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14-Oct-2024
 
Version 1 (Sunday): From Colby

Ironically, it was Manx Gold that alerted me to the presence of a standing stone and a fort very close to where we're living... So we decided to look for them on our hilltop route to Port Erin:

fort
Maybe the remains of the "fort" referred to here

menhir1
Definitely the megalithic standing stone

menhir2

view1
Fab views all the way

view2

view3

view4

quartz1
Quartz is everywhere here

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trainview1
And you get to see the steam train!!

trainview2

On the way down you amble past gorgeous little houses:

house1

house2

house3

And once you've eaten your sandwiches on Port Erin's upper prom, and had a cup of tea in the Whistlestop Coffee Shop, you can catch the train back to Colby:

loco1
It's impossible to ride on too many steam trains... And every time I return to the Island, I'm surprised all over again by how tiny they are

loco2

dome

chimney

carriage

diesel
One of the photos inside the carriage. This was taken at St Johns, scene of golden childhood memories. Nigel says these diesels are probably collectors' items now, but back then this was NOT the train you wanted...

peel
Peel Station

snow
These guys were clearing snow

psm1
The ride

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steam1

cats

whistling

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departing

I've talked already about the immense nostalgia that steam train rides evoke for me. They're bottled childhood. Incomparable.

Version 2 (Monday, aka today): From Port St Mary

You can take field tracks from the edge of the Island's southeasternmost town to its southwesternmost equivalent, stop for a break at the Whistlestop again, and take a different set of paths back:

sunrise
Awesome start to the day, by the way

redhouse
Heralding fabulous colours

trainleaving
A different engine today (only for watching this time)

hills1
Heading back, with glorious views

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morequartz
More quartz

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More fuchsia

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halftree
The amazing suspended tree...

stile
One of the BIG stiles you have to negotiate on this route

Idyllic.