Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Heart of Wales Line


# The heart of Wales Line crosses the 18 arches of the Cynghordy Viaduct near Llandovery | Route: Shrewbury to Llanelli about 110 miles; Notable passengers: livestock, Historically; Dining car: a trolley service sometimes operates; Sit on: the left-hand side for view up to Sugarloaf Mountain.

ONE of Britain’s remotest railways, the heart of Wales Line by some miracle survived the closure of Britain’s rural lines in the 1960s. what remains today is a railway line time-warped from a bygone era: stations where you have to ask nicely for the train to stop, tracks where weeds sprout between the sleepers and viaducts beneath whose arches sheep shelter from driving rain. To see it  for yourself, jump aboard a westbound train at Shrewsbury – passing by medieval manor houses and tumbling green hills, stopping at handsome spa towns like Llandrindod Wells and Llandwrtyd Wells, where Victorian gentlemen one disembarked to exfoliate themselves. The journey then skirts the western edge of the Brecon Beacons National Park before the train draws to a halt in Llanelli – a town which this year hosts the annual elebration of Welsh culture, the Eisteddfod. Special services ca noccasionally be found chuntering up and down the line on weekends-this April sees a train hauled by ‘Black fives’, the historic steam locomotives that once served on the railway.
Arriva Trains Wales operates normal services on the Heart of Wales Line from Shewbury-Llanelli (arrivatrainswales.co.uk). The Railway Touring Company operates its steam hauled ‘Heart of Wales’ special on 12 April (railwaytouring.net).

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