Thursday, October 16, 2025

Those Pesky Pirates


5:30 a.m.

I’m sitting on the train, rocketing through the pre-dawn darkness. I can see nothing out the windows — just velvety blackness and my own reflection. I’m having coffee in the cafe car, and although the train allegedly has internet, I’m told that it’s spotty so I’m writing this offline and will cut and paste it into Blogger once we get to Penzance. Of course I left my glasses in our room, so I’m also typing blind! (With greatly enlarged font size, though it will hopefully look normal by the time you see it.)

So far, it’s been a good trip, and I did sleep for a couple of hours at a time in my upper berth. It’s long enough to stretch out and the cabin is surprisingly quiet — just a few creaks and squeaks as we move.


The cabin is ridiculously small, though. Dave and I have just enough room to both stand up next to our berths, and God forbid we need to change clothes or put on shoes. Our elbows and knees go knocking into everything, including each other. It’s a study in economized space, with a sink beneath a tabletop and a closet just deep enough for a single jacket. We barely have room on the floor for our backpacks. It’s a good thing Olga isn’t with us because she’d never fit, although as Dave said, she would have loved it. I guess if we had bigger bags they’d go in a luggage car somewhere.

This train is officially known as the “Night Riviera,” which sounds quite elegant, but I’ve seen no one in evening clothes, drinking champagne or playing baccarat.

(In fact, a guy just came into the cafe car wearing a sweater and an orange toboggan covered with enamel pins of trains. A trainspotter! He’s carrying a camera on a tripod.)

We seem to be moving quite fast, but maybe that’s an illusion. We left Paddington Station (photo above) at 11:45 p.m. By 2:48 a.m., we were here…


…somewhere near Curload, just west of High and Low Ham, and south of Chedzoy, Middlezoy and Westonzoyland. (Henceforth known as “the Zoys,” at least by me.)

After a few more hours, we were here…


…so the tracks are hugging the coast, not following the middle of the Cornish peninsula. Still, I had the sense lying in bed, rumbling along, that we might mistakenly overshoot Penzance and sail right out into the ocean.

Speaking of which, our conductor asked us when we boarded, “are you continuing on from Penzance?” And that gave me pause, because where would we continue to?! “The Isles of Scilly?” she clarified. And now I wish we’d thought to go to the Isles of Scilly.

(The trainspotter just got off in Plymouth.)

The most tedious part of the whole trip so far was sitting around all day yesterday waiting for our train’s departure time. I mostly read “Auntie Mame,” which I am really enjoying. I know the movie well because it’s one of Dave’s favorites, and it’s fun to identify lines in the book that were carried directly into the script. But there are big divergences too. Claude Upson, for example, is much more viciously anti-Semitic in the book, and there is no scene in which the Upsons are victimized by Mame’s modernist furniture. And Agnes Gooch does not belatedly discover that she married Brian O’Bannion in a drunken wedding ceremony — in fact he disappears entirely after impregnating her and she marries a faculty member from Patrick’s school, St. Boniface. And on and on.


8:55 a.m.

And now we're in Penzance, sitting in a waterfront cafe, eating scones fresh from the oven and listening to Elvis Presley sing "Bridge Over Troubled Water."

When we were pulling into the train station, we looked out the window and saw the beach.

"Oh, I didn't know Penzance was on the water!" said Dave.

"Of course it is," I said. "How could there be pirates if it was inland?"

"Butt pirates," said Dave. "And you know someone's made that movie."

We laughed really hard about the Butt Pirates of Penzance, but I'm not going to Google it.

70 comments:

  1. I am the very model of a modern butt pirate!

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  2. A smooth journey, and what a lovely spot for breakfast.
    Looking forward to your next posts!

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  3. Hello Steve,

    We love travelling by train but overnight in these teeny tiny cabins are just a little bit claustrophobic we find. Nevertheless, the end result of Penzance will surely be worth it. We toyed at one time of living in Penzance and even got as far as making an offer on a house....but there was a matter of Radon...But, how we loved the sea.

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    1. Oh, radon! Now there's something I didn't realize would be a local risk in Cornwall. Great to see you in blogland again!

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  4. I live in St Ives , so not far from you - and worth a visit if time allows, for the Tate and Barbara Hepworth alone . The Jubilee pool in Penzance is a treasure , and worth a visit and a swim - I go there often - it also has a lovely cafe . It will close for the season shortly . Have a lovely visit

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    1. Our hotel is very close to the Jubilee pool, but I don't think it's open now. (Too cold to swim in any case!) We're hoping to get to St. Ives, but we shall see!

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  5. Now you and Dave are the pirates of Penzance in your horizontally striped shirts, eye patches and spotty bandanas with parrots on your shoulders and cutlasses slung from your waist belts... "Avast there me hearties!" Can you remember where you buried the treasure chest? Make sure that you order rum when you visit "The Pirate Inn" on Alverton Road.

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    1. Needless to say, there are lots of pirate-related restaurants and shops all around town.

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  6. The start of a lovely adventure ;) Hope the weather becomes sunny.

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    1. Today (Friday) is looking better than yesterday.

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  7. So funny: when I read your post from yesterday, I thought how it felt so odd for Olga not to be involved and how much she would have loved this trip.

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    1. She did love a train, and a train with a bed would have been heaven!

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  8. I grew up near the Zoys never heard anyone call them your shorter version.

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    1. Ha! I'm modeling it on "the Hamptons" in New York. :)

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    2. That's a bit grand for tiny villages.

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  9. I did the sleeper from Glasgow to Manchester years ago, tiny quarters and the rocking train, hm. I sort of slept.
    Have a good time. This will be a bit strange without Olga taking care of you. But it will simplify travel not having to find a pet friendly uber, I suppose.

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    1. When the train is traveling smoothly it's easy to sleep, but the stops-and-starts are a challenge. Yes, car travel will be MUCH easier!

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  10. Butt pirates - hahahaha! The twelve year old boy in me salutes the twelve year old boy in Dave.

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  11. One of my goals is to do a longer train trip in a sleeper car of some sort. Thus far, my only train journeys have been day trips.

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    1. To be honest, if there were just one of us in that cabin it would be more pleasant. It's very tight for two people!

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  12. Well, this is all an adventure! Yes, that berth is tiny but almost adequate and you will look back and laugh about how squeezed in you two were on your way to Penzance which yes, Dave, is on the coast! He certainly does trust you to plan the travel destinations, doesn't he?
    Have so much fun!

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    1. Yes, the overnight train was really the whole purpose of coming. That and the fact that we'd never been to Cornwall.

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  13. It's a great photo -- and yes, tight quarters! Rick and I both love the movie and book of "Auntie Mame," and yes -- tons of differences in the book, which is so much richer. And yet, the parts they changed in the movie are such fun. Now that you mention it, we loaned it to someone -- should get that one back! I'm wondering if they have a lot of pirate kitsch in Penzance.

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    1. Yes, the book is richer and also darker, I thought. Pirates are everywhere in Penzance -- in shop names, on murals, you name it!

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  14. With the exception of the teeny, tiny cabin the train sounds ideal. Small spaces are hard when we are all so used to plenty of space.
    Have fun exploring. Penzance has lots to see.

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    1. It's a challenge because we're only here for one night!

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  15. Looks like a beautiful spot. I love that photo of the shop window and I'd be interested in a performance of the Butt Pirates of Penzance!

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    1. As Dave said, I'm sure that movie has been made! LOL

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  16. I had to look up butt pirates.
    Have a fun getaway!

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    1. I'm sorry to inflict that term on you! I just assumed everyone would have heard it but it seems many people here didn't know what it meant.

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  17. This sounds like a great adventure.

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  18. getting to the train so early (or late) would be a challenge - the tiny bed looks OK. Long trip! We cobbled together relatively talented singers in college, performed Pirates of Penzance with Butt pirates in a line buggering across the stage. That was swell! have a grand time! You would have had to use Olga as a cushion in that cramped cabin.

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    1. Ha! Dave will be crushed to hear that his idea is not new. LOL

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  19. Scones just as they should be, fresh!! Whichever goes on them first....

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    1. They were SO good. We just put jam and butter on them. I'm not a fan of clotted cream -- too heavy.

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  20. I have taken two night trains in my life. One from Edinburgh to London, and one from Paris to Berlin. They thought of taking them was exciting, but the actuality of it was cramped quarters and trouble sleeping. But I am glad that I've done it. Have a great time and thanks for the map updates that you posted as I don't really know that part of England very well. Have a great time.

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    1. I took one in Spain from Granada to Madrid, many years ago, but I don't remember it being hard to sleep. But then, I was in my 20s. I probably could have slept anywhere!

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  21. The few times I've been on the night trains, they have never been very quick. Aberdeen over 2 nights was awful. But they used to be quite roomy.

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    1. I've never heard of a TWO-night train. That sounds miserable.

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  22. Looks like you're having a good trip. I was baffled by the train spotter wearing a " tobbogan." Sled? Really? Google tells me it's a southern term for a beanie. Ha. That's all I googled!

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    1. Yes, a yarn hat or beanie. I didn't know "toboggan" was a southernism!

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  23. Oh my, that cabin does look very tiny but being able stretch out makes a difference. I flew business class on my flight to London this last time and even though it was a teeny-tiny little cubicle, the fact that I could lay flat made all the difference in the world.
    Have fun! I hope you don't run into any pirates except maybe those that sing and dance.

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    1. This was very similar to flying business class -- in fact we talked about that. Space to lie down and nothing else!

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  24. I'm afraid to look up "butt pirates"! I love the swimwear display.

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  25. Yes - This Post Is Above And Beyond And Olga Girl Would've Loved This Trip - Remember How She Would "sleep" Under Your Feet When On A Bus - She Would Have Been Just Fine As Long As A Tennis Ball Was Near By - And So Dig That JAWS Scene As Well - Dave Looks Gr8 In That Photo And Wishing You Both The Best During This Adventure

    Travel On ,
    Cheers

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    1. Olga would have been fine as long as she was in the bed with one of us! LOL! We joked about how we could have gotten her her own cabin, but then she'd want to be in our room anyway.

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  26. That has all the makings of a great trip. Hopefully Dave could sleep a bit longer than you?
    Many years ago, we travelled on night trains in India and we have very fond memories. We travelled not third but also not luxury class, usually in roomy four berth cabins sharing with Indian business travellers or couples with a porter calling with bed tea in the morning - freshly brewed tea, toast and boiled eggs in "silver" plates and ceramic cups, all included in the cheap ticket price. The beds were big enough for me to share mine with my seven year old daughter. The train bathrooms were a bit of a mess but the railway stations had great facilities.

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    1. I traveled on a night train from New Dehli to Varanasi, so I know exactly what you mean. I couldn't really relax because I was so worried about missing my stop, and all the signs were in Hindi script so I never knew where the heck we were. The conductor made sure to tell me when to get off. But yes, we had a "chai wallah" who came through with delicious tea! I don't think I had a ceramic cup, but maybe I had a lower-class ticket than you did.

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  27. Codex: Thank you for taking me on this trip. Dave's expression, though? Never heard of aunt mame either but 50s movies were do dramatic and upbeat. So, not do.

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    1. I thought everyone would be familiar with that crude slang but apparently not. It's just as well! "Auntie Mame" was a phenomenon in the '50s -- a popular broadway show and a hit movie, followed by a lesser musical show and movie in the '60s and '70s.

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    2. Codex: Hahaha. We've ended up in a double sided double entendre. I meant his facial expression is funny. I can see he probably has this dead pan sense of humor.

      The literal version would probably be deNiro in Stardust. Literally.:)

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  28. Lol. Butt pirates. anyhow, have s lovely adventure!

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    1. I love him for his sense of humor but sometimes he makes me wince. And then guffaw.

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  29. Great picture of you both. Hope you have a lovely time away.
    Wendy (Wales)

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  30. Well you certainly are "out there".

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  31. Dave didn't know where Penzance was? I think you very wise not to google butt pirates:)

    Have a lovely trip and take lots of photos. I live vicariously through you and Mr. Pudding.

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    1. Be prepared -- this is going to be a very fast vicarious trip!

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  32. "wearing a sweater and an orange toboggan" šŸ˜‚ sounds a bit uncomfortable...

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    1. A toboggan is a type of hat, at least in my world, but I now realize not everyone knows that term!

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  33. SG had at one time planned a train trip across the States. When we saw the sizes of the cabins, we realized his claustrophobia would make it impossible. That’s a tight fit.

    Speaking of which, Butt Pirates of Penzance. Some great lyrics: “Oh is there not one maiden breast,...”

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  34. I also was not getting the joke and had to look it up. I wondered how long the train trip was, so now I know, about 8 hours.

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