Styrifoam or the like have no place in garden railways, they will not last the distance and they defeat the whole idea of outdoor work.
The idea that you cannot plant real trees 3 ' above the ground is baseless; i build little planter boxes and have whole gardens above the ground and it works for me here in the tropics. It must work better for you in a temperate climate.
Rgds ian
johntealon30 wrote:Hi, I cant plant real trees as my garden railway runs on a shelf 3 ' off the floor, I got round the problem by using an artificial christmas tree. It cost me £14 for a 6' tree and made over a hundred little trees !! As for foam and plasticard, I use both and the local squirrel population although rarely curious have not added it to there menu. One word of advice if you model a Building dont get clever and model open doors and windows !! Its like putting out an invite to anything small enough to crawl in !!! John RJR Branch Line I can be found at www.rjroriginals.co.uk/rjr_branch_line.htm
Hi,
I cant plant real trees as my garden railway runs on a shelf 3 ' off the floor, I got round the problem by using an artificial christmas tree. It cost me £14 for a 6' tree and made over a hundred little trees !!
As for foam and plasticard, I use both and the local squirrel population although rarely curious have not added it to there menu. One word of advice if you model a Building dont get clever and model open doors and windows !! Its like putting out an invite to anything small enough to crawl in !!!
John
RJR Branch Line
I can be found at www.rjroriginals.co.uk/rjr_branch_line.htm
have seen real trees on a shelf railroad - the trees were in pots sunk into the surface - ok it was outside but the added bonus was the Bonsai effect of restricting growth which was a real plus .
As far as buildings in foam a coat of cement or spackle then paint should render things strong and inedible - on a par with stone
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