Scottish Daily Mail

A long trek to Olympics

- Mike Anderson, Worcester. Compiled by Charles Legge

QUESTION How did the Olympic sailing and showjumpin­g competitor­s get their boats and horses to Tokyo?

This was a major logistical challenge. As well as 12 horses, sailing boats, canoes and rowing shells (as they are known), Team GB had 13 rigid inflatable boats (RiBs) with outboard motors to provide support on the water.

On top of all the sporting equipment for the other events, the team took 13,000 rounds of ammunition, 600 mattress toppers, 132 sofas, 40,000 tea bags, 28 Union flag deckchairs and a red telephone box.

For the horses alone there were eight tonnes of haylage (a replacemen­t for hay) and six tonnes of feed, plus their favourite treat — 450 tubes of Polo mints.

Very few of the competitor­s carried anything other than their personal clothing in their luggage. Everything else was air or sea freighted, including team uniforms. Thirty shipping containers were used.

The horses were transporte­d with stable staff and a vet in a freight Boeing 747 fitted with stalls to prevent them from moving about and harming themselves or placing the aircraft at risk.

Before departing, the horses went through a mandatory one-week quarantine, but didn’t have to isolate on arrival. They travelled by road to Liege, Belgium, before flying to Japan with horses from other competing nations.

sailing boats were shipped in containers for the five-week journey. Masts were removed and some were broken down into shorter sections for easier handling.

Except the equestrian­s, competitor­s had reserve equipment in Britain so they could continue training until their departure for Tokyo.

The person responsibl­e for getting all the horses for Team GB to Tokyo and back again was the chef d’equipe (or team leader) Di Lampard MBE. Mark England, Chef de Mission for Team GB, was responsibl­e for overall logistics.

Robert Sutherland, Northampto­n.

QUESTION Scientific­ally, how does scratching your head help your thought process when solving a problem?

hEAD scratching is thought to be a displaceme­nt activity that brings comfort. The familiarit­y of a routine behaviour and the comfort of touch can help calm you in a stressed situation.

A 2017 study at Portsmouth University suggests head scratching might be an outward manifestat­ion of an animal’s emotional state and, as such, might provide a social function.

They found that macaques scratch their heads when stressed, which acts as a signal that makes other macaques less likely to attack or harass them. head scratching might act as a warning to keep away when we’re deep in thought.

Sally Walker, Oxford.

QUESTION Are there any abandoned railways in Britain with rails in place?

ThERE are railway lines, some up to several miles long, which are not in use, but still have the rails in place.

Usually, the lines closed before and during the Beeching cuts of the 1960s had their rails taken up quickly. This was ostensibly done for the scrap value of the rails and resale value of the land, but many believe it was also done to remove any chance of reinstatem­ent.

There followed building and road developmen­t on many sites, making it unlikely the rail routes could be restored.

British Rail and its successors were less keen to take up the track. Freight services continued on many lines for decades after passenger services were axed, and now some of these have been mothballed with the track left in place.

Notable examples include Gaerwen to Amlwch, Gobowen to Oswestry, Blaenau Ffestiniog to Trawsfynyd­d, Leek to stoke, March to Wisbech, and Thornton to Leven, which are subject to proposals for reopening as part of the national network or heritage lines.

Other lines with their track left in situ are officially abandoned. An example in surrey is the line from Woodside to sanderstea­d, which was closed in 1983. The northern section was reinstated in 2000 as part of Croydon Tramlink, but the southernmo­st mile has been left to nature.

Bob Bell, Croydon, Surrey.

ThE line from West Kirby to hooton was a victim of the 1960s’ cuts and has become the Wirral Way for walkers, cyclists and horse riders.

however, the track has been retained at Willaston for the length of the platform. hadlow Road station has been renovated to its 1950s heyday and is worth a visit.

Richard Barlow, Wirral.

ThE track survives that took travellers along New holland Pier to connect with ferries to hull before the opening of the humber Bridge in 1981. On the other side of the humber, you can see rails embedded in the Tarmac from the narrow gauge spurn head Railway, which featured in Andrew Martin’s novel, The somme stations. Tim Mickleburg­h, Grimsby, Lincs.

A sECTiON of the former Wye Valley Railway, which closed in stages from 1959 to 1992, had almost two miles of rails surviving until recently, including through the 1,086m Tidenham tunnel.

The trackbed has been converted to the Wye Valley Greenway foot and cyclepath, with only 600m of overgrown rails near sedbury.

The rails remain through the disused 1.5-mile Victoria tunnel in Liverpool, the former North staffordsh­ire Railway between silverdale and Keele and at the long disused Llanthony swing

Bridge in Gloucester.

 ?? ?? Medal: Charlotte Dujardin and Gio competing in the dressage at Tokyo
Medal: Charlotte Dujardin and Gio competing in the dressage at Tokyo

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom