'I built a big boy's train set in my back garden'

James Ardin (in green shirt) says the line has been very well received
- Published
It was always his dream to have a "big boy's train set" – and now James Ardin has built one in his back garden.
His miniature, ride-on railway runs on a three-and-a-half acre (14,000sq m) plot at the family home in Holmpton, East Yorkshire.
Called the Great Withernsea Railway, after the nearby seaside resort, it is proving so popular with visitors that a Bonfire Night event has sold out.
"There isn't anything like it for miles around," said Mr Ardin, a dad of two. "It's a nice family day out and it's been very well received."

James and his family open their railway to the public three times a year
Mr Ardin loves trains so much he spends his days working in the rail industry – before going home to operate his self-built narrow gauge line, which has three locomotives.
He began planning the railway even before buying the house with his wife.
"I was looking for a nice little property, but equally I was looking for quite a lot of land and we struck it lucky with this one.
"I'd started writing out, drawing the plans and mapping the railway before we'd even put a bid in."

The locomotives include battery, diesel and steam-powered examples
Mr Ardin said life as a trainspotter began thanks to his grandad, Peter Milner.
"He was always a big fan of steam trains and took me around the country and that's basically where my love of them started."
He now has two children of his own, aged 12 and five, who are "pretty much growing up to be railway children".
"My son drives the trains very well and my daughter is learning – so they're doomed from the start," he joked.

James Ardin with his grandad and son
"It's actually my wife I feel sorry for, it's her that can't escape it," he added.
"But I suppose it keeps us out of her hair."
Mr Ardin began work on the line in 2020 and the family open their garden gates a few times a year to give visitors a chance to get "all aboard".
More than 100 people are due to join the sold-out Bonfire Night event on 1 November.
"If it goes well this year, then we'll be able to host it again the next, and hopefully it'll become a bit of a tradition for the railway and the local community," he said.

Mr Ardin's friends help him run the railway, which even has a station
The railway is run by volunteers who travel from around the country to help.
It already includes a miniature steam train, but Mr Ardin has "bigger and better plans" for the future, which involve expanding into a second field and adding more locomotives and rolling stock.
"It's a bit of a funny one really, because it is still my house," he said.
"You could call it a big boy's train set around my house."

James Ardin driving a full-size train
"I've got to keep the wife happy as well, so I can't do too much," he said. "And I've got to be courteous towards our neighbours.
"They've got a lot of patience with me running my trains next to their houses."
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