QUOTE: Originally posted by tstage Chip, Here's a post that AggroJones wrote a week or so ago that may be helpful. http://www.trains.com/community/forum/topic.asp?TOPIC_ID=26674 It will still take some time to make them but shouldn't put a big hole in your pocket in the process... Tom
"Being misunderstood is the fate of all true geniuses"
EXPERIMENTATION TO BRING INNOVATION
http://community.webshots.com/album/288541251nntnEK?start=588
QUOTE: Originally posted by Jetrock Building in stages is the fastest way to get trains up and running--each six-foot segment becomes fully operational and usable, rather than having to do ALL the benchwork and ALL the trackwork before running trains. The 4x8 is a good place to start--you can build that and expand from there. I use six-foot sections because I base my modules' size on their ability to fit inside my station wagon should I ever move the layout for train show or relocation purposes. The north central valley was SP territory--did you ever get a chance to see South Shasta Lines? It is a huge O scale basement-filling layout in Gerber, built to represent the line from Gerber to Dunsmuir, based on the SP (but carrying his own "South Shasta Lines" livery.) It's a heck of an accomplishment. Unfortunately it's no longer open to the public, but this spring I went up there with my wife and some nephews (she grew up in Redding) to check it out.
Chip
Building the Rock Ridge Railroad with the slowest construction crew west of the Pecos.
QUOTE: Originally posted by SpaceMouse So how can I make a bunch of pine trees?
QUOTE: Originally posted by Jetrock SpaceMouse: You mentioned you are a former Californian: mind if I ask what part of California?
QUOTE: I ask because I'm a Californian too and went to school up on the Northcoast (Humboldt State) and know a thing or two about the railroads up there. Beautiful country, too--should make an impressive model.
QUOTE: One piece of advice, though: Start small. I'm building my layout in six-foot long modules, and only starting the next module once the previous one is operational. Helps keep things in perspective and I don't end up staring at a vast mass of plywood.
QUOTE: The link above to AggroJones' pine tree post is a good one--if you're modeling the Northcoast, you'll need a lot of them! Keep in mind that actual scale-sized redwoods are almost unmodelable--an old-growth redwood, even in HO scale, would be an inch or two thick and about three feet high!
https://tstage9.wixsite.com/nyc-modeling
Time...It marches on...without ever turning around to see if anyone is even keeping in step.