Tunnel of green

If I told my daughter about the train journey, she’d sound excited and want to do it. And maybe we would in a few weeks time, then after a minute on the train she’d say, dad, this is so boring. It was the same with the record cleaner; I’d built it up to be the most exciting thing ever, which I still think it is, but after cleaning one side of one record she’d said, dad, this is so boring.

The train journey was from Truro to Falmouth Town. Admittedly it doesn’t exactly have the same exotic ring about it as the train journey through the jungle we did from Cusco to Machu Picchu in Peru, but it wasn’t far off.

The rattly old train hurtles south towards the coast. For most of the 20-minute journey we are surrounded by lush, verdant foliage. The bushes and trees are alive and moving as the train whooshes past them. The foliage is alive, obviously, but more than that, it seems to jump out of the way of the train. The plants, trees and bushes seem to enjoy the train speeding past, blowing them out of the way. It’s like they're waving with their leaves. Most of the journey is like this, with the foliage really near to the train and the banks really high, so really the journey feels like a tunnel of green.

Except for the flowers. There’s part of the journey where it’s all about the flowers. Huge foxgloves, mainly, but also, maybe, rosebay willowherb or clematis, I wouldn’t really know, or care. But their pinks and purples are overwhelming. Then there’s the giant echiums (also known as viper’s-buglosses) – slim, long, wavy towers of pink flowers with spiky green leaves sticking out, as big as the ones at Trebah Gardens that have a plaque by them for being so big, but these are just on the side of the railway line, swaying in the wind the whizzing train creates. They don’t seem natural, all the blurs of pink and purple, but like candyfloss and sweets from Charlie and the Chocolate Factory, perhaps.

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