I always have at least 2 issues of NSR and MR in my work bag. Plus I use any idel time to cruise the various Model Railroad forums I follow.Everyone knows I'm the train nut.
Sometimes I actually get interupted ...by actual work.
I take my MR and Trains and Classic Trains and Special issues anywhere where i may have to wait and pass the time.
Such as Dr's office, while car repaired etc. After I scan them at home, I leave the newer isssues in the van for easy access to anytime I may have to wait/ pass time.
I don't care what looks or comments I get {almost never}.
-G .
Just my thoughts, ideas, opinions and experiences. Others may vary.
HO and N Scale.
After long and careful thought, they have convinced me. I have come to the conclusion that they are right. The aliens did it.
Hi,
Thank you everybody for the great posts. It is great to read how many take their magazines to work and also have started other people into this great hobby.
Frank
"If you need a helping hand, you'll find one at the end of your arm."
tatansWork? Job? Don't we wish, I hate to tell anyone, there's a recession out there, there really is .
Work? Job? Don't we wish, I hate to tell anyone, there's a recession out there, there really is .
"The true sign of intelligence is not knowledge but imagination."-Albert Einstein
http://gearedsteam.blogspot.com/
I don't get to read it at home, but I do read it over lunchtime at work from cover to cover. There's another person that does cleanup around the plant that sneeks my mag to lunch with him and returns it when he's done....he thinks I don't know, but he's a kind older gentleman and I can't say anything...he's an old modeler from way back as well, and we've had many train discussions.
Bob Berger, C.O.O. N-ovation & Northwestern R.R. My patio layout....SEE IT HERE
There's no place like ~/ ;)
I do also.
Russell
Being self employed and working from home as well, my MR collection (1957-now) is right on a shelf in my office. And RMC is in spare room down the hall.
But, its hardly fair to call what I do "work".
Sheldon
moelarrycurly4mononguy63pastorbob when I am in the office and stuck on the sermon. Am I the only one who sees great risk in that? I have this vision of the congregation some Sunday morning hearing, "I'll now read from the Book of Trains of Thought..." Jim I thought it was : " ..now lets all turn to 1st Koester chapter 3 verse 4...."
mononguy63pastorbob when I am in the office and stuck on the sermon. Am I the only one who sees great risk in that? I have this vision of the congregation some Sunday morning hearing, "I'll now read from the Book of Trains of Thought..." Jim
pastorbob when I am in the office and stuck on the sermon.
when I am in the office and stuck on the sermon.
Am I the only one who sees great risk in that? I have this vision of the congregation some Sunday morning hearing, "I'll now read from the Book of Trains of Thought..."
Jim
I thought it was : " ..now lets all turn to 1st Koester chapter 3 verse 4...."
That's a hoot!
My office is a home office, so...yes, as a matter of fact, I do...
"I am lapidary but not eristic when I use big words." - William F. Buckley
I haven't been sleeping. I'm afraid I'll dream I'm in a coma and then wake up unconscious. -Stephen Wright
My office has 3 large, framed pictures of steam engines on the wall. (O W Link prints that are something like 2 ft X 3 ft)
Does that count?
I spend a fair bit of time at clients homes so mags are in the car--but through those mags I ended up inspiring three clients to involve themselves in MRR'ing---now I get to talk trains at my job!!
Any argument carried far enough will end up in Semantics--Hartz's law of rhetoric Emerald. Leemer and Southern The route of the Sceptre Express Barry
I just started my blog site...more stuff to come...
http://modeltrainswithmusic.blogspot.ca/
I have a 2 1/2 hr commute on the train each day and enjoy reading a copy. It really makes the time fly much faster. Though the commute is long, its easy to get involved in an article. And its especially fun reading it on a train.
I not only take my magazines to work, but I have a small small layout there as well!
I can tell someone has been "secretly" playing with my layout. I can see the "cars" slightly moved when I come back the next morning. (Which amuses me.) Guess there's a closet model railroader in a number of us.
Don - Specializing in layout DC->DCC conversions
Modeling C&O transition era and steel industries There's Nothing Like Big Steam!
When I go on a trip, either business or pleasure, I usually put a copy of MR, RMC and/or the Walthers catalog in my laptop case, so I've got it for the plane ride, the airport terminal stockyard or the hotel with 3 TV channels, all showing Nancy Grace.
Sometimes, I forget to take them out and they piggyback to work with me.
It takes an iron man to play with a toy iron horse.
tatans Work? Job? Don't we wish, I hate to tell anyone, there's a recession out there, there really is .
I thought the majority of people still worked?--and what does this have to do with anything?
Breaks? Who waits for breaks? ;)
I'm a locomotive engineer, so they ride in my grip and I haul them out for a short period of time during my layovers. In freight, where the layovers were generally longer, I used to take a specialized small plastic craft toolbox with me. It would hold a couple of cars or a locomotive, tools, spare parts and paint supplies. Made those long layovers easier to take, but with the shorter layovers in passenger service, I can't do that anymore.
I am retired now, but I never did take magazines to work and read them there when I was working.
Nowadays when I collect the current MR from my PO Box, I dive in to the Subway Sandwich shop next to the Post Office and spend a leisurely hour or so eating a meatball sandwich, reading MR and looking over the girls from the beauty shop next door who have their coffee break at the Subway same as me.
Ah, to be alive now that spring is here
Bruce
Never did. There was never time or absent ethics for leisure reading at work, and I worked at several federal government agencies. On the occasions when there wasn't enough work to keep me busy, I did research to expand my work knowledge, and as a result, sometimes wrote papers for use by co-workers to help us do a better job... Did read newspapers on the train to/from work, but mostly tried to catch up on sleep to compensate for routine 12-hour workdays (includes commute), but occasionally took railroad-subject books to read at the hotel during out-of-town assignments.... Regardless, at the first opportunity to retire, I took it.
Mark (retired supervisory auditor for one of the fed's Inspector Generals)
I do, too!
Living outside the town where I work, and having to use a passenger ferry ride of 20 minutes each way. What could be better than using that time reading Trains and MR? Over the years I have received a lot of interest and comments from some of my by-sitters, reading /looking at great photos over my shoulder!
Best regards for the weekend!
I always carried about 5 MR in my grip. Any spot time was spent in MR.
Bob
Sure do - all the time. My coworkers love it.
-RC
~G4
19 Years old, modeling the Cowlitz, Chehalis, and Cascade Railroad of Western Washington in 1927 in 6X6 feet.
My primary job is a college student. I can't read them in class because I'll miss the lecture. Sometimes it would help to read MR when the lectures are boring My secondary job is delivering furniture and I am constantly behind the wheel. I don't think my boss, or anybody in traffic, would appreciate me reading MR while driving. I have seen people read books behind the wheel though, but not me.
Will
I keep a supply in the bathroom also, but I also carry mags in my car to work. As a pastor, my breaks generally come while waiting in a hospital waiting room, or at meetings, or when I am in the office and stuck on the sermon, so they travel with me.
My wife is less than thrilled that I have that stack in the bathroom at home when we have company coming over. However, the bathroom in the basement where the train room is gets away with leaving them scattered all over.
To go a step further, my church is in another town 50 miles away, so I carry tools and a few kits with me so that I have something to do in the idle time. Many kits have been started and finished in the church.
I take them to school all the time (I go to middle school right now).
What did it do at the beginning? Get me labeled a dork, lol. Oh well; I wound up teaching a mini-course on the subject to anyone that was interested this year.
Sawyer Berry
Clemson University c/o 2018
Building a protolanced industrial park layout