"My favorite railroad that I don't see on a regular basis?"
1st: Anything under wire, anywhere in Switzerland.
2nd: The Illinois Railway Museum and the East Troy Trolley Museum - but only on those days when the CTA 4000s are running.
3rd: Iowa Traction Railroad Company.
4th: The AT&SF, CB&Q, C&NW, CA&E, CNS&M, MILW, SOO, D&RGW, NYC, and The Mighty PRR - all just warm memories now.
I wish I could see more of the former MILW (now once again Canadian Pacific) Chicago-Kansas City line. I always used to watch that line while visiting my grandparents in Muscatine, Iowa - I'm too young to really remember the Milwaukee Road era (although I do remember when there was still the riverfront yard there and even after the tracks there were removed and the park went in, I remember seeing switchers in orange paint even after the SOO took over). But really, that was probably the first place where I really saw some good variety of cars/locomotives (where I am from, you pretty much just get NS locomotives and covered hoppers (and often the same ones because of the use of grain shuttle trains). Last time I was out there, I got a good view of the end of the independent DME/ICE - and thanks to living out east, I was able to get up early in teh morning when the line is really active (generally, you can see about 3 trains through there between about 6:00 am and 7:00 am)http://penncentral2002.rrpicturearchives.net/archivethumbs.aspx?id=32254&Page=1 - I'd really like to get back out there more often, especiallly to see what is goign on now that hte CP is running the line again.
Would like to see the Iowa Interstate some more - when my other grandmother lived in West Liberty, she lived only a couple of blocks by the old Rock Island depot - used to go by there and look for trains while visiting.
Probably the most interesting place I have ever been is the TRRA line in St Louis - lots of trains and a good amount of variety. Even being there for a conference and being tied up most of the day, I saw quite a bit there.
In general, I wish I could see more BNSF - they have a pretty wide variety of power and paint schemes running (at least from my limited exposure).
And really, I wish I could see more of any railroad other than CSX - since CSX is really the only railroad I see on a regular basis.
bubbajustin My favorite railroad is NS, but I still like the UP. I live in Indiana so I hardley ever see a UP unit. So that would be my response.
My favorite railroad is NS, but I still like the UP. I live in Indiana so I hardley ever see a UP unit. So that would be my response.
You should live down along CSX's Indy-St Louis line. There are days when we see more of UP than CSX.
inch
http://www.trainboard.com/railimages/showgallery.php/cat/500/ppuser/4309
For me it's worst. My favorite railroad is Canadian Pacific and I'm French. I went in Canada two years ago and I saw many CP trains. Since May 2007, I have never came back. I look at pictures of Canadian Pacific on differents websites. One day, I will go in British Columbia to see Kicking Horse Pass and Roger Pass. It's my dream, but I must be patient.
CP & CN both still alive and grinding all over B.C. You must live in the 99.6% of the province that is uninhabitable,
Iowa Interstate for me. I used to live on their line and would see them a few times a week. Now I live an hour away and when I get a chance to get down in their area, it's usually the wrong time of day to see them.
Jeff
Florida East Coast. For an outfit that goes through so much population, they can be hard to see!
I live in east-central Minnesota but I'm from Wisconsin originally. I'd say as far as existing railroads are concerned, it'd have to be DME/ICE which I have to drive about 2.5 hrs. south to see but I've had pretty darn good luck with, and the WSOR which I'd have to drive 4+ hrs. to see.
The Wisconsin & Southern has been the toughest for me. Even when I lived in Wisconsin's Fox River Valley I had the worst luck finding them outside their yards at Janesville or Horicon. I just never had any success at all getting a shot of the WSOR in operation "on the road" - I never seemed to be in the right place (unless I was looking for tracks trailing off to the horizon with nothing but sunglare on the rails - then I was always in the right spot).
RJ
"Something hidden, Go and find it. Go and look behind the ranges, Something lost behind the ranges. Lost and waiting for you. Go." The Explorers - Rudyard Kipling
http://sweetwater-photography.com/
CSX, even though I cross one of their lines every day on my way to work - they just don't run very many trains on it any more.
CSX, by the way, is a favorite by extension from mergers - The C&O ran on the former Pere Marquette line to Flint, MI in my youth, so they garner a warm spot in my heart.
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
I miss both the CN and CP in British Columbia...Nothing beats heavy trains and awe inspiring scenary.
The road to to success is always under construction. _____________________________________________________________________________ When the going gets tough, the tough use duct tape.
I have lived in Minnesota most all of my life,but I have a real strong interest in Santa Fe. I suppose it came from seeing Santa Fe in those Lionel catalogs when I was a kid.That war bonnet livery got me hooked. I did not see a Santa Fe train until a summer vacation trip to California in 1954 at Cajon Pass. I told myself that I was going to ride a Santa Fe passenger train. That became many rides on the San Diegans while in the Navy but I did ride the El Capitan from Los Angeles to KC on a leave home.Flew home from KC on Braniff.
I would drive to Fort Madison Iowa to watch Santa Fe a couple of times. There was a question of who owned the bridge across the Mississippi. Santa Fe owned that bridge and charged a toll which I think was a dollar in 1984. I remember that the Santa Fe people were wonderful at Shopton and found it interesting a guy from Minnesota would drive from Minneapolis to watch Santa Fe. No one even thought of that BN and Santa Fe would become BNSF back then.
Have any of you had a simliar experience happen to you ?
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