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Jeffrey's Trackside Diner: December, 2022 and Winter Trains

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Thursday, December 29, 2022 7:54 AM

TOP OF THE PAGE

TREATS ARE ON ME

-  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -

How about some coconut cookies and a glass of milk?

-Photograph by Kevin Parson

-  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -  -

I almost made it a whole month without having the top of the page.

Good morning everyone.

It is warm here for the next week at least. I plan on spending ther next three days hard at work in the yard.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by York1 on Thursday, December 29, 2022 8:22 AM

Good morning, diners.  Bacon, eggs, and black coffee, Chloe.

Kevin, I'll have the glass of milk, but I'll skip the coconut cookies.  For some reason, I have never liked coconut.  They were the only cookies my mother made I didn't like.

Long, boring sick story:

On the flight home from the vacation, I started to feel ill.  By the time I got to Dallas, I was sick.  I went to the doctor there and had covid.  The doctor said I should not fly for a week, so I spent that time at my daughter's house.

The doctor gave me paxlovid.  She said that it was an antiviral, and that I should take it because I was over 65.  I took it.  I was very sick, but felt better in four days.  I flew home and continued to feel better and better.  Then....

I woke up one morning sicker than I had been before.  My wife convinced me to go to the doctor here.  When I explained the situation, he wanted to know why I was given paxlovid.  He explained that here, it is given only to someone with heart or lung issues.

He said that he has dealt with case after case of someone taking that medicine, and then getting covid again worse.  He called it a 'rebound'.

I can see why some states restricted paxlovid's use.  I was so upset.  I've spent several weeks sicker than I've been in a long time.  Finally, yesterday, I've begun to feel better.

Before someone goes there, I was double vaxed and double boosted!  I am jealous of those of you who got covid and had just mild symptoms.

Now that I've been playing the part of an old man complaining about his health, I'll make the New Year's resolution not to talk about my health again.

A word of warning:  if your doctor ever prescribes paxlovid, run the other way.

York1 John       

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Posted by NorthBrit on Thursday, December 29, 2022 10:32 AM

Good afternoon Diners.   A cup of Darjeeling, some Christmas Cake with a slice of Wensleydale Cheese  and a Coconut Cookie, Kevin left please,  Janie.

 

That's a story and half, John.  Hope things change for the better now.

 

Trains and Winter Rains  -  Enya

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tE2dr8v-nh4&ab_channel=enyatv

 

David

To the world you are someone.    To someone you are the world

I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought

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Posted by Water Level Route on Thursday, December 29, 2022 11:08 AM

Howdy diners!  Flo, a grilled ham and cheese please.

Been enjoying the time away from work for the holidays.  Leaving in a few to go to our annual bowling day with my wife's family.  Got some sort of knot in my back, so might only be one game for me.  We'll see how I feel after the first.

Otherwise, no news from my area of the woods.  Later guys.

Mike

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Thursday, December 29, 2022 1:01 PM

York1
When I explained the situation, he wanted to know why I was given paxlovid.  He explained that here, it is given only to someone with heart or lung issues.

When I had Covid-19 a few months ago, Paxlovid was all in the news as a great thing. My doctor said that there were too many possibilities for liver side effects, and it was suggested I not get it.

I was told that since I was vaccinated and double-boosted, I would have mild symptoms.

York1
I am jealous of those of you who got covid and had just mild symptoms.

That was me.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by York1 on Thursday, December 29, 2022 2:01 PM

Good afternoon, everyone.

Kevin, I'm glad to hear you had only mild symptoms.  This has not been fun.

I've started work on the layout for the first time in six weeks.  I need to finish some bridge approaches and get my final bridge installed so I can run a train again.  I have not bought anything for the layout in months.  I'm getting anxious to buy something -- anything -- just for the good feeling of buying some train related item.

We've had a reprieve for two days, with milder temps, but now we are again in the target for ice and some light snow.  It will be a white New Year's Eve.  I can't complain.  We need the moisture, and we're not getting anything catastrophic.  We'll gladly take the ice and light snow.  Daisy the Dachshund doesn't like it, though.

I'm looking forward to the January diner.  It will be fun to see what gets posted each day.  It'll also keep the waitresses on their toes.

Hope everyone has a good finish to this 2022!

York1 John       

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Posted by moelarrycurly4 on Thursday, December 29, 2022 8:04 PM

Greetings from our southern command, we came to spend some time for new years,

we found a stray bullet had come thru our guest room windpw, breaking the window, the bullet was on the floor. it was a ricohet from prob the goobers up the road, now I must replace the glass. atleast no one was hurt, we filed a report with the SO, the deupty was goin got go have a talk with thes goobers.

Other than that , no issues, the pipes did not freeze during the big freeze we just had. So i would rather deal with window glass than plumbin any day. 

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Posted by Track fiddler on Thursday, December 29, 2022 8:23 PM

That's a little too close for comfort MLC.  I'm glad no one was hurt, as ricochets can be just as dangerous as inline sometimes.  Especially high velocity.  There's nothing worse than an idiot with a firearm.

During hunting season we'd hear shots going off all day at the resort.  It wasn't the locals we worried about but the Cidiots. 

All those years we were lucky enough to dodge the bullet so to speak, in the lodge.  There was a hole at an angle through both walls in the corner of the fish house though.

 

TF

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Friday, December 30, 2022 12:07 AM

moelarrycurly4
Other than that , no issues, the pipes did not freeze during the big freeze we just had.

OK... forgive me here...

If the weather falls below 32 degrees, how do the pipes NOT freeze? And... what is wrong if they do freeze? Wouldn't they just thaw out?

-Kevin (Floridian)

Living the dream.

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Posted by allegedlynerdy on Friday, December 30, 2022 1:30 AM

SeeYou190

 

 
moelarrycurly4
Other than that , no issues, the pipes did not freeze during the big freeze we just had.

 

OK... forgive me here...

If the weather falls below 32 degrees, how do the pipes NOT freeze? And... what is wrong if they do freeze? Wouldn't they just thaw out?

-Kevin (Floridian)

 

Inside your house is (hopefully) warmer than 32F, and any external plumbing (either a well or city water hookups) will be dug below the frost line (in the places that get this weather often).

However, especially in older houses, pipes in exterior walls can freeze (I lived in an 1880s farm house for a while- almost no insulation and the bathroom was over a space on the first floor we didn't heat so it happened a bit). At best, yeah you'd just end up with no running water until you thaw it out, but a bad freeze can fracture the pipes! I know people with houses on slab foundations who have had nightmares after their heat went out, they were able to stay with a friend but half the pipes in the slab froze and burst, basically had to have their entire foundation split open to repair. 

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Posted by "JaBear" on Friday, December 30, 2022 3:33 AM
Gidday Chloe, been a long hot frustrating day. I hate it when customers ask me for advice, ignore it, and then wonder why things have gone pear shaped!!Bang HeadBang HeadSigh
Still, all fixed now but…Angry
 
Getting low on my winter poster stash!!
 
Winter4 by Bear, on Flickr
 
Thoughts and Best Wishes to Al that need them. Kia Kaha.
Cheers, the Bear.Smile

"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."

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Posted by NorthBrit on Friday, December 30, 2022 4:39 AM

Good Morning Diners.  Just a quick visit, so a coffee on the go please, Zoe.

 

Somerset & Dorset Railway just before closure.  A railway line that should never have closed, but that is another  (political) story.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sSDLZ6ZjN2k&ab_channel=PhilipFowler

 

Back Later

David

To the world you are someone.    To someone you are the world

I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought

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Posted by hon30critter on Friday, December 30, 2022 5:24 AM

SeeYou190
OK... forgive me here... If the weather falls below 32 degrees, how do the pipes NOT freeze? And... what is wrong if they do freeze? Wouldn't they just thaw out?

Hi Kevin,

If the air temperature around the pipes goes below the freezing point, then the pipes will freeze. Unfortunately, when pipes freeze they tend to burst. Why? Water expands as it freezes. That process has shaped our entire planet. Freezing water will eventually break solid rock. Given that, copper or plastic pipes are no match for freezing water. 

One trick to help avoid having your pipes burst is to leave your taps open a tiny bit so that a very small trickle of water is flowing through the pipes. Moving water does not tend to freeze as readily as stationary water. 

As you can imagine, burst water pipes can do a whole lot of damage! Our security service offers an option for monitoring excess water flow. Now that we are retired and rarely leave the house in the winter I don't see a need to pay for that protection, but if we were to go for a holiday during our cold weather seasons, I would definitely sign up.

Cheers!!

Dave

 

I'm just a dude with a bad back having a lot of fun with model trains, and finally building a layout!

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Posted by Track fiddler on Friday, December 30, 2022 6:10 AM

Good morning

Good point Dave.  My dad used to get pissed off if we didn't leave the faucets at a slow trickle during the Sub-Zero temps near International Falls.  Well water was free but bursted pipes wasn't.

There was never a year we didn't fluff up bales of hay covered with tarps over the septic system in the fall.  And heat tapes around the sewer line exiting the basement in the lodge. 

Otherwise the outhouse would be a cold walk down the hill and could freeze ones buns on arrival.  We didn't have no heat tapes down there eh? Laugh

 

  Ajan/Pinterest

 

Have a great weekend gentlemanSmile, Wink & Grin

 

TF

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Posted by York1 on Friday, December 30, 2022 8:37 AM

Good morning.  The last Friday of 2022!

In New Orleans, we didn't usually worry about frozen pipes.  When we moved north, our first house had a large garage with a small bathroom in it.  I didn't really think about it until the first winter when the pipes froze.  Lots of sheetrock to replace.  I found out that before winter, I had to turn the water off to the bathroom and drain the pipes.

I have some earth-shattering news from our house.  Yesterday my wife began to clean some of the junk out of the basement storeroom.  It was so full you couldn't even walk into the room.  While she didn't get rid of much, it's a beginning, and it gives me hope for 2023!

This photo was about eight miles west of my house about 10 years ago.

I hope everyone has a great Friday!

York1 John       

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Posted by CNCharlie on Friday, December 30, 2022 10:07 AM

Good Morning,

John, hope you are feeling better soon. 

When we had the sailboat I carefully drained the block on the engine, removed the cover of the water pump to drain the water and blew out the intake hose to prevent damage from freezing over winter. The engine was a 1 cylinder Volvo diesel I named Helga. It had 7.5 HP and weighed 250 lbs.

Nothing new here. Tomorrow it will be warm enough to replace the car headlight. The lights are quite good on this car but not as good as the lights I had im '73 Nova. I installed Bosch H4 headlights that had 450,000 candlepower on high beam. Lit up the road like daylight. I had to be very careful when travelling in the US as they were illegal there at the time. 

Still haven't moved the U2g from the water tower. Maybe today.

CN Charlie

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Friday, December 30, 2022 10:42 AM

allegedlynerdy
Any external plumbing (either a well or city water hookups) will be dug below the frost line

When I shared the first pictures of my irrigation system with my family, some people said I was not burying the pipes deep enough, this must be why they said that.

Not a concern of mine!

hon30critter
As you can imagine, burst water pipes can do a whole lot of damage!

We have pipes burst down here, but for different reasons. The heat in our houses, attics and external walls, makes the pipes become brittle over time. Also, hard water eats copper piping.

Track fiddler
There was never a year we didn't fluff up bales of hay covered with tarps over the septic system in the fall.  And heat tapes around the sewer line exiting the basement in the lodge.

This all sounds like too much work.

York1
When we moved north, our first house had a large garage with a small bathroom in it.  I didn't really think about it until the first winter when the pipes froze.  Lots of sheetrock to replace.

The Dream House had a full bathroom in the garage. The builder said it was a feature he had never included before. I wanted to shower and get clean before I walked into the new house after work.

CNCharlie
When we had the sailboat I carefully drained the block on the engine, removed the cover of the water pump to drain the water and blew out the intake hose to prevent damage from freezing over winter.

I read processes for winterizing engines in a few service manuals... No thank you!

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by moelarrycurly4 on Friday, December 30, 2022 11:57 AM

Kevin,

I shut off the water to the house here when we are gone, I drain the pipes each time starting in October, One time i forgot to drain one side  and busted three faucets in the house and some pipes in the crawl space. Not good when you arrive late and no place is open to get parts till the next day,

we had teen temps here in Mississippi, but at my main house in KY it was -5 F last Friday morning. I have never had issue with my pipes freezing in KY because my basement is a semi heated space.  I ran my Kerosene heater to supplemnet the heat down there. We were lucky we did not loose power during that cold. 1 week later and it was 65 degrees yesterday in KY, go figure. We did get a white Christmas , but you cannot tell it ever snowed now. 

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Posted by NorthBrit on Friday, December 30, 2022 12:15 PM

Good evening Diners.  A Pusser's Rum please, Brunhilda.

 

Flying Scotsman in Wartime Black.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=itDIm5KY2Hw&ab_channel=theenthusiast101

 

Tanfield Railway North Pole Express.   Many years back I was a volunteer here.

 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VoPoKA-9He4&ab_channel=Spike%27sSteam

 

David

To the world you are someone.    To someone you are the world

I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought

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Posted by gmpullman on Friday, December 30, 2022 12:17 PM

I've had many anxious moments at the GE plant I w**ed in for many years. We would get cold spells, -10 and lower were sometimes the norm, not so bad until warmer temps would then thaw the frozen pipes and everyone was looking at me, the pipefitter, to get the water shut off.

Ever see how much water comes out of a 6" pipe at 70 PSI?

Sometimes the steam heat trace lines were frozen (or the valve shut!) or the breaker would trip on the electric trace lines. This was basically a chemical plant on 30 acres. There were pipes everywhere!

Often I had to call the city water department to close the lines leading into the plant, never a nice option. Sometimes the sprinkler lines would burst and in turn, the fire department would respond when the ADT alarms went off.

Quite a few of the water lines were interconnected and you had to close three or four valves to isolate the leak. Sometimes these valves were thirty feet up, other times buried in manholes you had to chase the rats out of, and of course, at 2 AM you had to try to arrange a confined-space entry team when there's only five people in the whole plant (during holiday shutdowns for instance)

I'm sure glad those days are behind me.

I blow out the water lines on the caboose and I have a rig I made up that I can pump the lines with RV anti-freeze for the duration.

Cheers, Ed

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Posted by howmus on Friday, December 30, 2022 12:31 PM

LOL.....  Yep!  Growing up on the farm we had two old farm trucks and usualy a secondary tractor or two to drain well before any freeze.  We had a compressor on the farm and we also blew out all the remaining water as best we could.  Only the Ford 861 Powermaster, the Pick up Truck, and the Car were flushed and new antifreeze added for the winter time...  Only water line left up was the water in the heated milk house (and of course the piping into the basement of our house).  We had a couple hundred foot of hose in the milk house to reach the water tanks for the calves and the milk cow herd (chickens, etc when we had those as well).  Part of my job every day (sometimes twice) was to break the ice off the large watering tanks so the cows could drink.  When it was well below Zero (F) that was a major task.  Cattle have to have fresh water to drink!!!

The constant fear was that the pump at the dug well across the road and way down in one of our fields would freeze up if the weather got really cold.  Then we had to grab one of the kerosine heaters and open up the cover on the well and hope to get it unfrozen.  We did have a small electric heater in that to take care of it, but a couple times I remember that burning out.  I can also tell you that frostbite is painfull!  VERY PAINFULL!!!  Got that a couple times while my dad and I were deperately trying to get water to the cows! Brrrrrr!!!

73

Ray Seneca Lake, Ontario, and Western R.R. (S.L.O.&W.) in HO

We'll get there sooner or later! 

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Friday, December 30, 2022 12:52 PM

gmpullman
Ever see how much water comes out of a 6" pipe at 70 PSI?

I can only imagine.

I have seen how much water comes out of a 30" pipe attached to a pump driven by a 2,000 horsepower diesel engine. Seeing a 30" solid column of water shoot 150 feet through the air really lets you appreciate just how much power a 16 cylinder industrial engine can create.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by York1 on Friday, December 30, 2022 1:03 PM

howmus
I can also tell you that frostbite is painfull!  VERY PAINFULL!!! 

I can attest to that!  When I was a teen, I had a small hole in a glove and got frostbite on a small part of my thumb.

It was as if someone held a lit match on my thumb.  It turned black and hurt for weeks.

Our fingers and toes used to get numb from the cold, but I only had true frostbite that one time.

York1 John       

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Posted by York1 on Friday, December 30, 2022 3:52 PM

thought it felt a little different when I woke up this morning!

 

York1 John       

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Posted by MisterBeasley on Friday, December 30, 2022 4:14 PM

York1

thought it felt a little different when I woke up this morning!

 

 

We did our part this morning at breakfast!

It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse. 

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Posted by SeeYou190 on Friday, December 30, 2022 6:41 PM

Many years ago I wanted the Lackawanna caboose from Railworks to be the standard caboose for the Stratton And Gillette.

After not being able to find any, I switched to the Gulf Mobile And Ohio caboose I have collected twelve of.

Good thing, when one of the Lackawanna cabooses comes up for sale, it is a real bank-breaker.

This one sold today.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by "JaBear" on Saturday, December 31, 2022 3:45 AM
Gidday Chloe, the drinks are on me, please. It’s currently 2245 on a clear 55°F New Year’s Eve, and the fireworks are already going off around the village.
 
Winter1 by Bear, on Flickr
 
Mt Cook. by Bear, on Flickr
 
Thoughts and Best Wishes to All that need them. Kia Kaha.
Cheers, the Bear.Smile

"One difference between pessimists and optimists is that while pessimists are more often right, optimists have far more fun."

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Posted by gmpullman on Saturday, December 31, 2022 4:21 AM

Ski-joring ? 

 CP-Rail-Frontenac by Edmund, on Flickr

 

Everyone's happy on the New York Central —

 Smiling NYC Conductor by Edmund, on Flickr

Happy New Year, everyone!

Cheers, Ed

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Posted by NorthBrit on Saturday, December 31, 2022 5:13 AM

To the world you are someone.    To someone you are the world

I cannot afford the luxury of a negative thought

  • Member since
    March 2017
  • 8,173 posts
Posted by Track fiddler on Saturday, December 31, 2022 7:37 AM

Good morning

Heading up to Wisconsin in a bit, as it was too cold to safely travel for Christmas. 

Someone locked the good goody thread and it wasn't requested.  Have to say it pissed me off as being unnecessary.  Past months Diner threads aren't even being locked anymore is my point.  Others might post on a thread the OP has excused themself from, and I've been known to dig up an old bone like the 2019 GG thread.  The only time I've seen threads locked is when there's foul activity or stated that the OP has directly requested it.  Not that big of a deal, but still pisses me off.  Must be the ScotsWhistling.....Rant overSmile

 

All packed but "Sleepy" hasn't woke yet.  She worked hard last week after being out with her cracked ribs for a while.  Guess she's entitled to it, but want to get this show on the road! (pun intended) Laugh

 

  Reddit

 

Have a good New Year's gentlemanSmile, Wink & Grin

 

 

TF

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