid but their work is/ was 100
    times more interesting than my job. Was it the norm to have a crew of 3 on
    Garratts? I write this in June 2014, can anyone help, is there any working steam still left in Zimbabwe? Many thanks.........

    • @buxton4472
      @buxton4472  10 років тому

      On a long haul such as Bulawayo - Dete - TJ - Vic Falls,the third man was (I think the term is) coal trimmer.He pulled the coal forward from the tender to make it more available to the fireman to shovel it into the firebox. Also (as can be seen in the video) he would hose down the coal and the footplate to reduce dust. Most of the time he just stood around looking very cool puffing on a cigarette! There are still a few steam locos serviceable in Zimbabwe and they were until recently employed on the Bulawayo shunts and trip working but poor coal availability often meant these turns were diesel worked. Can't say for sure what the current situation is.

    • @scottiszlass
      @scottiszlass 8 років тому +1

      +tony wolton in the 50's I used to travel by train pulled by Garratt Locomotives from Mombasa to Kisumu it tool 2 nights and a few hours to children it gave a great excitement sadly these are replaced by Diesel and they trains are and not as frequent and reliable as they used to the Indian and Brits took great pride in their Locos all brass work was polished till they had shine I believe they were the most powerful Locomotives in the world probably after American , They were a beautiful sight when the whole train wason a long bridge over rivers or valley

    • @chunkyroo
      @chunkyroo 6 років тому

      Yes it was normal to have a third person on the footplate, especially on long hauls. As the tender started to empty this person would move the coal forward providing access to the Fireman on the footplate.
      Brings back memories of my 12 month stint as a Fireman around1976, between army call-up's.