[citation needed] An extension of up to 435 metres (1,427 ft), running along the north bank of the fishing lake has been proposed.
[5] They wanted to save the narrow gauge railway equipment which was disappearing from local industries.
[7] These two locos were soon joined by more industrial diesels and the first home-built items of rolling stock.
Members of the WLLR retrieved the remains of Quarry Hunslet Alice from one of the upper levels of Dinorwic.
Alice's boiler was retained at the WLLR and the rest sold to the Bala Lake Railway.
Bookings can also be taken for birthday parties (and other types of celebration) and for visits by schools, colleges, clubs and societies.
The WLLR and its members own a variety of goods wagons obtained from several UK industrial narrow gauge railways, including tipper sand wagons from Pilkington Brothers sandfields in the Rainford and Bickerstaffe areas.