Jo spent another day today supervising and working at the recovery of the remaining bricks from Avonmouth. Here is Jo's report:-
Hi Bill,
I am
pleased to report that we had a very successful day at Avonmouth. I was a bit
worried to start with, as my team of willing men shrank as the hours went by, until
only 4 were left at 7.30 this morning. And then, out of the blue, a phone call
from John S just as I was picking up Mike, that he was free and could come to
help. Brilliant ! So 5 able men arrived on site, with 20 new dumpy bags in the
boot. We threw ourselves at the 6 broken bags scattered about the old
marshalling yard, and within the hour, all were re-bagged with new.
We then
cast a critical eye over the remaining 38 bags and decided to rebag several
more. In order to save on costs, we had been too keen to accept gifts of second
hand bags, and under a critical eye they were not up to scratch. We re-bagged
those too.
At 11.00
the Barry Proctor lorry arrived. We waited for him at the port gate, and then
led the huge truck through the port to the old GWR sidings. We were in a
groove, and nothing could go wrong now. How pride does come before a fall…..
the Moffett wouldn’t start. Nooooooo! Turning the key just produced a ’click’.
I heard quite a number of these clicks, I didn’t want to hear them any more,
and turned away. Tomorrow is good Friday, then the Easter weekend, and Tuesday
the BPC contractors come to take over the sidings, and we are prevented from
accessing it and all our bricks would be lost. Disaster! More clicks, then a
long silence. Suddenly the Moffett roared into life – Yesssss!!!
On Tuesday
during the first collection, we lost a large percentage of bags – about one in
four – to broken loops. Having scratched our heads over this, we were armed
this time with two plastic drainpipes slit down their length, which we pushed
over the forks to create a loop friendly round surface. This worked a treat,
and during today’s session we lost only one bag, and one broken loop, easily
fixed (you can tie a knot in them, if broken in the middle). The loading
proceeded steadily, although taking nearly three hours, given the careful
manoeuvering over the old sidings. At the end of the day we had loaded every
single bag on site, including several new ones (from bricks removed in an effort
to lighten the loads on some of the older bags) and one bag of S & T gear
found lying about the site.
At 14.30
the lorry left Avonmouth, and we raced ahead to meet it at Broadway. Here, two
of us unloaded everything in only 1 ¼ hours, and we now have a large pile of
dumpy bags of engineering blues in the open area to the right of the drive. 28
bags on the first day, and 38 on the second. 66 bags of blues in all.
We were
very happy with the services of Barry Proctor, and recommend them to anyone.
Their towing unit is beautifully painted, their drivers are lorry enthusiasts,
aand they attend rallies too. Drivers are required to take their shoes off
before they climb into the cab! And just nice people to deal with. Thank you!
Thank you
also to everyone form the BAG that gave a day at Avonmouth. We couldn’t have
done it without you. 7.500 bricks, imagine that. Many hands make light work,
and we did it as a team. Thank you to all of the players, and see you on the
next project (I have something pencilled in J )
Jo
I can only reiterate Jo's words - a fantastic job, not least by Jo himself who kept at the task until it was completed.
6 comments:
Thrilled to see such a final conclusion, having helped in a very small way in the initial brick gathering. Well done all.
Chris Crump
Thanks for helping, Chris!
As my young son once said, reading Dr. Doolittle's birds make an island with grains of sand:
"some's not much, but lots of somes....."
Brilliant team work and well led.
Fortune favours the braveWell done gents all.
Tremendous achievement by Jo and his team, congratulations to all, hope they have an Easter off, though I think unlikely !!
Amazing.
Well done for getting all that you did in such a tight space of time! good to see some S&T stuff was picked up too (I'm guessing for Broadway)
I wonder what the next "project is"...
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