Evening Diners,
I few things I thought of yesterday. To late to post about and my kindle was used for something else.
Building a small layout... I know I talked about the current one, but this one will be short oval. Since I have left over foam and wood I would make something smaller and simple.
I thought if I did continue the Thomas layout I would buy only OO real British structures. Since I know some European structures sometimes have an american feel or vise versa. (Things must have changed over the years, since sometimes my information is decades old).
Edit: Up of the page. If anyone wants an alcoholic beverage or soda or just water it's on me. Enjoy.
Amtrak America, 1971-Present.
Ken I'm not a primary care doc but I don't know why a blood sugar of 118, which is not low, would make you feel bad. It's not clear what you are saying about your vision. Diabetics can have retinal hemorrhages so a sudden change in vision could be important. You only get 2 eyes.
Rochelle I will say no more except the diamonds are silent instead of the clack clack clack and trains no longer wobble going through them.
Henry
COB Potomac & Northern
Shenandoah Valley
Good Morning, Folks!
The month of May is about to say goodbye - in the same manner as it arrived, which was wet! We had a torrential ra*nfall last night, which made such a noise I could hardly find some sleep!
Janie, make that coffee in an IV bag for me, please.
Today is the last day of Ulrich´s Train Movie Theatre, featuring
The Resurrection Of A Legendary Train Locomotive - The Return Of The Flying Scotsman
LNER Class A3 4472 Flying Scotsman is a Pacific steam locomotive built in 1923 for the London and North Eastern Railway (LNER) at Doncaster Works to a design of Nigel Gresley. It was employed on long-distance express East Coast Main Line trains by the LNER and its successors, British Railways Eastern and North-Eastern Regions, notably on the London to Edinburgh Flying Scotsman train service after which it was named.
The locomotive set two world records for steam traction, becoming the first steam locomotive to be officially authenticated at reaching 100 miles per hour (160.9 km/h) on 30 November 1934, and then setting a record for the longest non-stop run by a steam locomotive when it ran 422 miles (679 km) on 8 August 1989 while in Australia. Retired from regular service in 1963 after covering 2.08 million miles, Flying Scotsman gained considerable fame in preservation under the ownership of, successively, Alan Pegler, William McAlpine, Tony Marchington, and finally the National Railway Museum (NRM). As well as hauling enthusiast specials in the United Kingdom, the locomotive toured extensively in the United States and Canada from 1969 until 1973 and Australia in 1988/89. Flying Scotsman has been described as the world's most famous steam locomotive. In a 2015 poll which questioned people from four continents it was again ranked the most famous locomotive.
Enjoy!
Good morning, everybody .... Coffee and a donut, please.
Who wants to suggest the location for June ?
GARRY
HEARTLAND DIVISION, CB&Q RR
EVERYWHERE LOST; WE HUSTLE OUR CABOOSE FOR YOU
Garry - I have no idea where to put next month´s Diner, So I´d be happy to step back and leve the honor of moving it to the new location to someone else. Volunteers - one step back!
The following video is to spectacular not to be shared!
A breathtaking ride up the Devil´s Nose!
Hello, Fellow Diner Denizens
Just a quick HI and hopes that all are well and safe.
Busy, as usual, and now the summertime chores have kicked-in full swing!
Prayers and good thoughts to all... Happy Railroadin'
I had planned on posting a photo here but Photobucket is up to it's usual tricks again
Regards, Ed
Mornin, from the cool and cloudy WestCoast.
Took the daughter to see her favourite dog last night. Though the poor mutt has blood coming out of her front and back ends, this morning she is somewhat stable and if she survives should heal from the bleeding completely. When my daughter put her arms around her she managed a tail wag and that was the first sign of movement she had all day. It seems not only are visits from dogs to their people in hospital beneficial, the opposite is true.
Ulrich, loved the "Devils' nose" Video, not sure how I missed that one, as I tend to watch a lot of South American railroading stuff. It just show's, that where there is a will there is a way.
As far as location for next month, how about here? There appears to be plenty of train rides to take.
https://www.google.ca/search?gs_ivs=1&q=railroads+in+Tasmania#safe=off&q=railroads+in+Tasmania&rflfq=1&rlha=0&rllag=-41671029,145822847,68143&tbm=lcl&tbs=lrf:!2m1!1e2!2m1!1e3!3sEAE,lf:1,lf_ui:2
All the best to all.
Brent
"All of the world's problems are the result of the difference between how we think and how the world works."
Two years ago today, on my 70th birthday, I had to call an ambulance for my wife, hit with severe respiratory distress. Eight years prior, we had purchased a "handicapped accessable" house because of her disabilities. It had a 15' x 23' empty room in the basement for my "final" layout.
23 years in one house should only require one 30 yard dumpster. Right? Wrong! The room was quickly filled with over 200 boxes and miscellaneous "stuff". Two years later, I retired early to care for Kathy full time.
Kathy suffered cardiac arrest twice during the 1.5 mile trip to the hospital. After being stabilized, she was sent to Abbott Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis, where they cooled her body to minimize organ and brain damage. Two days later, we learned that severe brain damage had occured, and it was inferred that it would be prudent to remove life support.
With family present, support was disconnected the next day. One of the most distressing experiences is listening to the body's last breathings. Kathy passed a few minutes later, on June 3.
34† years marriage, 2 children, 7 grandchildren; I'm still finding it difficult to celebrate or even acknowledge my birthday. With the help of my son, the basement room is now about 50% clear, but I doubt that my declining health will give me the ability to build much. "Que sera, sera" I think the song goes.
Gary
Gary,
Condolences for your loss. My wife Marymartha died here at home, twenty-six years ago, and I was fortuniate to be holding her hand at her last breath. It is an adjustment to say the least. She was an ardent supporter in my various endeavours, she was my WHY--
Loosing that, hurt deeply-- I have empathy for your loss.
J.White
Afternoon Diners,
I wished I had some words to say about your wife, Gary.
Brent locating the diner in South America would be interesting.
I designed a new layout but it would be shorter by 10 inches. Later today I'll call to see if they will recut a purchased lumber since I don't a saw or power tools.
The new plan will only have one right hand switch, and a river ditch bridge. Everything else is unclear. I'm basically modeling desert... I hope. Locomotive power only 4 axle like GP38, GP60, etc. to fit the theme.
Gary, my condolences as well.
You and your wife obviously had a full, accomplished life together. The fact that this and June 3rds dates weigh heavy on your heart is because she meant so much to you. What would be a shame is if today and tomorrow passed without notice.
Thanks for sharing, none of us are alone when it comes to times of grief and it helps when we can share it with others.
So I just called them and they will cut post purchased lumber. That will be good for me.
Gary I hope it helped you to tell us that story. Anniversaries like that are always hard, more so because it coincided with you birthday.
Do not doubt you made the correct decision. Modern medicine has the power to prolong life beyond decency, compassion and common sense. I say that after 35 years in medicine.
If you have the means, there are people that will construct your layout. I have no idea what they cost or who their clients are. Sure, there must be multimillionaires but MR is not the most common hobby in the world and there must be a lot of common people that use there services.
Brent I hope your dogs recover. I have had a couple friends who have had dogs poisoned. At least one intentionally.
I have a dog story.
I had a redtick coonhound that on walks to the neighborhood pier, would see an osprey or a sea gull or a heron. She would stalk the bird like a lion, thinking she was invisible and then at about 20 yards away she would charge and the bird, watching her the whole time would fly away.
I had a blue tick coonhound that got into a box of donuts. Even though I was watching, she ate the donuts faster than I could see. I only found out how many she ate by counting after I took the box away.
Fast forward to today. My beagle coonhound mix, which looks like a tri color beagle, saw geese at the pier. He stalked like the red tick, the geese moved further down the pier, he charged, the birds flew.
Suddenly he was surrounded by goose ka ka. He did the blue tick imitation on donuts to clean it up as fast as he could. Don't let him kiss you.
BigDaddyIf you have the means, there are people that will construct your layout. I have no idea what they cost or who their clients are. Sure, there must be multimillionaires but MR is not the most common hobby in the world and there must be a lot of common people that use there services.
Henry: Thanks for the thought, but that's not an option for me. I"m guessing that it would run me at least $10k for something reasonably sized, and I simply can't justify that (my heirs would realize that somehow I went "bonkers").
Given my CHF, 65% left and 35% right leg circulation, bad knees, and unconscionable weight gain in the last couple years, I perhaps should concentrate on one thing at a time. Before we moved, I had started a roundhouse/turntable module which has been untouched for ten years. Turntable is in and powered with a 0.5 rpm motor, and six stall roundhouse floor (Heljan) and tracks are installed.
I am sorry to hear about your loss two years ago. I just hope that I will not have to go through what Ray, Herrinchoker and you had to endure. I am quite sure that I will go before Petra. Somehow I have to manage to stiock arounf for a little more than two years, so she will be entitled to the full widow´s pension.
It´s not yet 3am here and I have been up for a few hours. There are too man things in my head keeping me from getting the sleep I should gez. Not good thoughts, though.
Evenin' Folks!
Just a shot of Southern Comfort, yes the 100 proof stuff for me tonight. Been reading the sad things here for the last few minutes catching up on the place.
Gary, My heart goes out to you.... Been there, done that..... For me it will be 30 years on August 15th. I still think about her every day. The pain does get better, but is still there. In my case my wife died of the cure for Leukemia (Graft vs Host disease after a bone marrow transplant from her sister). The family had gathered at the hospital knowing she would leave us some time that day.... Her sister arrived from California about 5 minutes before she died. One of the Nurses came out and said it would be about 5 minutes if we wanted to be there. None of us in the family had the courage to be with her at her end. I have regreted that for almost 30 years... I was with her in her room for several hours that day, waiting...... It was as though she wouldn't leave until the whole family was together.
OK, I have dried my eyes and blown my nose, so I can continue typing.
Brent, I do hope your dog pulls through her ordeal. I have a nieghbor who lost a beautiful, sweet dog to poisoning several years ago. I would like to catch whomever did it! (Actually I wouldn't, as I don't think he would be worth what they would likely do to me.......! And I tend to be a "gentle soul" most of the time.)
Had to drive to Victor, NY about 55 mile round trip, to pick up a box of goodies for the Door Prize/Raffle Table for the Meet on Saturday. Turns out I just could have made the whole trip on electric, but I turned on the ICE and used "Hold" mode for about 6 miles on the way there. Just got home and plugged it in to charge, came in the house and the phone rang. It was my son letting me know that Granddaughter #2 had a Lacrosse game over across Geneva in about 50 minutes. Lacrosse is pretty much thee "National Sport" around here, Geneva and Canandaigua being the ancestral home of the Seneca Nation..... So I drove over and watched her run up and down the field for an hour. You don't really expect much more from 2nd graders in that sport I hope. Fun!
Will keep all of those with needs for healing (both physical and spiritual/mental) in my prayers, and hope you will do the same for me.
Quote for the day:
"Peace comes from within. Do not seek it without." - Buddha
Ray Seneca Lake, Ontario, and Western R.R. (S.L.O.&W.) in HO
We'll get there sooner or later!
Good evening ..
Gary Weighmaster... I read your post three times. So sad. I hope it helps if we tell you we care. We do. ... Let us know if there is anything we can do. Praying for you.
Herrinchoker ... After 26 years, I'm sure you have had many moments of sadness. Will pray for you too.
Ray ... I've heard from you before how much you miss your wife, and I understand you still have tears in your eyes. Praying for you. I admire you and respect you for doing so many things with your life in spite of the sadness. It is an honor to share a forum with you.
To be sure, there are many things in each of our lives which are tough to deal with. This includes loss of loved ones, of course. ..... I do believe we help ourselves through difficulties with our hobby. It is good to take sanity breaks working on model railroads. ..... Without getting religious, I suggest people strive for keeping spiritually healthy. ... Prayers for each of you ...
Evening Diners
Flo, Ed, Brent, Jan and I will have a please.
Ed Good to see you in the dinner again.
Henery The boody gets use to a certan blood sugar level, when it is lower than what it had been, it reacts like it has lower blood sugar! Yea, it sucks but just the way it is?
Gsry Soory for the loss. We lost Sue's brother on Chrstmas day a 6 years ago. Wife still has a hard time dealing with it.
Brent Hope the Doggie pulls through, I like dogs more than people! Not counting the diners.
Jan Again I am sorry for your loss as well. Did you find another better half? For some reason I thouht you still had one?
Ulrich Would you mind doing the move again? You do a great job hosting! How about West Virginia or Virginia? Where every the Norfolk & Western was based out of. I love big steam!
By the way Ulrich, you caused a small train wreck tonight! I was watching the Devil Nose and not the layout.
Ken
I hate Rust
cudakenEd Good to see you in the dinner again.
Thanks, Ken! I came in before the end of the month to cash in on all the beverages you have been buying me
Seems like we are ending the month with melancholy memories...
My first wife, Sandy, the mother of my two sons, died in February of 1986 at the age of 27 of a cerebral hemorrage. Everything in my life changed after that! I have tried to use the power of positive thinking to recover and place her memory in a very special place in my soul.
On the model railroad I have the Sandy Creek, of Twentieth Century Limited fame in her honor.
To anyone who has lost a loved one, and that goes for pets, too, you have my prayers, sympathy and compassion.
Let's start June on a happier note
Best wishes to all...