Sometimes I come back from a trip out on the trains positively champing at the bit to type it up. I'm almost in a fugue state, hammering away at the keyboard, memories and impressions flowing out of me. Sometimes, however, I return from a trip and think: what am I going to say? Not everywhere can be inspiring. Some places simply exist.
Welcome to Landywood.
So that's nice. As is seemingly always the way with art on the West Midlands network, I can find absolutely no information about who designed or commissioned it, so my apologies to the artist involved. Landywood does have a sign pointing to it which is in ALL CAPS, which is horrible, but that's as notable as it gets.
It is, in short, a perfectly ordinary halt on the British rail network. Which is fine if all you're doing is using it to catch a train, but I'm trying to extract content for a not even slightly popular blog here.
Actually, there's one slightly interesting fact about Landywood station: it's not in Landywood. That's a village to the south. The station is actually close to the centre of Great Wyrley, a mining village redeveloped into a satellite suburb in the Sixties for the workers in the city. Avenues of semis and bungalows on roads called Sunbeam Drive and Paddock Lane curl their way from a small low shopping centre with a Co-op and a local Italian restaurant.
The Davy Lamp pub, constructed along with the rest of the estate as the hub, was closed and gone now. Not quite gone: it had been converted into a Bargain Booze, so the local alcoholics will have to take their cheap drink back to their homes rather than enjoying it with convivial company. Maddeningly, the signs for the old pub remain on the side of the building, a reminder of what you once had, like keeping your ex's name after they left you.
It was all very familiar. It was like wandering round the streets I grew up on, a nice little Sixties run of homes that had front gardens and driveways and a quiet sense of pride that their occupiers were on the ladder up. The countryside brushed up against the homes, close enough to play in and make you feel rural, but distant enough that you had all mod cons. I'd cycled down these roads, chatted aimlessly for hours in them, gone to school on these pavements, and the fact that mine were a hundred miles away from here didn't make them any different.
Soon I was in Landywood proper, with its older cottages and a narrow road without a pavement. A Methodist Church with beams stood at the side, its noticeboard plugging its coffee morning ("be assured of a warm welcome"), its minister and church chief contact both women - a fact that used to be so unusual they made a whole sitcom about it, and now it's pretty much the norm.
As so often when I'm in the West Midlands, I was headed for a canal. The Wyreley and Essington Canal twisted its way through the countryside of South Staffordshire for decades but, as with a lot of waterways in the region, it never made much money. After nationalisation the canal was one of the first to be closed and now most of it is unnavigable. Branches have become clogged and abandoned. At Landywood, the route has been turned into a country park.
I sank beneath the road and onto a small path that ran along the narrow, stagnant canal. With no flow to reenergise it the water had become clogged with plants and debris. Trees tumbled into the course and stayed there to rot. Meanwhile, the towpath was awash with damp fallen leaves, concealing a thick layer of mud.
I ducked branches and pushed through bushes. My heavy boots squelched in the mess. It was dark and silent, the grey sky flat between the branches of the trees. Beneath a bridge, the rain had caused the canal to burst its banks, almost covering the path. I splashed through.
The path ended with a dog leg path, designed to stop cyclists from getting access, and concrete blocks to try and minimise fly tipping. I was chucked out at the side of the road beside a sign telling me I'd reached Bloxwich. There was a Jet garage with its own Londis - no doubt the source of all those cheap beer cans - and then Bloxwich North station was hiding under a bridge. There was another piece of art on the totem - a waterwheel, I'm assuming. Seriously West Midlands Trains, just a little plaque, that's all I need.
Some genius had decided to put the ticket machine right in front of the station sign, meaning you could only actually see it from a limited angle. I wedged myself in for the legally required selfie.
I went down to the platform - past a Millwall sticker and a sign from West Midlands Police warning me not to loiter because there had been complaints - and went into the shelter to wait for my train and eat my sandwich. It's that time of year when the stores wheel out their festive offerings and I eat them all. I'm an absolute sucker for a limited edition, fully aware that I'm going to get my heart broken when I find one that's incredibly tasty and they whisk it off the shelves on Boxing Day. This was a Christmas Club from Marks, which had the twin benefits of being both tasty and giving a portion of the profits to Shelter, allowing me to feel ever so slightly virtuous as I stuffed my face.
The trip to Bloxwich itself - no compass direction needed - took only a couple of minutes; indeed the guard didn't even have time to work her way down the carriage to check my ticket before we'd arrived. (Once again I spent an entire day out on the trains and not one single individual checked my ticket the whole time. I'm a fool buying them. I could save a bomb just winging it. Of course I'd never do that, and I can assure you that any Ko-Fi contributions are spent on train related antics and not a summer house in Antigua.)
Bloxwich's Wikipedia page is really down on the place: it has an entire section headed "Deprivation". I prepared myself for the worst. Once I'd snapped a picture of the totem art...
It was busy, too. There were plenty of shoppers about, and a queue out of the door of Greggs. I much preferred Allmarks further up the street that sold the kind of bargain cakes full of colour and flavourings I didn't think you could buy any more. Which would you rather have - a blueberry muffin from a generic coffee shop or a jam donut for sixty pence? Their window display also carried a "synthetic cream donut" for £1.30, and I found that use of the word "synthetic" charming. None of your crème pat nonsense, this stuff comes out of a squirty can, and you bloody love it.
I'll be honest: there was one feature of Bloxwich that I was absolutely dying to see, ever since I'd done a bit of idle googling. After the death of the Princess of Wales, a local stonemason, Andrew Walsh, crafted a tribute to her. His day job was a funeral director and he turned to his usual materials to craft the statue, which he intended to present to Walsall as a suitable memorial. He turned out... this.
Well.
It's quite a good likeness, if you ignore one teeny tiny element. Walsall wasn't amused, and refused the gift. Earl Spencer was livid. A decision was made by the transport authority to put it in their brand new bus station, but when they consulted with the Palace over the wording of the memorial plaque, they were politely informed that they couldn't erect it.
Andrew took his statue back. He removed the veneer, to make Di a little bit less shiny, but still nobody wanted it. So he put her up outside his funeral home and that's where she remains to this day.
I had to see it, of course. If someone crafts a statue to the late Princess of Hearts off their own back and sticks it in a car park outside a funeral home that is the very definition of camp. It's right up my Straße.
Nothing could really top that, so I headed back to the station. I had read that Bloxwich was famous for its many pubs, but every one I passed was closed, and I didn't fancy going to a Wetherspoons. I wasn't that desperate for a pint. For once. Instead I returned the way I came, trying to think of some over arching theme for the blog post I would eventually write. I never did find one.
4 comments:
Well I enjoyed your blog.
And bless you for that!
You do usually manage to make a silk purse out of a sow's ear. Your choice of geography for this tranche of stations has meant you will face many such ears (and I was born in Brum, so I can say this!)
As long-time columnist Peter Rhodes put it in the Wolverhampton Express and Star during the Walsall Bus Station controversy, the problem with that statue isn't that it's black. It's that it looks like Denis Nordern.
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