
We took the train from Bowral to Sydney yesterday, as a kind of test run for the future. Living just 100 kms from Sydney we thought we might reduce driving and use public transport.
We had enquired the day before and were told by the Station Master time of departure and cost which for us seniors was a mere $2.50 return. Wacko, who could refuse an adventure of this nature? Next day we got up early, all excited about the coming day. Arrived a bit early at the station and bought our tickets. When the train arrived we were surpised how new it was and spacious. Many people hopped on-board incuding an elderly couple. The husband had a brand new dark blue checkered shirt with razor sharp pleats still visible on the sleeves. One almost expected the white collar bit of stiff carton to still be peeking from the back of his shirt.
The train took off on a rather somber and overcast day. We weren’t going very fast but time wasn’t important and we settled nicely. It took us past many stations including the one of killer Milat notoriety. The houses there were somewhat dilapidated looking with yards full of junk and cars propped on bricks with large dogs barking at the train. Bargo, Tahmoor, Dapto, Yerrinbool and many others we passed by. This was the train with only 4 stops between Bowral and Central, Sydney.
At one stage I noticed a very optimistic notice board on a terracotta roof. Painted on a large sign in bright blue was written; FUNERAL DIRECTOR and telephone number. The sign faced the train so it was clearly designed for the traveler but I wonder how many would get their address book out and scribble down the phone number. Who on earth would have that kind of foresight?
We arrived after almost 2 hrs (This is the fast Country Link) and sauntered down the platform but no ticket inspection. We walked up towards the Town-Hall soaking in all the changes since the last time we were there. As usual, there were huge cranes and dog-men directing great concrete panels hovering above building sites. In all sorts of nooks and crannies were available coffees and cakes. Backpackers were spilling over the footpaths busily sending texts and pictures of exotic Australia back to Japan or Sweden. Many were with those towering backpacks and some, which is’ par for course’ in going overseas, squatting down on the pavement cross legged.
Also, a disturbing increase in homeless, some with cardboard notices explaining their plight, others just oblivious to it all and seemed sound asleep. At the entrance to Myers was a small colony of homeless with mattresses and blankets, shopping trolleys, empty big M bags and a profusion of polystyrene containers. One desperate homeless and bearded man held up very bravely: FAMILY COURT VICTIM!

We were getting hungry and noticed a pub advertising food. It might have been called the King George but Helvi just now assures me it was The Edinburgh Castle. All patrons were seated. This is one of the most baffling cultural changes in Australia, where not that long ago, everyone in pubs would always be standing, except for some blue hair coloured patrons in the “Ladies Lounge”.
Not only were all seated they were also enjoying their beverage with food. We ordered two Heinekens with one Rump steak and one Chicken snitzel, both with chips and salad. This was about 1pm and the hotel was chockers, so were all other eating and drinking venues. What a buzz.
We decided to head home after this excellent lunch and slowly sauntered back to Central station where a sign told us to go to platform 23 for Bowral. Train after train did arrive but not a sign of anything going towards Bowral. We walked back to the entrance and a Rail Information Lady took it upon herself to guide us towards a train. Platform 23 is where you go to Cambelltown and then change over, she said. Oh, we did not know that nor was this indicated on the electronic sign or loudspeaker. She then went out of her way to say why you don’t get on the Country Link at 3.48PM. This leaves at platform 3.
There is a huge distance between both platforms, so we decided we needed another schooner to remain hydrated. This was lovely, seated away from the humidity of the Sydney Station in a air conditioned and licensed premise next to a McDonalds. I had the courage and gall to brazenly also ask for two fifty cent smooth-ice cream cones. Helvi declined, how can you drink beer and lick ice-cream? I gave hers to a homeless looking man who also did not lick it. We finally walked to the platform and this smooth ice cream in its cone was still un-licked and might still be sitting on the table as far as I know.
After seeing a young man with both legs cut off below the knee and heavily bandaged attended to by an ambulance officer on a mobile phone, we decided to hop on the train. That same couple, with the husband’s sharply creased shirt were also in our wagon. Perhaps they were doing the same as us. Perhaps they might even have taken down the number of the Funeral Director? Who knows?
The return was just as good but we were feeling pretty shagged by the time we arrived back, which was at 6pm. I noticed that in the morning the train came from Canberra and the afternoon train was also destined for Canberra. There wasn’t a buffet or possibility for any water or a coffee on board, which is a bit rich if you are going Sydney-Canberra. It could be that after Bowral a buffet car would be linked to the train.
Who knows?
What I loved best was going to work by ferry from East Balmain to the city, my two girlfriends travelled on the same one which made it even better…Allison was usually late but the ferry did not leave without her…
I remember her running down the hill and putting her make-up on the run so to speak, the green eye-shadow ending up on her cheeks at times.
Those were the days when we did not need any of that 😉
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I wonder if the picture of the train is Barry O’Farrells idea of public transport once he becomes premier.
Since starting a new job last september I’ve take to traveling by public transport. Buses from the end of the street and 30 minutes to the city. I haven’t traveled to work by public transport since the late ’80s. I find it relaxing most of the time.
I have even taken to catching a ferry three days a week when I drop Algernonina the older of for her early periods at school. What a joy at the start and the end of the day.
Fortunately when I do take a train I’ll take Central coast or Newcastle train if I’m traveling to central. Algenon Junior took a train home from Newcastle recently when we had a short break at Port Stephens. The train left there at 2:40 and he was home by 5:30. The train fare for a student was $3.90 and the bus the 2km from the station $1.70. It would have cost me more in petrol to get him to the station.
Great story Gez.
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I grew up in Harbord, so the only public transport for me was the occasional ferry trip. When I was a kid these trips were on the old Scottish built ferries, such as the South Steyne. These were so robust that they sailed out from Scotland under their own steam, and were capable of traversing the harbour in any weather conditions, although they were sometimes taken out of service if the passengers were going to get seasick!
Trains from Newcastle to Sydney? Hopeless and expensive. Last time we went to the Opera House it was cheaper to drive and park at the Opera House parking station. Novocastrians go on about getting a fast train. We can’t even get one that gets there on time! Interestingly, during the Sydney Olympics, one could get from Newcastle to Sydney in about one hour and forty minutes. this feat of efficiency evaporated with the closing ceremony!
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Little has changed from Harbord Big M, the buses struggle over the Spit bridge and military road is a carpark.
I think $3.9 for a student from Newcastle to the city is pretty cheap. I’d suggest its well below cost. I believe the adult fare is $7.8. Even if you double that I couldn’t drive from Newcastle to Sydney for amount. Junior did say that the train ran 15 minutes late. As for the Opera House wwell the last time I parked there last November it was $32.
Are you sure that it took 1hour 40minutes for a train to travel friom Newcastle to Sydney during the Olympics. Hornsby to Central on an interurban is 25 minutes with only a stop at Strathfield. That would leave 1 hour 15 minutes from Newcastle to Hornsby. Even if it hardly stopped it would be travelling at around 160kmh for more than half the trip. I couldn’t drive from the same points in under 1.5 hours.
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Getting technical Algy. Never let the truth get in the road of a good story 🙂
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I wasn’t trying to have a go Hung. I’ve recently started taking public transport to work after driving for more than 20 years. It’s much maligned. Besides the parking station across the road from work charges $149.50 for 8 hours + parking (not that I’d park in the city)
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Understand young fella, just having a laugh. It takes me 45 minutes across town and I whinge, all relative I guess.
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Oh and $3 a trip
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Test
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In the bus
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Licence back on 4th March
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Been a naughty boy Hung.
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Gave away too much information Lord Algernon
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The man with his legs missing, all bandaged up had not lost his legs there and then. The problem seemed that he arrived, god knows how, at Central Railway without the means to go forward or to any further destination.
He had no wheel chair and no crutches. I am not sure what finally happened but even with crutches, when both legs are missing?
It seems that Country travel seems totally different here. Many seem to be very poor or lost and train travel in the country is some sort of travel as a last resort, not having the means to drive or own a car.
Perhaps the legless man was carried by someone and just put into a seat, more or less abandoned to his fate. He was a young man, perhaps early forties. Anyway the ambulance person would have organized something, I hope!
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Did they send his legs to Wollongong by mistake?
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Yes, the Bowral-Sydney not quite the Genoa-Stockholm Trans Continental but at least not those irritating pass-port controls.
Still, those trains then were providing passengers with a choice of foods, including small bottles of Chianti, freshly cooked chicken and crispy bread rolls.
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What about heroin, cocaine and bottled water Gez?
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Gez, one time I was studying for a masters in history and philosophy (never quite finished it) and my HPS professor praised my writing saying that reading it was like being in a conversation where the speaker actually heard the questions and the comments in the reader’s head.
That’s so often the case when I read pieces like yours. Despite our vastly different (but curiously linked) lives, it resonates with me and elaborates on my own similar experiences. Reading your stories brings me right into the picture.
I think it’s that kind of train – of thought,
Many thanks. Like Jules, I enjoyed it too.
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Thanks for your kind words, there is nothing like praise to bring the best out.
Did I tell you, traveling Genoa-Stockholm by train and getting close to meeting up with Helvi again, I started to preen and groom, trying to put my tie on, when the passenger seated opposite me, got up, and kindly helped me adjust my tie? He was Italian.
Nice thing to do. I couldn’t imagine Scott Morisson ever doing this somehow to an Afgan.
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Dapto?
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Yes, Dapto has mysteriously jumped a track or so, appearing now in The Southern Highlands. Just shows my recall of geography going to the dogs. What next?
Still, Bargo, Dapto, it’s only a small error.
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Two hours one way is okay I think for a day trip. If you take a picnic basket and a good book (and a nice wine in a flask for the way home?) A trip to Kinokuniya bookshop, and a few hours of browsing their stands…
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Yes, the train to MacArthur Square’s ‘Borders’ will be soon in the past. This one smack in the middle of Campbelltown was huge, a double storey affair with coffee lounge and cakes galore. All will be gone, and some will just grow into their chairs ordering books on-line with the walk to the letterbox the only exercise.
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True, but you could imagine Tony Abbott doing it to a pig
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Pingback: The Slow Train to Sydney « Oosterman Treats Blog
Gorrrd, can’t go anywhere without being photographed; that’s me in the pink t-shirt and carrying a red bag, the one on my left is Gez, carrying a green supermarket bag.
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Well, you beautiful people do generate a lot of interest!
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Fancy carrying a red bag with a pink T-shirt, next you’ll tell me you’re finish.
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One would think hat a trip from the Tablelands to town would be delightful,but, alak, wrecked cars on bricks, junk and junk yard dogs, with the funeral directors to top it off.
Decades ago, when I was a callow youth, people with yards backing onto the train lines used to be very house-proud (or, garden-proud) with all manner of topiary, flower beds, etc..
The railway folk don’t seem to be too keen on promoting train travel. They view every passenger as some sort of potential pest or trouble maker.
Lovely writing!
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BM, sitting in a train in Holland I used see all these neat vegetable gardens, after while the whole started looking like one…there must be a lot of vegetarians living here, I thought.
We now have TWO of those Bunning’s veggie boxes, made of treated pine…Little Holland in Southern Highlands.
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We of course took the precaution of buying some water at the station. $ 2.99 for a small bottle. But what would tourists make of having booked a trip to Canberra and finding not a drop of water available for a 5 hr trip? That’s apart from the lurching back and forwards, left to right and the grinding noise of unaligned wheels or suspension not oiled.
Of course, Helvi’s reading of Mortimer’s ” Clinging to the Wreckage” and our train trip, would ensure no amount of horror would ever prevent us from train-travel anywhere in the world.
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PS. May I add something VERY important : most girls wore ballet flats and tights, some girls with skinny legs had shoes with heels as high as a double-decker buses.
I ran through the biggest department stores, both eerily quiet; the well-groomed make-up girls were grooming each other, others were gossiping in small groups behind clothes’ racks.
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One almost expected the white collar bit of stiff carton to still be peeking from the back of his shirt.
You don’t get cardboard collar stiffeners at Lowes.
Nicely written though gerard. I think that you’re improving with age.
……………………….
So that’s what they call a group, or a gaggle of homeless men: a colony.
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A colony is perhaps a bit overstated. I just thought to impress that they seemed to be together,of bedding and blankets all shared. Certainly a disheveled lot of men. At Central there were a few including a woman without foot wear but she did have a pram but no baby, just some belongings.
Another lost looking man was charging his mobile of which there are several powerpoints provided to do so.
Thanks for the compliment Jules.
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I wood have thought it wood be a colonoscopy of homeless men especially for you Jules
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You made it sound very cheerful, the usual Funeral Parlour references, young men with legs cut off, the fifty cent ice cream that sadly no one wanted…
I was busy checking for possible naughty t-shirts for Mel, and reading John Mortimer’s Clinging to the Wreckage most of the time to take in too much misery 🙂
Not quite the trip to Tuscany or Venice, I say!
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