
Britain's five best slow train journeys
Two hundred years ago in a small market town in north-east England, something happened that had never been seen before: ticket-holding travellers boarded carriages and eagerly awaited as a steam locomotive hauling passenger cars began to slowly rattle along wrought-iron tracks. The locomotive-powered series of cars and carriages was called a train, and this first 26-mile journey in 1825 from Darlington to Stockton birthed the modern railway and forever changed the world.
The bicentennial of this momentous event was the impetus for author, traveller and train enthusiast Tom Chesshyre's most recent book, Slow Trains Around Britain. For more than 20 years, Chesshyre has been riding the rails across the UK and around the world, totalling more than 40,000 miles in all.
Chesshyre recently sat down with the BBC to talk about his new book, what still makes rail travel so alluring and his favourite "slow-train" rides (regional train trips) in Britain.
What inspired you to write Slow Trains Around Britain?
Well, it's a simple one, really, because it's the 200th anniversary of the first public passenger steam train! We, the British, invented the trains. It was a proud moment.
I've been interested in railways for some time. It's a slower way [to travel]. You see places off the beaten track out of the train window. But it was the anniversary that really inspired it.
Considering that trains are a more eco-friendly way to travel than flying and people are increasingly concerned about their carbon footprints, do you think we're on the verge of a resurgence in train travel?
I think we've got a way to go. As long as the flight prices are so cheap, it's very tempting if you're in Britain to fly to Barcelona. You could fly there maybe for £60 return. But to get a train, it might cost £150 each way. The prices are so against it. However, there's a pass in Europe called the Interrail Pass, which is offered by a company called Rail Europe. In the past, it used to be mainly youthful backpackers, but I think now people are aware that if they've got two or three weeks off, they can book one of these rail passes and have an adventure around Europe by taking trains. Buying these passes makes it more affordable.
The other thing is the high-speed train networks in Europe have [gotten] much better. Spain now has the best high-speed network in Europe, so now most people in Spain would not consider flying from the north to the south.Why do you think travellers remain fascinated by trains?
There's a kind of nostalgia for the golden age of trains, when there was a kind of Agatha Christie feel: plush velvet seats (they were normally in the first class) waiters with bow ties and a mystique. This was very much where princes, royalty, celebrities, writers, actors and the aristocracy of Europe used to ride around on trains, say, from the 1890s to around the Second World War. This was the glamorous way of getting about, and I think in the back of people's minds, there's a belief that there's a kind of romance connected to train travel.
You've [still] got these beautiful old stations, too. People may go to a station such as St Pancras in London with all this beautiful Gothic style, and they think: 'This is a beautiful setting.'
Do you have a favourite international train trip that you've taken?
Just for the sheer adventure of it … I enjoyed the Trans-Siberian Railway. I went from Moscow to Beijing, which was many thousands of miles; it took nine days. I liked it because you could see the scenery. We went into Siberia; we went above Mongolia. And when you're on a train for that long as a writer, I met all sorts of characters.
I was confronted by a drunken Russian who was unhappy with me for some reason I didn't understand. I got to know the people who worked at the dining carriage and how the waitress was having an affair with the steward who ran the carriage. The actual train [becomes] its own ecosystem. I got to see the beautiful Ural Mountains, these industrial cities with their smokestacks, the great big pine forests and the expanse of the tundra. [It was] a sleeper car for eight nights, nine days, so this was quite an adventure.
What do you hope readers take away from your book?
Well, [train travel is] a way of getting about that opens up parts of the country you might not normally see – not just in Britain, but anywhere. And if you use a train line as a kind of means of getting about, you can stop off, and you don't have to worry about traffic jams. You don't have to worry. You're not having a big carbon footprint.
You're not stressed out in a car, you can read a book, you can visit places that you wouldn't really see [otherwise] and I think we rush around so much in our lives that it's time that we should think about slowing down. There's no need to hurry, and that's what trains allow you to do. So just take it slow.
These are Chesshyre's favourite slow train rides in Britain.
Overall favourite: Inverness to Thurso on ScotRail
Inverness is in the middle of Scotland, and then I went all the way up to the most northerly station in the whole of the UK, which is called Thurso. You go through this kind of moorland, almost like a kind of desolate landscape. It's really awe-inspiring and so quiet. You feel like you're taking a train and disappearing from modern life, leaving it behind. It's not an expensive ticket either; it's a regular train. You end up in this little town overlooking the Atlantic Ocean up there, and it's just a feeling of escape. (Interested? Check out this recent BBC Travel story: Scotland's most remote railway adventure.)
Most picturesque: St Ives Bay Line
The most picturesque of all was probably just the short journey from St Erth in Cornwall to St Ives, which is a kind of [an] old fishing village that all these artists went to live in. You go along this clifftop with a beach down below and all the waves crashing on the shore. You must sit on the right going in and on the left going out if you want to get the perfect view.
Most fun: Craven Arms to Llanelli on Transport for Wales
Going through the middle of Wales, it's called the Transport for Wales train line. You'd be [starting] in a place called Craven Arms and [going] as far as a place called Llanelli. This journey took about three hours, but it was on a Saturday evening, and people had brought their beer or wine and their snacks. I kind of sat, and I watched as people began singing some Welsh songs. [It became] a singalong!
More like this:• The return of Mexico's famous Tequila Express train• The Baltic Express: Central Europe's new hop-on hop-off train• How the bullet train transformed Japan
It wasn't like people were getting drunk; it was just kind of jolly. It was only one carriage for this train, so there was a small little party going on as the darkness fell, with the green hills around us on a very remote line. It was a very happy experience.
Best for history buffs: New Romney to Dungeness on the Romney, Hythe and Dymchurch Railway
There are lots of these heritage lines; they're kind of like the old steam trains. You have in Britain 170 [of them], which is unbelievable, heritage lines covering around 600 miles. These are special little lines that might only just be open at the weekend.
One of them went from a place called Hythe in Kent to Dungeness, which is where there's a former nuclear power station. It's tiny, and they have what are called 'narrow gauges'. So it's not the big, wide train, like a normal train. It's narrow … a 1-ft or 2-ft-wide track. It was created by an eccentric aristocrat who had a lot of money and decided to build a little toy train just for himself. It was like a little baby train. So, that was maybe a historic train line that I wouldn't have discovered if not for the book.
Best for rail enthusiasts: North Yorkshire Moors Railway
There was one place called the North Yorkshire Moors Railway that is up in the north-east, near the Stockton and Darlington, where I began the whole journey.
In the 1960s, when motorways came along [in the UK], it began to basically make railways not so important. There was a massive cutback in railways in Britain. There were as many as 23,000 miles of train tracks, and now there are only 10,000 miles of train routes. But on one of these routes on the North Yorkshire Moors Railway, rail enthusiasts reopened it in the 1970s.
So, you can go along this little train track with all these old steam trains through beautiful moorlands, very remote. Lovely bracken and gorse on the hillside, and you see the steam trailing past the carriage windows. I was allowed to go in where they put the coal in, you know, and actually see the furnace at the front.
At least 30,000 people volunteer to help these [old steam trains.] They're not for profit, most of these things. It shows that 200 years on, there is still a lot of respect and pride in Britain for the fact that trains were invented here. That was quite touching to see.
This interview has been edited for length and clarity. --
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Times
18 minutes ago
- Times
Airport staff paid bonuses to catch passengers with oversized cabin bags
Airport staff are earning cash bonuses for catching out easyJet passengers travelling with oversized bags, a leaked email has revealed. An internal email has revealed that staff at Swissport, an aviation company that runs passenger gates at airports, were notified they were 'eligible to receive £1.20 (£1 after tax) for every gate bag taken, effective immediately'. The email, seen by The Sunday Times, was sent to Swissport employees working at seven UK airports in Belfast, Birmingham, Glasgow, Jersey, Liverpool and Newcastle. It introduced them to 'the easyJet gate bag revenue incentive', which is 'intended to reward agents doing the right thing' and would result in 'payments made directly to employees'. The email was sent in November 2023, and the policy is still in force. For staff concerned about meeting targets, 'internal tracking will be used to identify opportunities for further support and training for individual agents, but will not be used negatively'. It was signed — with a 'Thank you for your ongoing contribution to the success of easyJet' — by Dean Martin, a Swissport station manager at Glasgow airport. The email and its contents was first reported by the Jersey Evening Post. Ground handlers employed by another aviation company, DHL Supply Chain, at Gatwick, Bristol and Manchester airports also have a remuneration package for identifying non-compliant easyJet bags. The employees receive 'a nominal amount' per bag. EasyJet, which last year made £9 billion in revenue, allows passengers to take a small bag that fits under their seat for free. Larger bags can be put in the overhead lockers for prices starting at £5.99. For a one-way flight this week from Gatwick to Palma, Mallorca, the cost is £32.99. The financial incentive for boarding-gate staff applies if they catch a passenger whose bag is deemed too big to be taken into the cabin, either because they have not paid to take a larger suitcase on board or because their free hand luggage is too large. Boarding gates at airports usually have a metal box with the dimensions of baggage allowed on the plane. Passengers boarding flights are asked to check their bags in the box. Many travellers complain that they have been forced to pay an additional fee for their bags, and sometimes put their bags in the hold, despite their luggage seeming to meet the correct dimensions. In some cases it has led to furious rows at the boarding gate. EasyJet charges £48 at the gate — £1.20 of which is paid to the ground handler. The airline does not have oversight on the commission paid to DHL Supply Chain or Swissport staff because both companies manage the payments directly with their employees. Emily Thomas Adderson, 44, flew with easyJet from Gatwick to Athens with her husband David, 44, and their three daughters, Lily, 8, Poppy, 10, and Daisy, 12, for a half-term holiday. But the family holiday got off to a bad start after all five of their bags were seized by boarding gate staff for being too big to fit beneath an airplane seat. The family, who live in Guernsey, had to pay £240 to take the bags on board. Thomas Adderson said this was despite their bags being within the free hand baggage size and fitting inside the measurement box by the gate. When on board the plane, Thomas Adderson said she put her bag under her seat anyway. 'There is no rhyme or reason for why you get singled out,' said Thomas Adderson, who works in finance. 'They are so aggressive and then say you can join the back of the queue and not board the plane if you want, so you have to just give in and pay. 'I don't know what the secret is but I am sure there must be an incentive to get people to pay extra. There is never any kindness or human approach to the process, you just get targeted in the queue. 'It is hard enough to travel now and it has just made us really question doing that sort of thing. We haven't been away since.' On the last day of the holiday, the family's hire car was broken into while they were sightseeing at the Acropolis and all their bags were stolen. 'So we didn't have to fight the flight attendants on the way home,' Thomas Adderson said. A spokesman for easyJet said the bags were 'marginally outside the gauge' but apologised to the family and refunded the extra charges. Swissport has passenger services at 17 airports in the UK and its staff are stationed at more than 200 airports worldwide. The aviation company also provides ground handling services for Ryanair, Tui, Lufthansa and Vueling. Ryanair said it did not offer a financial incentive to Swissport staff at its gates, but did not respond to multiple requests for comment on whether it has an agreement with other third parties to which it contracts ground handling services. Lufthansa said it did not offer financial incentives to its boarding gate staff. Tui and Vueling have not yet responded to requests for a comment. Swissport ground handlers earn about £12 per hour. One former Swissport passenger service manager, speaking on condition of anonymity, said he and his colleagues had no choice but to police the line on oversized baggage. 'Confronting people with excess baggage is like taking on fare dodgers,' he said. 'You risk abuse or worse — imagine stopping a group of lads on a stag weekend and telling them, 'I'm going to have to charge you more than you paid for your tickets to check those bags into the hold'.' • Hand luggage: Ryanair, easyJet and British Airways policies explained Luggage has become a lucrative tool for airlines and bags can now cost more than the plane seat. Size allowances differ, depending on the airline, and several have shrunk in recent years. However, last week, Ryanair announced it is increasing its allowance from 40cm x 25cm x 20cm to 40cm x 30cm x 20cm, which equates to 24 litres. Last month, the EU proposed new rules that would allow passengers to bring one personal item, such as a handbag, backpack or laptop, and one item of cabin baggage weighing up to 7kg on board free of charge. The change, which would apply to any flight taking off or landing in the EU, still needs approval from 55 per cent of member nations. Coby Benson, a solicitor at the consumer law firm Bott and Co, said he welcomed the proposals because 'transparency and fairness in airline pricing must be the priority'. He added: 'For years, passengers have faced premium charges simply for bringing a carry-on bag on board. Baggage charges have quietly become a major source of revenue for airlines, often catching passengers off-guard. 'The revelation that airport staff are receiving financial incentives for seizing non-compliant cabin bags only adds to the perception that the system is stacked against consumers.' Swissport, which also offers cargo handling services, is owned by various private investors. It revenue last year was €3.7 billion, an 11 per cent increase on the previous year. Its head offices are in Zurich, Switzerland. A spokesman for Swissport said: 'We serve our airline customers and apply their policies under terms and conditions for managing their operation. We're highly professional and our focus is on delivering safe and efficient operations, which we do day in and day out for four million flights per year.' A spokeswoman for DHL Supply Chain said the company requires 'all colleagues to consistently adhere to [the easyJet baggage policy] and this is recognised as part of their remuneration'. She added: 'Doing so ensures we provide a smooth travel experience for every passenger.' A spokesman for easyJet said: 'EasyJet is focused on ensuring our ground handling partners apply our policies correctly and consistently in fairness to all our customers. 'Our bag policies and options are well understood and we remind customers of this when booking, before they travel and on their boarding pass, which means a very small proportion of customers who don't comply will be charged at the airport.'


BBC News
26 minutes ago
- BBC News
Fire breaks out at Shanklea Primary School in Cramlington
Firefighters are tackling a blaze at a primary school, which started in the solar panels on the Fire and Rescue Service (NFRS) said the fire began shortly before 14:00 BST at Shanklea Primary School in Cramlington and five crews were sent to the said the solar panels on the west side of the building were ablaze but no-one had been County Council could not confirm whether the school would open on Monday but said it would support "any arrangements that need to be made". Pictures taken from the scene show large plumes of black smoke billowing out of the building.A spokesperson for NFRS said: "Crews used two hose reel jets and a covering jet to attack the fire, along with four firefighters wearing breathing apparatus."The fire service was supported by Tyne and Wear Fire and Rescue Service. Northumbria Police and the North East Ambulance Service were also in crews remain at the scene. Follow BBC North East on X, Facebook, Nextdoor and Instagram.


The Sun
38 minutes ago
- The Sun
Aldi's £8 middle aisle bargain will keep your kids cool & entertained for hours in the summer sun
IF you're looking for a way to keep your kids entertained in the summer heat, Aldi has just the thing. This garden buy will provide hours of entertainment during the school holidays. 2 Whether you're working from home or trying to catch up on chores, this Specialbuy is sure to give you some peace in the hot weather. Aldi shoppers can pick up a Sandpit for just £7.99 from Thursday, July 10. This middle aisle buy is described as "multi-functional", making it a worthwhile investment for parents. "This Sandpit shell could be used as sandpit or as paddling pool for hours of fun in the sun," the product description read. Product details The blue shell is approximately 18 centimetres deep, making it safe for most children to use. However, you should never leave smaller children unattended around any pool, even one this shallow. Simply place this shell in your garden and use your garden hose to fill it up. Then everyone from your children to your pets can take a dip to cool down. And you can even park up in your garden chair and soak your feet at the end of a long day. Sandpit Alternatively, if the temperature drops a few degrees, you can convert this shell into a sandpit. Again, avoid leaving young children unaccompanied in this contraption. Pick up a few buckets, spades, and toy diggers and you can guarantee hours of fun for your little ones. Just be careful to avoid a viral parenting trend that involves swapping out sand for a more hazardous material in your sandpit. Other summer buys Plus, an easy-to-store paddling pool is also available from The Range for just £8.99. And The Sun tested a variety of paddling pools currently on the market. IT can be really difficult - and costly - to keep kids cool when it's hot outside. But Fabulous Digital Senior Reporter and mum-of-two Sarah Bull shares five ways to help, and they won't break the budget either. Strip them off It might sound simple, but stripping kids off at home can really help them regulate their temperature when it's warm outside. Just remember to regularly apply suncream, as more of their skin will be exposed to the sun. Cool down bedrooms before nighttime When it's hot outside, it can be difficult for kids to go to sleep - especially if their bedroom feels like an oven. If you have a room that's not in direct sunshine, keep the windows open to let in a breeze. It's also a good idea to keep the curtains closed, to prevent the room from heating up. Wear a hat Another simple technique, but one that really works. Make sure that if your kids are playing outside, they've got a hat on. It keeps their face and head shielded from the sun, and also helps if you've got a little one who struggles with bright sunlight. If your tot struggles to keep a hat on, try one with a strap that goes under the chin to help. Avoid the car The car can be one of the hottest places during a heatwave, and often takes a long time to cool down. If you have the option, it's better to stay at home rather than taking kids out anywhere in a hot car. Stay hydrated This is always important, but even more so in a heatwave. Make sure you're regularly reminding your kids to have a drink, and top them up with cool liquids whenever you can. Use ice too to ensure it's as cold as it can possibly be. The price of a popular paddling pool has been slashed ahead of the summer holidays. And you can even pick up a paddling pool for just £1.99 this summer season. Plus, a £5 cooling gadget available from Home Bargains that's a hot weather must-have. Five more heatwave gadgets that are currently on sale for £15 or less. Aldi also has a £15 gadget that keeps your home cool all summer long.