savagethegoat wrote: » I'd rather we dwelled on the future rather than the past. Is there a future for Preservation in the Republic? The successes are few and most stock has "gone north".
savagethegoat wrote: » can we discuss the reasons why? Most preservation attempts in the Uk have started with the volunteers and built from there. There doesn't seem to be the will to start at grassroot level in the Republic. Many projects seem to want the land , per way and dosh given to them before they start..... So what is the problem? The UK seem to have progressive small groups, but pretty much everything there is in the Republic is stagnant
savagethegoat wrote: » that doesn't explain why the existing groups are not thriving though. I suggested to a group recently that they applied for access to a site on a caretaker basis to tidy up and start a volunteer base. No interest, because I suspect, they didn't want to work for the Council for nothing. You can't really expect the Owner to hand over a site to a totally unknown and untried organisation , so I thought this would be a good way to get a foot in the door. There's also the issue of having a totally democratic Society running the show. The feeling with this particular organisation was that Society Membership would not carry voting rights. I find that odd.
savagethegoat wrote: » i'm not out to name and shame, they tried their best. I'm just intrigued to know why preservation here doesn't work when it is so successful in the UK.
savagethegoat wrote: » can we discuss the reasons why? Most preservation attempts in the Uk have started with the volunteers and built from there.
railer201 wrote: » Whatever happened to the 'Oslo Bar' heritage group, a few years back now, who weren't exactly promising a heritage railway, but were into 'prospecting' for a suitable preserved railway line - and sallied forth shrouded in a cloak of secrecy to 'negotiate' with some landowners somewhere - and that's the last that was heard from them ? I'm afraid I concur with Del Monte on this one.
hurricanemk1c wrote: » as well as some unsuited people who power went to their heads or had a closed shop attitude to fresh blood
hurricanemk1c wrote: » May I ask a question? How many here have actually been involved in the preservation movement here? It is very easy to deride and down-play the roles of groups when you have nothing to do with them (or even that area). The two main failings behind all of the groups that didn't make it was money and people. Both lack of money and lack of people as well as some unsuited people who power went to their heads or had a closed shop attitude to fresh blood It's interesting to note that the two railways mentioned earlier, "the 'plaything' at Stradbally" and "the strange incarnation which is the Waterford & Suir Valley Railway" are the only regularly operating preserved railways in the Republic of Ireland that are a reasonable commercial success, as well as attracting young volunteers. Both have active social media accounts as well. Dromod is currently in a state of flux due to track work issues, T&D not operating, West Clare no-one really knows, Fintown is beautiful but remote (like WCR). However the efforts of those at those locations (Carrick-on-Suir is a workshop base rather than a railway) should be commended, with a lot of items preserved that would otherwise have disappeared many decades ago.
savagethegoat wrote: » welcome to the Forum. The two railways you mention actually have little to do with Railway Preservation, commendable though they are.
whisky_galore wrote: » many of the Irish public could tell the difference anyway as they're all 'choo-choo trains' and 'Thomas the Tanks' to them...even diesels...
5rtytry56 wrote: » more precisely most of the Irish public don't care to tell the difference....great day out for little Tommy
savagethegoat wrote: » some of them actually stand in the way of it.
whisky_galore wrote: » Esp. landowners are notorious and anyone suspicious of 'blow-ins' which is a feature of rural Ireland.