The Semi-Retired Foamer has been a railfan since he was around 5 years old, oh yes a very young age, an age when one really should avoid being involved with the gunzel community to any great extent. A few rather unsavoury people bringing that fact home.
After a few decades of train chasing, one decided to break with protocol and get married, thus leading to a severe cut in railfan activity.
Subsequent dealings with hate breeders, lunatics, mental defectives and self-appointed preservation overlords lead to an even greater decrease in my hobby participation.
However things have changed thanks to our small group of trusted mates, interest has returned, and now I have become a bit more involved yet again.
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Over the years I have tried my best to further both the hobby, as well as the friendships that it brings. I have done this by setting up proactive groups both here in Australia, as well as the Philippines. It is with huge honour that I am often considered the founding father of the railfan hobby in the Philippines (my second home).
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I don't take the hobby too seriously and I am a friend to anyone who is good and genuine. But never forgive those who have used their hate to destroy my hobby or hurt the friends within it.

Let's Make The Hobby Great Again!
I aim to share the era that I considered mine, the 80s and 90s. I also like to help promote, and even raise funds for, the various heritage societies that keep the era alive
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**** LOCOMOTIVE/ PUBLICATIONS ****
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We occasionally publish information on the locomotives, and rollingstock, from railways in Australia and the Philippines.
All are available for
FREE at our ALR WEBSITE.




Please email me should you wish to use anything from this site !



Wednesday, May 27, 2026

ALBUMS: INFRASTRUCTURE NSW PT3

 




Welcome back, you glorious infrastructure perverts! 🚉
It is with deep, deep regret that I present to you the third instalment of the New South Wales Railway Infrastructure Series. Yes, somehow we’ve made it this far. I’m as shocked as you are.
As I’ve bored you rigid with in previous episodes: over the many, many decades I’ve spent hanging around waiting for trains (because apparently patience is a personality trait now), I tended to point my camera at other stuff during those long, silent, soul-crushingly dull stretches of absolutely nothing happening.
You know the drill – stations, signals, complicated track layouts, signal boxes… blah, blah, blah. Thrilling, I know.
And as I also never shut up about: I have an endless mountain of these photos and absolutely nowhere else to dump them. So sadly, you lot have to take one for the team and suffer through them all. Consider it your community service for having excellent (if slightly questionable) taste.
I’ll do my absolute best to make sure this isn’t the single most mind-numbingly dreary experience of your entire life.
 No promises though. 🤷‍♂️
Putting these sites together does take an immense amount of time and effort.
If you even find some moderate amount of enjoyment would you consider giving us even a little bit of 
Pretty please :-)


A lovely silhouette Yass Junction station on the Main South line taken late one afternoon while returning from one of our many south trips. 
Photo: Brad Peadon


Above and three below.
Robertson station on the cross country line from Unanderra to Moss Vale. 
Opened: 1932
Photos: Brad Peadon




The panel that has been very useful in times past when waiting endlessly for a train to photograph. 
Photo: Brad Peadon



Two above and two below.
Former Abattoirs branchline in what is now the Homebush Bay area of Sydney. 
The lower images are the once very smelly Abattoirs itself.
None of this area is remotely recognisable today.
Opened: 1926
Closed:1984
Photos: Brad Peadon




Wattamondarah on the now closed Cowra line. 
Opened: 1891
Closed: 1975
Line remained open for grain and special train usage until 2011 when severe flooding wiped out  some of the line between Cowra and Young.
Despite reopening announcements, as usual nothing has happened.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Weston signal box on the South Maitland Railway has become the victim of some local ferals.
While looking bad here, recent images show it looking a heck of a lot worse today. 
Weston opened in 1903.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Above and four below.
Tumbarumba yard as it appeared way back in April 1991.
Haven't got an exact date as I have still to find that notebook, but it was April 1991 and likely on the way back from a Melbourne trip. Am looking for those notes as well :-( 
Today the yard is the end of one of those rail trail things and it can be seen here on Googly Earth.
Opened 1921
Photos: Brad Peadon






Above and below.
If only space was not a problem, Temora has always been one of those locations I've dreamed of modelling.
Just a great yard, in a lovely part of the Riverina.
Not as lovely as Cootamundra mind you, but lets face it, nowhere in the world is :-) 
Opened: 1893
A museum now exists in the station building.
Photos: Brad Peadon



Thought to be Junee, but in reality I wouldn't have a clue yet. 
So just enjoy the semaphore and the lighting for now.
Photo: Brad Peadon


8242 and 8207 approach the lovely bridge over the Paterson River as it approached the town of the same name. Paterson that is, not River.
For the whingers, I am standing at the publicly accessible King Street level crossing.
Opened: 1911
Photo: Brad Peadon


Gosford station which I am told looks vastly more different today. 
Opened: 1887
Photo: Brad Peadon


 The former Redhead railway station in the Newcastle region of our beloved state was once part of the private Belmont railway line, serving the local coal mining communities and beachside suburbs south of Newcastle. Opened in the late 19th century, the station became an important link for both passengers and freight before the line gradually declined, with the last portion from Lambton Colliery (Redhead) eventually closing in 1991. 
  Bit of a bummer as, for many years, we would always start our Newcastle area trips with visit to the equally closed Toronto branch, then make our way around the lake to here.
  However, some time before closure, some vermin torched this building and left buggar all. 
  I guess that is even worse than the earlier Weston Signalbox, at least the shell of that survives. 
Today, much of the old railway corridor has been transformed into the apparently popular Fernleigh Track walking and cycling path, with Redhead’s railway history still remembered by locals and gunzels alike.
Opened: 1916
Photo: Brad Peadon


Redhead platform today.
Image: Google


Above and below.
Belmont line again, this time the Park Avenue crossing at the very start of the line and not long after closure. 
Below the scene today.
Photo: Brad Peadon
Image: Google



Wingello is a station David Henderson and I hung around a lot in the 80s. Unlike today, it had a signalman (signalbox at the far end of that main building), and an up refuge, the signalling for which is just visible.
That refuge was on a bit of a grade, so the sound of ALCos and EMDs climbing out with heavy limestone trains was a noise to behold. 
Opened: 1871
Still in daily use with the appalling Goulburn service stopping on it's way through.
Photo: Brad Peadon


Above and three below.
 Another place I spent a fair bit of time hanging around—especially through the late 80s, 90s, and well into the 2000s—was the former Neath station and signal box on the South Maitland Railway.

Back in its busier days it was a double-track junction, but by the final years of the signal box things had slimmed down to a single line, with part of the old down road still being used to shuffle coal trains from Pelton, the last surviving mine on the line.

Once the box closed, the remaining bits of the second track were lifted, and the ability for trains to cross there disappeared with it. Fast forward to today, the last colliery is gone, and Aurizon now owns the line, using sections of it to store wagons. I’ve also heard that a bridge just beyond Weston is currently in such poor condition that it restricts any further movement—so if that’s correct, Neath has effectively gone from a once-busy junction to a very quiet overgrown part of the network, even for storage moves.

As can be seen, yet more of that vermin has been entertaining themselves with the final relics, greatly helping have been the starving termites that are playing their part.
Photos: Brad Peadon





The busy junction location of Moss Vale (NSW Southern Highlands).
Opened: 1867 
Photos: Brad Peadon
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All who travelled with me back in the day, and those who still do.

 




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