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Thank to all who took part in our previous 'puddles' challenge. After all that walking and splashing, this week I thought we should look at more modern transport. of course 'more modern' is relative and this locomotive is on the South Tynedale railway in Alston, a 2 foot, narrow gauge, railway.
As the train pulls into the platform, what happens next?
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Have fun!
Dave
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Possibilities are wide open @davescm
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I think someone has been at the loco with a heavy hammer and a tin-opener! 🙂
Dave
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Love the theme park feeling on this image!
Great job!
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Anyone for a quick game of Quidditch?
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That must be platform 9 3/4 then...
Dave
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Yes Dave. That platform was crying out for such a sign
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Alston Sauna
Dave
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That reminds me of when I was a kid, watching coal being unloaded from the puffers (small steam-powered coastal cargo carriers) that brought it to the island. Every time the derrick started lifting, I'd be completely enveloped in a huge cloud of steam because it was also steam-powered.
One of those puffers was the Vital Spark, famous in 20th-Century Scottish literature, still running today:
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@AlanGilbertson Tales of Para Handy - brilliant! I didn't realise you were from the Scottish Isles. A lovely part of the world.
Dave
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We loved the Para Handy tales when I was growing up. BBC made a TV series, which was a lot of fun. (Yes, I'm definitely an islander! Until I went was banished to boarding school in Edinburgh I had seldom been more than a quarter mile from the sea. Waves played the soundtrack to my childhood the way traffic does for city dwellers.)
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The most clever thing about the puffers was that they didn't need a regular harbour to operate. Provided the location was an island or mainland with a sandy beach, then the puffer would come in at high tide, anchor and wait for low tide where it would settle on the sand. This was because it had a completely flat bottom.
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The two grey Fergusons were definately (used as) Sea Tractors.
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Dave, surely this must be proof of the annihilative power of antisteam, once fully escaped. No more train/railway/station in Alston.
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Dangerous stuff steam. It contains traces of dihydrogen monoxide!
By @davescm
I've heard it's been found in lakes, rivers, and last weekend's puddles.
Jane
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A major component of acid rain too!
Dave
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Dear Adobe
Can you please remove this white stuff?
Jane
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Haha - how many of those have we seen! Print it, then I am sure it will just wash off. 🙂
Dave
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Dave, with no real knowledge about the subject, I never considered a steam explosion until seeing it mentioned by Franck; the blast after a gradual increase in outflow made my imagination wander into seriously weird and dangerous kinds of steam.
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Wow Dave. I love it!
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Love the idea! And well executed!
I left before the explosion...
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A happy train Lynette! Welcome to SFTW.
Dave