Ashes to Ashes

News Stories and Press Releases.

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mow
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Ashes to Ashes

Post by mow »

As seen on Points West etc


Drivers rail at trainspotters' last journey
By Simon de Bruxelles

IT IS the last thing an avid trainspotter would want when he reaches the end of the line.
Services on a Somerset steam railway are being disrupted because drivers are having to clear piles of cremated remains off the track.
The owners of the West Somerset Railway are appealing to bereaved relatives not to deposit their loved onesÆ remains on the line. At least eight mounds of ash, most accompanied by flowers, have been found on the track since the start of the summer.
They are believed to be the mortal remains of steam enthusiasts whose last wish was to be laid to rest within earshot of a locomotive.
Mark Smith, the managing director of the West Somerset steam railway, said: ôI have seen piles of ashes. They are quite large and are often accompanied by flowers.
ôIt puts our drivers in a difficult position because they worry that they may run somebody over while they are on the tracks and workers donÆt want to touch the cremated bodies because itÆs a health hazard.ö
The picturesque 20-mile steam route runs 32 journeys a day carrying hundreds of passengers between Minehead and BishopÆs Lydeard in Somerset. But drivers are having to stop in case the dear departedÆs relatives are still in the area.
Mr Smith said: ôThe last thing we want is another dead body because they were trying to carry out the last wishes of a steam enthusiast. It must stop.ö
He added that steam enthus- iasts can instead request that their remains are shovelled into the engineÆs firebox and puffed out of the funnel. ôWe receive many requests to place ashes in the engine. We are happy to oblige as long as it is organised and done with reverence.ö
Chris Richardson, 63, a steam train enthusiast, said that the incidents showed the lengths that people will go to in order to be near trains, even after death. He has been a trainspotter since the age of 8. ôTrainspotting is not just a hobby,ö he said. ôFor some people it is their life ù and death. It is quite common practice to have your ashes scattered as near to a train as you can. I knew someone who bought a ticket, booked a seat for his urn, and his family had to sit next to it for hours on his favourite route.ö


Pasted from <http://www.timesonline.co.uk/newspaper/ ... 04,00.html>

http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/somerset/4226234.stm
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madhattie
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Post by madhattie »

Well!

10 out of 10 for the weirdest news story I've read this week :shock:

I think when I croak I'd like my ashes chucked off a boat somewhere off the south coast, but if I was going to go for a railway theme then maybe I could have them chucked on the fire of a 9F as it stormed out of a restored Bristol-Bath route via Mangotsfield...

ah well, I can dream... 8)
mow
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Post by mow »

I visited the Churnet Valley Railway in July, and the LNWR Super D was in charge of the services. During the course of a conversation with some staff on the CVR, I was told that ashes of one of their recently deceased team had been blasted out all over Staffordshire by this engine
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