2010: "Great Australian Railway Journeys" |
as shown on this Maximum Card trundling through dense forestation above the King George River. The reason I have chosen this card is because the photograph shows perfectly the rack and pinion system used on this narrow gauge track to be able to travel through mountainous terrain (steepest gradient 1 in 15). To be more precise it is an Abt rack and pinion, invented by someone living in an even more mountainous country, the Swiss engineer Roman Abt and first used on the Harzbahn, Germany in 1885. It is also the system used on the Snowdon Mountain Railway which takes you to the top of Wales' highest peak, which brings me to another small train in a country which is full of narrow gauge tracks
2014: Classic Locomotives of Wales |
near Bethesda in Wales from the 1880s until 1962. Although Blanche is much altered mechanically since that time she and Linda are still working and carry passengers on the Ffestiniog and Welsh Highlands Railway. Their brother Charles is in the Penrhyn Castle Railway Museum.
An entry to the Sunday Stamps II theme of "Riding the Rails", travel to Violet Sky's "See it on a Postcard" to see more here.
6 comments:
Great selection. I had no idea Australia had rain forests - just shows my ignorance of the country's geography. Fascinating story behind the line's restoration.
And in the US trains are rarely on stamps, while in the UK there are many issues. Intriguing how different countries view rail differently.
Despite there being so many GB train stamps i have none of the recent issues and had never seen the Welsh trains from last year.
Good on ya, Aussies.
wow! you have quite a few trains here. I'm not as lucky because I only have one to share.
Willa @ Postage Journal
My Sunday Stamp:Train
I did manage to get on a steam train in Wales when I visited there, but have no idea anymore which one. Perhaps I have a photo with the name on it. I do remember how giddily excited I was Even though I'd just spent hours on a train from Glasgow and would later spend more hours on a train getting out of Wales to Reading, that little steam was the best one!
Looks like there would be beautiful vistas on that train ride!
Great stamps!
And the postmark is a real beauty, too.
(btw, FinnBadger, you surprise me! :-) Australia indeed has rainforest (the north is close to Indonesia), with the famous fascinating Cassowary - one of my many favourite animals :-)
(this said, I must confess that I don't know much about geology or even geography of your country...))
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