The scout rode up the Culm Valley, across to Tiverton and down the Exe Valley, doing a refresher of the route taken by the “Tivvy Bumper” on the way.
“AF” and “FM” insulated containers, used by Lloyd Maunder, are often mentioned in the G.W.R. Letter Register which came from Tiverton Junction and was later kept as a Visitors’ Book in the railway’s Camping Van at Christow.
The scout turned off the road which he had last used when Tiverton Junction was open and followed Brown’s Bridge Lane.
The scout had passed Halberton on the canal towpath the previous autumn, while riding from Eggesford to Sampford Peverell.
It was only half a mile from the church to the former halt.
Halterton Halt
The diverted lane continues alongside the former line until it meets the Grand Western Canal, which also must have displaced the road.
The easiest way to reach Manley Bridge would have been along the canal but the towpath lay on the opposite bank. So the scout climbed away from the canal, only to descend and fly over it. He pulled up on Manley Railway Bridge, a little way beyond the canal.
When the scout emerged into the roads madness that has now invaded the railway junction, he did not stop to take photographs because he had already done so on an earlier Exe Valley ride.
Heavy showers were forecast and one started just as the scout was entering The Crusty Cob for a hot pasty and coffee.
He had left his bicycle in the covered alley leading to the Tivoli cinema, where, as a boarder at prep school, he and his chums went on a Saturday afternoon to watch a screening of “Where Eagles Dare,” the only film he saw there in six years.
The rain persisted until his lunch was finished and he kept dry on his ride down the Exe Valley.
Tiverton Museum
In June, the scout visited Tiverton Museum of Mid Devon Life and photographed pieces in its fabulous railway gallery. The annex was built around by far its largest exhibit, a 14XX 0-4-2T.
This was bought by Lord Amory after the closure of the Tiverton Branch and the loco stood for many years in an enclosure beside Blundell’s Road, where the cub scout must have walked past it dozens of times.
Stoke Canon Crossing
The scout made it back to the utilicon having clocked 44 miles.
The E. & T.V.R. scout, having on occasion sent a few photographs to the esteemed elders of the Cornwall Railway Society, in time rather got into the habit after his outings of submitting a short story, often under the general heading of “Route Learning” or “Route Refresher.”. Read more