I keep getting distracted from the main aim of the day (making a start on the first page of Point of Contact, since you ask). But at least it’s by good content.
When I popped out for a quick food shop I ummed and ahhed about which direction to go. I’m glad I headed for Burton Road.
I’d seen the Save Our Trees signs, but hadn’t realised how urgent they were.
I’m a big kid, and I’m so glad I got to see these grown up Tonka toys in action.
First through, but the last I got a picture of, is the one which does the actual cutting. They were on a break when I got this picture, but as they didn’t call the Police when I asked if I could take pictures it would be ungrateful to complain.
I may have missed the machine which strips the smaller branches off the trunks and cuts the big sections into more manageable lengths. This John Deere beasty comes through after that work’s been done, picks up the thinner branches and bundles them into convenient lengths.
Then this folows and picks up the big trunks.
I couldn’t get down to platform level. This is it from up the embankment after cutting but before clearing.
This is a platform level shot of roughly the same spot which I took last year. And here’s a post from a few years ago about a wander along some of the line they’re clearing out. The cover of Global Weirding used a photo I took at one end of the old station platform. I have some other pictures, but they’ll take a bit of digging out.
Entirely unrelated, but I saw this in the car park of the Four in Hand. I haven’t got a clue what it is, but I know enough war geeks that I might be able to get an answer. The yellow panel on the side is a warning about high voltage radio equipment.
the afv is an FV432 ex british army APC