..., a number of years ago. A crew of track-side tree-clearers had accidentally had a small tree (or part of one) fall across the track just as my train approached. Horn, urgent horn and severe braking ensued, then the front bogie clearly rode over/sliced through (we never found out[2]) the branches concerned. And then after the driver did the immediately necessary (initially worried the track-side crew had been at the other end of the 'tree'), the being informed of and then the waiting... It shut down both directions of a route, even after inspectors had inspected and engineers had sufficiently engineered so that we could move on to the next station. Which was in sight[3], and await a replacement bus while the train awaited its replacement driver[4].
That hit the (localish) news. Definitely the local radio, temporarily, for travel-bulletin purposes. For the disruption, but also with the relatively unusual nature of its cause, rather than just being a mechanical fault or crew being unable to take over as scheduled or signalling failures forcing a reduced line operation. (That the clump of small trees were being felled, track-side, to safeguard future trains was yet another irony!)
[2] And, at the time, it was just like the track-end "rumble strip", for grip/warning purposes as a train pulls up to platform buffers, but much more so.
[3] Multiple ironies. It was the station closest to where I'd set off from, that day, but I'd travelled 'backwards' over to the major town nearby, by bus to catch a 'fast' train that wouldn't have stopped at the local halt, then ended up waiting (within sight of it) for ages and then having to disembark there and wait for a bus (admitedly, a
special bus/coach) to do the rest of the journey. Or most of it, anyway.
[4] Both of which took ages. While engineers and track inspectors had gotten there quickly enough, the both the replacement transport and the train's replacement driver (after an 'incident', the driver isn't allowed to continue beyond making the train safe, for various reasons) were apparently stuck in rush-hour traffic trying to get out of the destination city that we were all headed to (at least some of us thinking we were avoiding the rush-hour by taking the train!)... What a day...
And I gathered much about the what had happened/would happen by chatting with the driver, who I
hope I did the right thing for[5] in engaging him in conversation whilst we were all in limbo, at various points in the episode.
[5] He seemed a little dazed, but then I don't know how he sounded beforehand! And maybe he, like me, could be perfectly happy just isolated in his cab and, but he certainly didn't retreat there and merely tannoy us passengers, when he had the opportunity to do so. So I put on my best empathetic face and made encouraging noises (having been seated almost by the door through which he came out of, to then hop down onto the track and back/etc), where it seemed appropriate.