My wife showed me this video. She said, and I agree, that our late cat Tom would've done something like this. If I had a tunnel on my model railroad, that is.
Paw-Don Me: Cat Squeezes Out of Model Train Tunnel - YouTube
Jeff
Growing up, my Catzilla would eat the people on the Christmas layout then go after the train.
"Just checking for mice. All clear in here!"
Cheers, Ed
We do a fairly elaborate layout at the holidays, and every morning, there are always a couple of downed trees and telegraph poles. C'est la vie.
gmpullman"Just checking for mice. All clear in here!"
We have my daughter's cat with us right now... terrible cat.
However, she never touches anything. She only lets her feet touch the floor or chairs, or her pillow. If there is something on a chair, she will not go on it.
-Kevin
Living the dream.
gmpullman "Just checking for mice. All clear in here!" Cheers, Ed
We have only one rule in our house. Kitty is not allowed up into the choo choo room.
Cats have proven that the world can't be flat. Otherwise they would have knocked everything off by now.
www.bostontype.com
My cat Max was allowed into the layout room.
I had a low plexiglass "catch fence" on the edges of my last layout, to prevent anything from tumbling off. It stuck up roughly 6" or so above the layout surface. (Installed when I knew we were getting Max. Only as I knew there is no "keep the cat off" that works 100% of the time.)
Max only tried to get on the layout once. He evidently could not see said plexi "catch fence" and instead of it catching any wayward railcars, it caught Max. He bounced off of it, landed back on the floor, and hurried out of the layout room before looking back with either a smug "I meant to do that" look, or a "What are you laughing at?!? I know it ain't me!" look on his face at me.
He proved that I was right about it working as a "catch fence"!
Ricky W.
HO scale Proto-freelancer.
My Railroad rules:
1: It's my railroad, my rules.
2: It's for having fun and enjoyment.
3: Any objections, consult above rules.
My first cat Chessie used to get allowed down to the basement with me. He would walk around and check things out on the floor before going up and settling down either on the stairs where he would watch me and the trains or up to the carpetted top of the stairs to curl up to sleep. In the living room, I used to have my Lionel going around the outer edges of the room when he was a kitten. He wouldn't attack the train but loved walking alongside it as it went around the room. When it went behind the couch, he would run around to the other end to wait for it and then follow it around the room again.
Kevin
http://chatanuga.org/RailPage.html
http://chatanuga.org/WLMR.html
jeffhergert"Speaking of cats on the model railroad".
No offense intended, but, in my opinion, those are two items that should never be in the same place.
Wayne
My wife's cat Sgt Pepper and my cat Cheddar Cheese are barred from the train room mainly because Pepper is huge puff that I don't want to clean up after and Cheddar will eat everything.
Cheddar is entirely too brave and likes to "help." He'll steal screws and stuff. Not even afraid of the mitre saw.
Cat? What cat?
Roundhouse_cat_sm by Edmund, on Flickr
doctorwayneNo offense intended, but, in my opinion, those are two items that should never be in the same place. Wayne
Okay I have to "fess up". When my cats were attacking Plasticville at Christmas, I would run one train, which they would watch intently. Then, I'd run the second at full speed, slamming into the cat's butt. It was hilarious. I was a teenager.
Nice video.
What I'd like to know is, "how did the cat get into the tunnel...?"
Signal was green, so...
One of the model railways I admire tremendously is John Ahern''s Madder Valley Railway (built 1930s).
I have a picture of his cat sitting on River Madder bridge admiring the scene. It is copyright, so cannot post.
David
To the world you are someone. To someone you are the world
I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought
Everyone here in the East Central and North East should always have a couple cats in their car trunk. They come in handy to throw under the drive wheels when the vehicle gets stuck in the snow.
maxman Everyone here in the East Central and North East should always have a couple cats in their car trunk. They come in handy to throw under the drive wheels when the vehicle gets stuck in the snow.