![]() |
| If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|||||||
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
|
I visited the National Railway Museum the other day. The other visitors
were mostly family groups and old age pensioners. However a third group was noticeably well-represented. These were groups of men who seemed to want to cling together. They were largely dishevelled, unshaven, spotty, and dressed the way people in the fifties used to dress their adult mentally-handicapped sons. They had cheap cameras and notebooks. Some had spectacles that had been repaired with elastoplast. The cliqued anorak was well represented. Once in a while I would see an unhappy female, mostly either absurdly fat or thin, dragging along behind a group of the males. Yes, these were train spotters. I honestly thought the archetypal train spotter was a figment of the imagination. Incidentally the person I was with had brought a three year old child, and had come by rail from Doncaster. I helped him to get the child and the pushchair from the platform at York station to the museum, a short walk but with a ridiculous number of steps. He was quite happy though because the return fare was £13, but less happy when we got back to the station to find that the train to Doncaster was running 70 minutes late. After a day spent admiring the grandeur of the British rail network in its hay-day this brought us down to earth with a bump. Bill |
|
#3
|
|||
|
|||
|
Bill Wright wrote:
I visited the National Railway Museum the other day. The other visitors were mostly family groups and old age pensioners. However a third group was noticeably well-represented. These were groups of men who seemed to want to cling together. They were largely dishevelled, unshaven, spotty, and dressed the way people in the fifties used to dress their adult mentally-handicapped sons. They had cheap cameras and notebooks. Some had spectacles that had been repaired with elastoplast. The cliqued anorak was well represented. Once in a while I would see an unhappy female, mostly either absurdly fat or thin, dragging along behind a group of the males. Yes, these were train spotters. I honestly thought the archetypal train spotter was a figment of the imagination. Heheheh, it's not just trains .. Go down Old bawtry road from Finningley and see them all watching the 'planes .. or Flamborough head when a storm's coming in off the sea for the Twitchers, waiting in the storm for sight of a wind-blown rare bird .... I can still remember saving car registration numbers as a very young child .. they were still relatively rare in our (pit) village in the early sixties .. ![]() Incidentally the person I was with had brought a three year old child, and had come by rail from Doncaster. I helped him to get the child and the pushchair from the platform at York station to the museum, a short walk but with a ridiculous number of steps. He was quite happy though because the return fare was £13, but less happy when we got back to the station to find that the train to Doncaster was running 70 minutes late. After a day spent admiring the grandeur of the British rail network in its hay-day this brought us down to earth with a bump. There seems to have been a number of local (to Doncaster) stoppages and delays in the last few weeks, not least of which are down to cable stripping pikeys .. -- Paul - xxx "You know, all I wanna do is race .. and all I wanna do is win" Mark Cavendish, World Champion 2011. |
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
|
In article , Brian Gaff
scribeth thus I've never seen them myself but I do recall some years back a Police spokesperson for a very nasty set of attacks on trains thanking the trainspotting fraternity for being so observant and these reports of a person being instrumental in catching a very elusive individual so they are not totally useless, just perhaps a little bit odd. There are unfortunately similar people about who spot aircraft you know. And some take piccys of electricity pylons and TV masts even;!..... -- Tony Sayer |
|
#5
|
|||
|
|||
|
In message , Brian Gaff
wrote I've never seen them myself but I do recall some years back a Police spokesperson for a very nasty set of attacks on trains thanking the trainspotting fraternity for being so observant and these reports of a person being instrumental in catching a very elusive individual so they are not totally useless, just perhaps a little bit odd. There are unfortunately similar people about who spot aircraft you know. And there are the beer tickers who have an obsession with "ticking off" all the real ales brewed in the UK despite some breweries cynically renaming their beers each week just for those who want something different each time they visit a pub. The real sad cases are those who turn up with plastic funnels and empty pop bottles at beer festivals and those who post endlessly to virtually dead Usenet groups and mailing lists documenting all the beers they've "tasted" in previous week. -- Alan news2009 {at} admac {dot} myzen {dot} co {dot} uk |
|
#6
|
|||
|
|||
|
Paul - xxx wrote... I can still remember saving car registration numbers as a very young child .. they were still relatively rare in our (pit) village in the early sixties .. ![]() Over the summer holidays of 1960 we had a car number collecting competition at our school: http://g.co/maps/4nhv8 I think the winner had 22 or thereabouts, but there were accusations that he had made some of them up:-( I can imaging our modern equivalent sitting by the M25 with his laptop and ANPR system, or maybe not. -- Ken O'Meara http://www.btinternet.com/~unsteadyken/ |
|
#7
|
|||
|
|||
|
I used to take pictures of tv masts and even foreign test cards as well.
Still have the latter actually. What kind of spotter does that make me? Brian -- Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email. graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them Email: __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________ "tony sayer" wrote in message ... In article , Brian Gaff scribeth thus I've never seen them myself but I do recall some years back a Police spokesperson for a very nasty set of attacks on trains thanking the trainspotting fraternity for being so observant and these reports of a person being instrumental in catching a very elusive individual so they are not totally useless, just perhaps a little bit odd. There are unfortunately similar people about who spot aircraft you know. And some take piccys of electricity pylons and TV masts even;!..... -- Tony Sayer |
|
#8
|
|||
|
|||
|
Do you know there are even people who look at rotting wrecks of trans, or
locomotives and look carefully at rivets, apparently enthralled by the different types? Surely this has to be some kind of illness? Mind you I think most people do go through a phase like that. Its just unfortunate if they alight on something a bit strange to categorise and study. With me when I was young it was radio valves and later on transistors. Brian -- Brian Gaff....Note, this account does not accept Bcc: email. graphics are great, but the blind can't hear them Email: __________________________________________________ __________________________________________________ __________ "Paul - xxx" wrote in message ... Bill Wright wrote: I visited the National Railway Museum the other day. The other visitors were mostly family groups and old age pensioners. However a third group was noticeably well-represented. These were groups of men who seemed to want to cling together. They were largely dishevelled, unshaven, spotty, and dressed the way people in the fifties used to dress their adult mentally-handicapped sons. They had cheap cameras and notebooks. Some had spectacles that had been repaired with elastoplast. The cliqued anorak was well represented. Once in a while I would see an unhappy female, mostly either absurdly fat or thin, dragging along behind a group of the males. Yes, these were train spotters. I honestly thought the archetypal train spotter was a figment of the imagination. Heheheh, it's not just trains .. Go down Old bawtry road from Finningley and see them all watching the 'planes .. or Flamborough head when a storm's coming in off the sea for the Twitchers, waiting in the storm for sight of a wind-blown rare bird ... I can still remember saving car registration numbers as a very young child .. they were still relatively rare in our (pit) village in the early sixties .. ![]() Incidentally the person I was with had brought a three year old child, and had come by rail from Doncaster. I helped him to get the child and the pushchair from the platform at York station to the museum, a short walk but with a ridiculous number of steps. He was quite happy though because the return fare was £13, but less happy when we got back to the station to find that the train to Doncaster was running 70 minutes late. After a day spent admiring the grandeur of the British rail network in its hay-day this brought us down to earth with a bump. There seems to have been a number of local (to Doncaster) stoppages and delays in the last few weeks, not least of which are down to cable stripping pikeys .. -- Paul - xxx "You know, all I wanna do is race .. and all I wanna do is win" Mark Cavendish, World Champion 2011. |
|
#9
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 13:28:40 +0000, Alan
wrote: The real sad cases are those who turn up with plastic funnels and empty pop bottles at beer festivals and those who post endlessly to virtually dead Usenet groups and mailing lists documenting all the beers they've "tasted" in previous week. How can a group be virtually dead if some people are posting endlessly to them? Steve -- Neural network software applications, help and support. Neural Network Software. www.npsl1.com EasyNN-plus. Neural Networks plus. www.easynn.com SwingNN. Forecast with Neural Networks. www.swingnn.com JustNN. Just Neural Networks. www.justnn.com |
|
#10
|
|||
|
|||
|
On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 15:08:58 -0000, "Brian Gaff, probably.."
wrote: I used to take pictures of tv masts and even foreign test cards as well. Still have the latter actually. What kind of spotter does that make me? Brian A eurocardy? Do you have a copy of the card produced by Rank Cintel for 625 testing? Now that one is rare. Steve -- Neural network software applications, help and support. Neural Network Software. www.npsl1.com EasyNN-plus. Neural Networks plus. www.easynn.com SwingNN. Forecast with Neural Networks. www.swingnn.com JustNN. Just Neural Networks. www.justnn.com |
| Thread Tools | |
| Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads
|
||||
| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Sharp’s Quattron LCD flat panel comes with four pixel colors instead of the usual three | UCLAN[_2_] | High definition TV | 9 | August 22nd 10 10:57 PM |
| Virgin Media Box - ITV worse than usual | Dr Hfuhruhurr | UK digital tv | 0 | May 17th 07 02:45 PM |
| Local dealer shows usual ZERO knowlledge | Deep Thought | UK digital tv | 1 | April 30th 04 12:28 PM |
| Best ways to train TiVo? | Marshall | Tivo personal television | 4 | March 26th 04 07:21 PM |
| Rigger's Diary - off topic as usual | Bill | UK digital tv | 4 | September 26th 03 03:42 AM |