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John Hulme

Dec 02 2020

News from Alderley Edge ….

The Alderley Edge Station Volunteer group has organised the two digitally created art montages installed on the wall of the Manchester bound Station platform ….

Group co-ordinator Kelvin Briggs commented ‘ We want to make the station a more welcoming gateway to the village and this is our first project. Hopefully local residents, visitors and rail passengers will enjoy the images and the future plant displays we have planned .

The montage boards are the work of Stockport based digital artist Eamonn Murphy . They depict landmarks close to each station on the Crewe to Manchester line. Each of the boards features an iconic Alderley Edge building.

Kelvin said  ‘We chose the Queens Court building frontage because it was once the old Queen’s Hotel with a railway heritage going back to 1844 when built by the London and North-Western Railway Company.’

Artist Eamonn Murphy commented ‘Alderley Edge Community Primary School is a splendid building, with some interesting variations in brickwork patterns, lovely tracery, prominent bell tower and delightful ornamentation. It’s a hidden gem!’

The boards have been funded by donations from group members , a contribution from the Waitrose Community Matters green token scheme and support from the Crewe to Manchester Community Rail Partnership.

Northern Trains and the Department for Transport will be helping fund future platform planters and flower displays.

The Station volunteer group are to donate a framed print to the Community Primary school to support their fundraising for improved sports facilities.

The Station group are currently raising funds for future projects including more art works, and new volunteers are very welcome to join in.

Contact Kelvin Briggs for more information kelvinbriggs@btconnect.com

· Categorized: Uncategorised

Nov 25 2020

Watch and enjoy the 2020 Awards Evening ….

The Cheshire Best Kept Stations Virtual Awards Evening was launched on Tuesday 24th November at 7pm and can now be watched by dropping into our YouTube Channel.

We are encouraging you to use  #cbks2020 on social media.

The 30 minute video, is introduced by Jools Townsend, the Chief Executive of Community Network, hosted by Cheshire Best Kept Stations Chair Mark Barker and concludes with a salutary thank you by Her Majesty’s Lord Lieutenant of Cheshire, David Briggs.

Filmed at Hadlow Road, a former Cheshire station now on the Wirral Way, 18 awards were made with 10 commendations.

Click here to watch and enjoy the event

Click here to read, download and print our Souvenir Programme of the event

· Categorized: News Item

Nov 15 2020

Journeys from Goostrey Station ….

Journeys – a new display at Goostrey Station ….

The current restrictions mean that people are making fewer journeys by train.

To make sure that we don’t forget the excitement of travelling, Becky Cowell, deputy headteacher at Goostrey Community Primary School, has produced a new display at Goostrey station called Journeys.

Our local children are helping us to remember places we visited before the Covid-19 pandemic, both real and imaginary.

As you approach the shelter on the Crewe platform, there’s a large model of the Pontcysyllte Aqueduct  complete with boats. This was created by year 2 pupils as part of a school exhibition called Water. Inside the shelter are colourful press print images of trains which were produced by the same children.

In the corner of the shelter there’s a huge model of Big Ben made by a pupil from year 1 when the class was studying megastructures.  It stands beside a superhero car complete with comfy cushions that was designed and made by the Reception class.  It’s ideal for very special journeys!

The back wall of the shelter is covered with writing and illustrations about journeys. Year 5 drew pictures inspired by Henry Moore’s drawings of people waiting in the underground stations during the bombing in WWII.  Year 4 read a poem about journeys and then wrote about all the places that they would like to visit.  Here’s an example :

I would travel to Denmark to see the LEGO factory.  I would fly to Hawaii to see the lovely healthy palm trees. I would love to see cute baby turtles in Hawaii. I would like to go fishing to see the vibrant coloured fish.

The Railway Carriage by Robert Louis Stevenson stimulated year 3 to create their own poems.

Faster than horses, faster than a dog running for a bone
Passing the meadows, passing the shadows
And charging along like Usain Bolt
All through the towns, all through villages
Hills and houses, dips and nature
And all of the time, rain pouring and soaking
In the corner of my eye I almost see 
A station flashing right by me 

Year 1 complemented these poems with colourful collages of views from a train window, including some cute sheep! The children have also been studying Well Being and they made collages of peaceful places that you could visit if your day was not going the way you wanted it to.

Not to be outdone by the younger members of our community, adults have been busy too. At the moment FOGS members can’t have their monthly working parties but the tubs of flowering plants still need to be tended.

And the memorial plaque to Cyril Caulkin, our first Chair, has been repositioned on a less exposed wall beneath the Wild About Goostrey Gold Award. In addition, workmen from Network Rail have repaired some fencing.

· Categorized: Uncategorised

Oct 23 2020

Biodiversity at Goostrey Station ….

The Friends of Goostrey Station write ….

Many people would not include the words biodiversity and railway in the same sentence.

But Network Rail states that they take seriously the responsibility to maintain and improve the railway, while being mindful of the variety of wildlife on the surrounding land.

It’s surprising to read that Network Rail manages many Sites of Special Scientific Interest (SSSIs). For example, Feltham Marshalling Yards in west London is a nationally important conservation site for two dozen invertebrate species which include bees, beetles, flies and spiders.

Biodiversity means the variety of life – plants, animals, fungi, one-celled organisms, bacteria, viruses – and the habitats they live in.

The rural location of Goostrey Station means that there is a greater variety of plant species than at urban stations.

So there should also be a greater variety of life forms which depend on vegetation.

The rooks which regularly fly around and nest in the trees beside the Crewe platform are easily spotted.

But the identification of other animals needs more patience.

A recent surprise was that numerous woodlice and earwigs were sheltering between the wall and the memorial plaque to the first chair of FOGS, Cyril Caulkin!

Members of FOGS are keen to increase biodiversity around the station.

Plants such as Buddleia have been  added to the bank above the car park and, early in 2019, several bird and bat boxes were put up.

When Goostrey cubs held one of their weekly meetings at the station, they created three bug hotels to increase the habitats for invertebrates.

Later that same year, Goostrey Parish Council recognised the work by presenting a gold Wild About Goostrey Award.

FOGS members have taken the biodiversity project a stage further by using a Geographical Information Service (GIS) to record species and their location.  It uses free Open Source Software to create maps.

Sets of data are stored so users can monitor biodiversity over time.

The information collected can be analysed to see which species of birds are currently using the nest boxes and what types of bugs are living in the bug hotels. This year there’s been an increase in butterfly numbers, possibly because of the planting of butterfly-friendly plant species.

In spring 2021, FOGS members plan to erect more bird boxes and the GIS will be updated by adding the new locations.

Every month, FOGS members create a GIS map which is uploaded into the Wildlife section of the website at friendsofgoostreystation.org.

When these ideas were explained during a recent online meeting, there was interest from other ‘station friends’.

FOGS members hope to encourage other groups countrywide to adopt similar practices in the grounds of their own railway.

· Categorized: News Item

Oct 21 2020

Service Enhancement at Rose Hill ….

The Friends of Rose Hill Station and Goyt Valley Rail Users’ Association have made a case for Restoring and Enhancing the Train Service between Manchester and Rose Hill via Hyde ….

A comprehensive paper has been prepared to make the case for service enhancement on the Rose Hill route.

The groups are asking that this should be brought into the December 2021 timetable for a three year trial period.

A trial period uplift in the service to Rose Hill in 2016 to a half hourly service showed a rapid increase of approaching 50% in passenger footfall.

Click here for further details of this paper

 

· Categorized: News Item

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