Trains.com

Subscriber & Member Login

Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!

Station name pun in MR

3817 views
20 replies
1 rating 2 rating 3 rating 4 rating 5 rating
  • Member since
    April 2009
  • From: Sweden
  • 1,468 posts
Station name pun in MR
Posted by Graffen on Sunday, September 13, 2009 7:18 PM

Did anyone get the nameplay on the Santa Fe station in the October MR? The author V.S. Roseman has named the fictitious station Heloderma N.M., I think it is a wonderful way to make an association with a real place.

I believe it is to link with Gila flats N.M, as the latin name for the Gila lizard is Heloderma suspectum. Anyone else that has some good ones like this one?

Swedish Custom painter and model maker. My Website:

My Railroad

My Youtube:

Graff´s channel

  • Member since
    July 2004
  • From: Lewiston ID
  • 1,710 posts
Posted by reklein on Sunday, September 13, 2009 8:11 PM

Good catch Graffen, brilliant for a non-resident. Are you a biologist of some sort? collecting punny names is a hobby of my wifes. One of my favorites is Pikup Andropov the russian delivery man. Back in the fifties and sixties the pun named railroads were endemic but seem to have fallen off now. My own Railraod I call Collier Bluffs and Poker Flats, but haven't labeled any rolling stock yet.

   It just occurred to me , that maybe you are in the medical field as there has been a fairly recently developed injection to help the diebetic which is based on the Gila lizards venom.  BILL

In Lewiston Idaho,where they filmed Breakheart pass.
  • Member since
    April 2006
  • From: THE FAR, FAR REACHES OF THE WILD, WILD WEST!
  • 3,672 posts
Posted by R. T. POTEET on Monday, September 14, 2009 1:25 AM

Graffen

Did anyone get the nameplay on the Santa Fe station in the October MR? The author V.S. Roseman has named the fictitious station Heloderma N.M., I think it is a wonderful way to make an association with a real place.

I believe it is to link with Gila flats N.M, as the latin name for the Gila lizard is Heloderma suspectum. Anyone else that has some good ones like this one?

They may have Gila Lizards someplace but here in Arizona we have the Monster of the species.

I know, Greg H.

(Your answer is) not actualy(sp) giving any usefull(sp) information.

From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet

  • Member since
    July 2002
  • From: Jersey City
  • 1,925 posts
Posted by steemtrayn on Monday, September 14, 2009 10:39 AM

I once had my car serviced by a guy named Lou Boyle.

  • Member since
    November 2003
  • From: West Coast
  • 4,122 posts
Posted by espeefoamer on Monday, September 14, 2009 1:40 PM

In Portland,OR. there is a tire shop named Flatt Tire Co.

Ride Amtrak. Cats Rule, Dogs Drool.
  • Member since
    August 2002
  • From: Corpus Christi, Texas
  • 2,377 posts
Posted by leighant on Monday, September 14, 2009 2:58 PM

 

I had a layout with a pair of hidden staging tracks which represented both the east and west end of the line, a secondary main in East Texas.  Needed two names for the same place.

Driving to Beaumont Texas on I-10 EB, I crossed a long drive over a body of water labeled "Old and Lost River."  Westbound the sign read "Lost and Old Rivers".  The rivers flowed together more or less in the vicinity of the bridge, and there was no telling where one ended and the other started.  Sort of like my staging tracks that represented two different areas.  I decided to call my east end of the line "Lost River", representing my (unmodeled) version of Beaumont.  The west end would be Old River.

But pretty soon it got confusing running between Old River and Lost River.  Sounded too much alike.  I needed to rename one and I have started thinking of a lot of industries etc connected with Lost River, whereas Old River was simply a connection to everything west, south and north.  How about Spanish.  One word in Spanish for old is "viejo" so my west end became Rio Viejo.

But viejo can also mean "old man" as well as the adjective old.  So Rio Viejo can mean-

---are you sitting down?---

"Old Man River"

 

But what can you expect on a railroad called Santa Vaca?  Holy Cow!

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • 599 posts
Posted by Milepost 266.2 on Monday, September 14, 2009 3:24 PM

Graffen

Did anyone get the nameplay on the Santa Fe station in the October MR? The author V.S. Roseman has named the fictitious station Heloderma N.M., I think it is a wonderful way to make an association with a real place.

I believe it is to link with Gila flats N.M, as the latin name for the Gila lizard is Heloderma suspectum. Anyone else that has some good ones like this one?

 

Very subtle.  I like it.  Much more creative than the Leakey Faucet Works or the Miracle Chair Company.

  • Member since
    January 2009
  • From: good ole WI
  • 1,326 posts
Posted by BerkshireSteam on Monday, September 14, 2009 5:45 PM

I personally liked the Gorre & Dephitade (spelling?) RR and from few months ago Whasup Dock Co. I thought of one named Rockbottom & Hardplace RR but it was so blantantly obvious that I never bother trying different speelings.

  • Member since
    August 2006
  • From: Nashville, TN area
  • 713 posts
Posted by hardcoalcase on Monday, September 14, 2009 8:07 PM

leighant
Driving to Beaumont Texas on I-10 EB, I crossed a long drive over a body of water labeled "Old and Lost River."  Westbound the sign read "Lost and Old Rivers".  The rivers flowed together more or less in the vicinity of the bridge, and there was no telling where one ended and the other started. 

I worked with a guy in Houston who made the Beaumont run frequently - it took him years to figure out that the changed order on the signs was because there were two rivers!

I shouldn't tease him... I never would have noticed!

Jim

 

  • Member since
    June 2007
  • From: Indiana
  • 3,549 posts
Posted by Flashwave on Monday, September 14, 2009 9:40 PM

A neat pun on the station, yes.

And while we're on the topic of puns in real life, in Mossuri, I forget where now, stand two water towers.

One says Hot, the other says Cold.

-Morgan

  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Ogden UT
  • 1,055 posts
Posted by PA&ERR on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 12:40 AM

 My freelance pike, based loosely on the Seattle and North Coast, is named the Port Able and Pacific Railway. Port Able as in portable (it isn't by the way). Also, the initials of the name are the same as the initial of one of the predecessor roads of the Seattle and North Coast, the Port Angeles and Pacific. And the initials of Port Able form the postal abbr. for my home state - Pennsylvania (PA).

Finally, I have a small scene that is supposed to represent the Discovery Bay sawmill from the Seattle and North Coast, which I call the Lost Bay sawmill.  

-Kosmo

"And the sons of Pullman porters and the sons of engineers ride their father's magic carpet made of steel..."

  • Member since
    April 2006
  • From: THE FAR, FAR REACHES OF THE WILD, WILD WEST!
  • 3,672 posts
Posted by R. T. POTEET on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 2:24 AM

PA&ERR

 My freelance pike, based loosely on the Seattle and North Coast, is named the Port Able and Pacific Railway. Port Able as in portable (it isn't by the way). Also, the initials of the name are the same as the initial of one of the predecessor roads of the Seattle and North Coast, the Port Angeles and Pacific. And the initials of Port Able form the postal abbr. for my home state - Pennsylvania (PA).

Finally, I have a small scene that is supposed to represent the Discovery Bay sawmill from the Seattle and North Coast, which I call the Lost Bay sawmill.  

-Kosmo

Been done, Doc. Back in the '60s MR ran a feature on a modular layout called . . . . . are you ready for this? . . . . . The Port Able Lines.

From the far, far reaches of the wild, wild west I am: rtpoteet

  • Member since
    September 2006
  • From: Ogden UT
  • 1,055 posts
Posted by PA&ERR on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 11:15 AM

 

R. T. POTEET

PA&ERR

 My freelance pike, based loosely on the Seattle and North Coast, is named the Port Able and Pacific Railway. Port Able as in portable (it isn't by the way). Also, the initials of the name are the same as the initial of one of the predecessor roads of the Seattle and North Coast, the Port Angeles and Pacific. And the initials of Port Able form the postal abbr. for my home state - Pennsylvania (PA).

Finally, I have a small scene that is supposed to represent the Discovery Bay sawmill from the Seattle and North Coast, which I call the Lost Bay sawmill.  

-Kosmo

Been done, Doc. Back in the '60s MR ran a feature on a modular layout called . . . . . are you ready for this? . . . . . The Port Able Lines.

I knew I wasn't smart enough to have been the first one to come up with that name! Wink

However, it may be that the Port Able and Pacific is heading the way of the Dodo! Through my research into the Milwaukee Road heritage of the Seattle and North Coast, I developed a keen interest in all things Milwaukee Road. 

My original plan was to make the PA&P a contemporary pike - ala Eric Boorman's Utah Belt. However, it is becoming extremely obvious to me that to do so, in a realistic manner, would mean (for me at least) recreating the "G" word on nearly all of my freight cars. That is not something I can see myself doing.

So, now I've been toying with the idea of going back to a simpler time and modeling the Milwaukee Road in the Bitteroots in Idaho - concentrating on the 22 mile section from Avery ID to St Paul Pass Tunnel. I was inspired by a John Armstrong design for a layout based on that prototype in Creative Layout Design. I basically took his plan and stretched it out to fit the space I have available.

-Kosmo

 

 

"And the sons of Pullman porters and the sons of engineers ride their father's magic carpet made of steel..."

  • Member since
    March 2007
  • From: On the Banks of the Great Choptank
  • 2,916 posts
Posted by wm3798 on Tuesday, September 15, 2009 2:30 PM

 It's been said that on the old B&O low line one would travel west bound through Paw Paw, West Virginia...  and east bound trains passed through Wap Wap...  But I digress....

Before I changed the name to something more suitable at the urging of my operating crew,

 

this junction was called "Wye Knot Jct" so named because it was a track plan necessity to allow the layout to operate as a point to point, so what the heck, I figured, "Wye Knot!"  (There's also a farm, well, now it's a McMansion farm near me that bears that name.)

Lee

Route of the Alpha Jets  www.wmrywesternlines.net

  • Member since
    August 2002
  • From: Corpus Christi, Texas
  • 2,377 posts
Posted by leighant on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 11:33 AM

Okay, let's keep this thread going, until it knots up...

 

Looking for a name for my model railroad and for the name of the big city I wanted to model.  My favorite prototype is Santa Fe from the time I got my Lionel warbonnet streamliner set in 1950-something.  The Lionel catalog had an artist's painting of the train going through what looked like Monument Valley.  Romanticized Southwest.  Southwest.  A mission station like Albuquerque or San Diego or like SP's in San Antonio.  So many Santa Fe stations and towns had names in Spanish with some kind of a religious connotation.  Santa Fe = holy faith.  San Diego = Saint James.  Santa Cruz = holy cross.  And so on.  I thought of a real Santa Fe town in California-- Victorville in the desert.  And that reminded me of Vacaville, where there was some kind of prison disturbance.  And the name Santa Vaca came.  It means Sacred Cow, or Saint Cow, or Holy Cow!

            My railroading got started with a train around the Christmas tree, and after a while, I thought of a way the name Santa Vaca relates to Christmas.  I will tell you in advance it is entirely made up.

 

            The Legend of Santa Vaca

 In one of the early Spanish missions established in Texas to convert the Indians, a priest was telling his congregation they should give to the church even though they didn't have much to give.  He said that God can use our gifts more than we know, and he told the story of the cow who gave up her feeding stall to make a place for the Baby Jesus to lay.  He said the cow's gift-- the manger-- became more a part of the Christmas scene than even the expensive gifts of the Wise Men.But the Indians confused the cow in the priest's Christmas story with a buffalo cow who was worshipped in their pre-Christian native religion and they began to bring back the cult of the Holy Cow.  The Church tried to discourage the practice but could not stop it entirely.  The village near the mission took on the name Santa Vaca, and it grew into a major city served by a subsidiary of the Santa Fe Railway.At the cathedral in Santa Vaca near where the mission once stood is a stained glass window with the manger scene featuring the Baby Jesus, the Virgin Mary and the Holy Cow, each with a halo. It looks like I am never going to be able to have a layout big enough to model that big city.  I am instead modeling an Island Seaport.  But I am keeping the name "Santa Vaca" and I used the theme of the cow with the halo in the manger scene for a "company Christmas card" for my imaginary railroad.

 

  • Member since
    November 2007
  • From: Utah
  • 1,315 posts
Posted by shayfan84325 on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 5:36 PM

On my layout I have a couple:

The Stave Brothers Cooperage:

and Spock's Wingnuts (bigger ears for a better grip; the logical choice).  Here one of their boxcars passes the barrel factory (cooperage):

 

Phil,
I'm not a rocket scientist; they are my students.

  • Member since
    April 2004
  • From: SC
  • 318 posts
Posted by lonewoof on Wednesday, September 16, 2009 5:52 PM

 Years ago, someone in MR had a trolley stop near the ocean named Sonova Beach...

 

Remember: In South Carolina, North is southeast of Due West... HIOAg /Bill

  • Member since
    May 2015
  • 779 posts
Posted by Dallas Model Works on Thursday, September 17, 2009 12:01 AM

My layout is the Mount Penelope Railway, named after my wife.

And that's all I'm going to say about that...

 Craig

Craig

DMW

  • Member since
    April 2009
  • From: Sweden
  • 1,468 posts
Posted by Graffen on Thursday, September 17, 2009 1:01 PM

 Thanks for all replys on this.

 BILL: I am an amateur Heretologist, so that is why I have knowledge of the latin names of the reptiles.

 Leighant: Holy Cow. That was a good one...

 Milepost 266.2: I agree, the puns shouldn´t be too obvious, I think.

Shayfan 84325: The Wingnut co. was a good one, any more trekkie puns "out" there?

Craig Cooper: That was a nice one.... Say no more, say no more, nudge, nudge, wink, wink!

 

 

 

Swedish Custom painter and model maker. My Website:

My Railroad

My Youtube:

Graff´s channel

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Finger Lakes
  • 10,198 posts
Posted by howmus on Thursday, September 17, 2009 3:05 PM

Great thread!

My Railroad is the Seneca Lake, Ontario, & Western.  Our motto is, "We'll get there sooner or later."

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

We'll get there sooner or later! 

  • Member since
    November 2007
  • From: Houston, Tx
  • 135 posts
Posted by ds137 on Friday, September 18, 2009 10:29 AM

I just thought it was a greeting to his mother- Hello there, Ma!

I once caught a train in my pajama's. How it got in my pajama's I'll never know... (sorry, Groucho)

Subscriber & Member Login

Login, or register today to interact in our online community, comment on articles, receive our newsletter, manage your account online and more!

Users Online

There are no community member online

Search the Community

ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
ADVERTISEMENT
Model Railroader Newsletter See all
Sign up for our FREE e-newsletter and get model railroad news in your inbox!