Apart from the fatality and the injuries, this one was an interesting case.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/1996_Stafford_rail_crash
The chaos of the immediate response and the madness of trying to negotiate the responsibilities through the maze of privatised owners and service providers were (hopefully) salutary lessons.
The chap who lived in the house that the 86 hit was a friend of a friend. He had been out earlier to clear off a load of kids kicking a football against his wall - he heard the thud of the loco hitting the outside skin of his cavity wall and went out to tell them off again, only to find "a railway engine, with a bloke still in it".
The legal cases went on for years and were never really resolved completely.
Numbers comes into it. There's a lot of people on the Big Island, but as potential volunteers and as potential visitors.
Living in both places, I know more people in Ireland actually involved in heritage activities of various kinds than in I do in England.
There are cultural issues, too, railways just aren't 'as important' to people in Ireland
It's a matter of what is possible and viable. If people aren't interested as volunteers or visitors, than so be it, unfortunately perhaps...
There shouldn't be much carbon available, mostly just some from the lubrication.
CO and CO₂ emissions should be fairly low, surely?
The carbon in the air will be mostly CO₂ already.
I remember dealing with some French students in Stafford in the 90s.
Asked for their general impression of the area, they had a chat amongst themselves and, overwhelmed by the amount of brickwork everywhere, the answer was "It is very brown".
Further - on the way to Iceland...
This just popped up for me. I've not seen it before, but others probably have.
1911, apparently.
I thought Guinness used to have a smokier taste years ago...
HS2 is Hydrogen Sulphide - the smell of rotten eggs - and few things are more rotten than HS2...
Last time I worked out the cost on the declared amounts at the time, it was around £1,000 per centimetre, barely enough space to write my name on my bit.
I won some tickets in 2013, so I felt obliged to go.
I found it to be a bit of an ordeal, but it certainly was worth going - and I would be regretting never having gone now, if I hadn't gone then...
When I said "car rallies" above, it wasn't really people charging along dirt tracks, it was more old motors parked up in fields and being tutted at by the "better owners"...