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Jeffrey's Trackside Diner Tour — FEBRUARY, 2021

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Posted by York1 on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 12:41 PM

Track fiddler
I cranked up The Wreck of the Edmund Fitzgerald so loud my neighbors might be pissed off  The Denon has been known to do that "Don't you know" ?   I'm just sorry none of you heard it. 

 

That was you!?

I was outside a little while ago, and I thought someone was playing their car radio too loud.  And I live 500 miles from you!

York1 John       

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Posted by CNCharlie on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 12:44 PM

Ray, great story abour your Bug! I had a '61. I had studded snow tires on it and a gas heater under the back seat so it was great in winter. The heater had only one setting which was max. It got so hot in that car you started to feel ill so you alternated btween freezing and roasting. I had it for a year, 1968. I then got a '62 Chevy II which actually was a fairly good car. At least it had adequate power and good heater.

CN Charlie

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Posted by moelarrycurly4 on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 12:51 PM

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Posted by Track fiddler on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 12:58 PM

Yep

That was me John!  Denon with Klipsch speakers and 12" subwoofer, No Substitute!

And I enjoyed the Bug commercial MLC.

 

 

 

TF

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Posted by BATMAN on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 2:04 PM

The Fitz in snow.

Northern Michigan In Focus: Edmund Fitzgerald Snow Sculpture - 9 & 10 News

When Lightfoot recorded this song, it was the first time the band had ever played the song together.

Why It's Called Lake Superior
Pretty amazing..... Didn't realize how big this lake is !!
LAKE SUPERIOR FACTS
Lake Superior contains ten percent of all the fresh water on the planet Earth.
It covers 82,000 square kilometers or 31,700 square miles.
The average depth is 147 meters or 483 feet.
There have been 352 shipwrecks recorded in Lake Superior.
Lake Superior is, by surface area, the largest lake in the world.
A Jesuit priest in 1668 named it Lac Tracy, but that name was never officially adopted.
It contains as much water as all the other Great Lakes combined, plus three extra Lake Erie's!!
There is a small outflow from the lake at St. Mary's River (Sault Ste Marie) into Lake Huron, but it takes almost two centuries for the water to be completely replaced.
There is enough water in Lake Superior to cover all of North and South America with water one foot deep.
Lake Superior was formed during the last glacial retreat, making it one of the earth's youngest major features at only about 10,000 years old.
The deepest point in the lake is 405 meters or 1,333 feet.
There are 78 different species of fish that call the big lake home.
The maximum wave ever recorded on Lake Superior was 9.45 meters or 31 feet high.
If you stretched the shoreline of Lake Superior out to a straight line, it would be long enough to reach from Duluth to the Bahamas .
Over 300 streams and rivers empty into Lake Superior with the largest source being the Nipigon River
The average underwater visibility of Lake Superior is about 8 meters or 27 feet, making it the cleanest and clearest of the Great Lakes. Underwater visibility in some spots reaches 30 meters or 98 feet.
In the summer, the sun sets more than 35 minutes later on the Western shore of Lake Superior than at its Southeastern edge.
Some of the world's oldest rocks, formed about 2.7 billion years ago, can be found on the Ontario shore of Lake Superior.
It very rarely freezes over completely, and then usually just for a few hours. Complete freezing occurred in1962,1979, 2003 and 2009.

Brent

"All of the world's problems are the result of the difference between how we think and how the world works."

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Posted by BATMAN on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 2:09 PM

Bear.

Antonov AN-2 with Shvetsov Ash-62 IR engine 1000 hp

Image result for Antonov AN-2 with Shvetsov Ash-62 IR engine 1000 hp

Brent

"All of the world's problems are the result of the difference between how we think and how the world works."

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Posted by Track fiddler on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 2:32 PM

Good afternoon

 

Thanks Brent

Somehow I knew Batman would be the one to post the song because he appreciates Gordon just as much as I do

It was much appreciated and not to my surprise how much more appreciated it was hearing the song off my phone that someone posted for me instead of coming out of the Denon with Klipsch speakers and the fine Stereophonics that go with that

I would also like to give you a Special Thanks for the Lake Superior Facts

I found those very interesting and have to admit I probably didn't know about 80% of them

 

Thanks Brent,  If you were here I'd give you a great big grizzly bear man hug not to scare your horseLaugh  You certainly made my dayBig Smile

 

 

 

 

Track Fiddler

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Posted by gmpullman on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 2:35 PM

Track fiddler
Ships don't hit anything like cars do, but they do sink.

Say again?

 

       

I learned to drive in my mom's '66 VW bug. Lots of fun times in the snow, sometimes intentional, sometimes NOT!

Moving at a crawl on an icy, steeply banked curve I found myself 180° to my original direction! Well, a yank on the parking brake (that handle between the seats was sure handy!) cut the wheel a bit and alternate between the clutch and parking brake and I got 'er right way 'round Big Smile

Speaking of East Broad Top, I rember being with my dad on one of their February "Winter Rambles" maybe in '69 or '70 and we got snowed in at Breezewood, Penna. for two days. Pa. Turnpike was closed that whole time. Luckily we had a room already at Howard Johnsons Yes

Cheers, Ed

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Posted by Track fiddler on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 3:02 PM

I stand to be corrected EdTongue TiedIndifferent

 

 

 

WhistlingTF

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Posted by howmus on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 3:28 PM

CNCharlie
I had a '61. I had studded snow tires on it and a gas heater under the back seat so it was great in winter. The heater had only one setting which was max. It got so hot in that car you started to feel ill so you alternated btween freezing and roasting. I had it for a year, 1968.

Yep!  My last Beetle was a 1971 Superbeetle which was also my first "new" car.  That one I put an extractor exhaust on and souped it up from 60hp. to 72hp.  That was a pretty good boost in the little girl so not only was it quick off the line, I could actually do a wheelie with it!  A 6th. grade science teacher in one of the buildings I taught in at the time told his class that he could beat any car made in a footrace between telephone poles.  His class came to the music room and told me and I said "I don't think so!"  So....  I got challenged to a science experiment (at least that is what the school principal classified it as.....WinkWink) which was a race right out in front of the school one afternoon.  The entire student body was either looking out windows or lined up in front of the school to see the great race.

I didn't know that he was allowed to start running before I could start before the race, and I was only allowed to start when he reached my front bumper!  I cried foul, but still did the race.  I revered her way up and when he went by I popped the clutch and did about a 6" wheelie with the car and roared past him about 5' from the telephone pole finish line!  He said that was impossible as the kids were all cheering for their "cool" music teacher.

We did the race 3 times and I beat him every time.  For the last couple years that I taught there when the school had a sports day in the stadium at the school we restaged the great race down on the track....  The science teacher was a fine athlette, BTW.  Those were fun times.  Today both of us teachers would have been fired for pulling something like that and the principal may have been as well for allowing it!

Oh!  I did have a pair of chains for that car which I used for pulling a small trailer to Boy Scout Campouts in winter time...  That got real scarry a couple of times.  Chains are no help at all on glare ice!!!! Indifferent

73

P.S. - I also used to pop wheelies with her out in the parking lot of Chemung School where I also taught.  A couple of my little students out there liked to see me do that!  You may have heard about them.  Their names were Todd and Brett Bodine...

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 CNCharlie on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 6:08 PM

The fastest car to 60 I've ever ridden in was a Lotus Super 7. It had a 1600cc Cortina engine with 2 Weber 40 side draft carbs. The fellow who owned it also had a '67 Vette with a 427. He said nothing could touch the Lotus to 60. Perhaps JR could give us a perspective on that. It was strange sitting in it and looking at the top of the tires of cars beside it. 

CN Charlie

 

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Posted by Track fiddler on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 7:20 PM

Good evening

I'm sure you all remember the days I used to take the Stagecoach home from Cowboy Jacks Saloon.  Those days were well long gone over a year ago due to the covid.

Well enough's enough.  We used to go up there every Wednesday night like clockwork to Chum with our friends and get the Hump Day special $2 cheeseburger basket.

Got it to go tonight.  The only difference is things are not quite the same.  Two cheeseburgers was $26

They were okay but not like when we were there,  and at $13 a cheeseburger, I won't be going back there anytime too soon.

 

And we didn't even get a beer out of the dealCrying

 

 

 

LaughTF

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Posted by hon30critter on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 7:50 PM

Track fiddler
Got it to go tonight.  The only difference is things are not quite the same.  Two cheeseburgers was $26

Hi TF,

We have experienced the same thing. Our local diner which we visit at least once per week has increased prices since the start of Covid. I can't blame them. Over the last year they have either been forced to restrict the number of in house diners or close the seated area completely and just rely on takeout. I am happy to say that they have maintained their quality. I ordered a BLT with cheese a couple of days ago and the cheese slice was at least 1/4" thick! They put in so much bacon that you can hardly get your mouth around it.

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 Wednesday, February 17, 2021 8:15 PM

I can understand it too Dave.

This thing has been extremely hard on restaurants.  That sounds like one heck of a BLT thoughDinner

There is just something way missing up here.  We both really need a vacation.  The little four-day getaway in the Frozen cabin just didn't quite cut it.  I need some hot weather with the palm trees.  

 

Hey!, .....Maybe I could pack up my pup tent and stay in Kevin's backyardStick out tongue LaughLaughLaugh

I would mow the lawn, trim the orange trees and possibly take care of that lizard egg problem to earn my keepLaugh

 

The world is a beautiful place

 

 

 

SmileTF

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Posted by hon30critter on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 8:29 PM

I just got five very nice HO scale automobiles from Oxford Automobile Company in England. They range from a 1949 Mercury 2 dr., a 1950 Oldsmobile 2 dr., a 1954 Pontiac Chieftan 4 dr. through to two 1961 Chevrolet Impala convertibles. These look to be much closer to HO scale than some of Oxford's early North American offerings which were a bit on the large side, but I haven't measured them.

The paint jobs and details are extremely well done. They do not look toy-like in any way. They don't have separate clear plastic headlights but that can be fixed easily if you want to illuminate the cars. They even have detailed license plates and appropriate width whitewalls.

I have no affiliation. I'm just a very satisfied customer. I will certainly be buying more of them to populate my layout. I got mine through eBay and there was a discount for purchasing five at once.

Cheers!!

Dave

Update:

I just ordered seven more. They are really well done!

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 gmpullman on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 9:55 PM

Well, it is time to skeedaddle along the PRR "Broad Way" and hop aboard The Admiral for an early-morning departure from Altoona, 2:50 AM and we will have the Diner set off in Lancaster Pennsylvania at 6:03 AM in time for an early breakfast.

 PRR_General_0001 by Edmund, on Flickr

Yes, there was still lots to see and do in the Altoona area. we barely set foot in the Railroader's Memorial Museum. Well, that's an excuse for another visit.

Once we arrive Lancaster we can spend some time at the State Of Pennsylvania Railroad Museum and, of course, the ride to Paradise on the Strasburg Railroad.

 PRR_General_0002 by Edmund, on Flickr

All the snow accumulation has made our bird feeders a popular attraction. Those darned Starlings are emptying the feeders almost every day but at least the ground feeders are staying busy, and FED!

Today we had TWO Pileated woodpeckers visit along with at least a dozen bluebirds and lots of purple finches, plus the usual tufted titmouse, chickadees, sparrows and, those beautiful, bright red Cardinals!

 Pileated_x2 by Edmund, on Flickr

Cheers, Ed

 

 

 

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Posted by Track fiddler on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 10:11 PM

Sweet!

I'll be back in the dining car and have the coffee ready at 5:57 just before we arrive in Lancaster for breakfast.

After that I'll be sitting at the end of the boothSmile, Wink & Grin

 

Beautiful picture.  You were lucky to capture that as they are a timid bird and get scarce easily.

Those Pileated Woodpeckers are an incredible bird Ed.  I've always admired their bright red mohawks.  People with tall hollow wooden chimneys have problems with them.  Apparently, and I just learned this about 7 years ago.  The males go to the highest place they can find, to make the loudest noise they can find, pecking loudly to attract a female candidate is thier mating ritual in the early spring.  And that's why you always hear those loud knocks in the early spring.  And a little later in the spring if she was late in finding him.  Other than pecking holes to come back to later to eat the bugs that crawl in to hide, they don't peck for the heck of it. The peck is their job and they do it well

 

The world is a beautiful place

 

 

 

 

TF

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Posted by Heartland Division CB&Q on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 11:01 PM

Howdy .... 

TF, John York 1, MLC, and Tim. ..... Thanks for the welcome home. 

Tim ..... Thanks for sharing your memorable experience of winter driving. Sad, the VW driver died in the crash. 

Ed ..... I watched the interesting video about ships crashing. There is a picture to the link showing the ship that crashed in recent years on Kentucky Lake (Tennessee River with a dam.) near here where I live. So, I watched the video and did not see that crash. 

Here is another picture of it. 

The bridge was built in the 1930's. A temporary replacement span was installed after about 4 months of work. 

Our neighbors happened to be driving across the bridge at the time. They were on another span approaching the one that fell into the water. Fortunately, no vehicles fell in the water. 

The ship went under the wrong span. The correct span had enough clearance. 

Since then, the bridge has been replaced with a modern one with four traffic lanes. 

GARRY

HEARTLAND DIVISION, CB&Q RR

EVERYWHERE LOST; WE HUSTLE OUR CABOOSE FOR YOU

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Posted by gmpullman on Wednesday, February 17, 2021 11:40 PM

Heartland Division CB&Q
Ed ..... I watched the interesting video about ships crashing. There is a picture to the link showing the ship that crashed in recent years on Kentucky Lake near here where I live. So, I watched the video and did not see that crash.

I see that pretty often from the YouTube people that try to get "click bait".

I normally wouldn't have posted one like that but I just happened to see it the other day and remembered it to show TF that, yes, sometimes ships DO crash like highway vehicles.

If something was designed or operated by man ...

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eggner%27s_Ferry_Bridge

Cheers, Ed

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Posted by Track fiddler on Thursday, February 18, 2021 12:07 AM

And now I'm going to crashLaugh

Good night everyone.  It's after high noon and I'm hitting the rackYes

 

I'll see you all tomorrow.  Sleep well KidsWink

 

 

 

 

TF

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Posted by hon30critter on Thursday, February 18, 2021 12:32 AM

I've just been reading about the very serious cold weather situation in Texas. Things seem to be pretty bad. Not to minimize the serious situation that the Texas citizens are in, but I noted in particular that the sea turtle population is in trouble. Thousands of turtles have been brought into the community center on South Padre Island because they won't survive the cold, but the power has been off for most of the time so it is questionable as to whether or not the rescue will succeed. Tragic!

I will hope for a huge change in the weather!

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 SeeYou190 on Thursday, February 18, 2021 1:09 AM

My last day of work was Monday, 17/FEB/2020, so as of midnight, I have officially been retired for an entire year!

Big Smile

I worked for my previous employer for more than 30 years. My job defined my entire adult life. I started there when I was 21 years old. I qualified for early retirement because my age (52) and years of service (30) added up to more than 80. I was one of the youngest people that qualified.

I am amazed how long my work life still entered my mind.

One of my biggest responsibilities was making sure that about 30 large assets were in the correct place all the time. I had large facilities I managed in Atlanta, Charlotte, Tampa, and West Palm Beach. I had smaller facilities I used sometimes in Nashville, Daytona Beach, Jacksonville, and Chesapeake. Sometimes it seemed I spent entire days on the phone with Southeastern Freight making sure things were being shipped on time to the correct locations.

For months after I retired I would find myself suddenly very concerned about the status of these shipments, and I would start to fret. I would realize it is not my problem anymore, and then I would kind of chuckle.

I also found myself worrying about budgets, inspections, tool audits, channel readiness, new product releases, and so on...

Finally, a couple of months ago, it seemed my brain realized I can relax and not worry about anything anymore. It is really astounding how long it actually took for me to turn it off.

I am so relaxed now. Having no worries is an excellent place to be.

The World Is A Beautiful Place.

-Kevin

Living the dream.

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Posted by hon30critter on Thursday, February 18, 2021 1:35 AM

SeeYou190
I am so relaxed now. Having no worries is an excellent place to be.

Hi Kevin,

You obviously took your responsibilities very seriously. You are to be congratulated for that!

I took my job very seriously too, but unfortunately my employer, Sears Canada, didn't understand how to do that. My managers were so bad that I gave up on hoping that my installed home improvement customers would be treated properly. Towards the end, one in three customers was being screwed totally. I couldn't take that any more so I quit.

I am very relaxed now too. I don't miss work one little bit!

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 gmpullman on Thursday, February 18, 2021 3:20 AM

I still have bizarre dreams about my job and I retired after 38 years back in April of 2016. When I started at GE in 1978 there were over 2000 hourly and 600 salaried people at the plant I worked in, part of Lighting. Back then there were over 30 GE Lighting plants in Ohio alone.

When Jack Welch rose to power everything changed. GE could get a 20% return just by shuffling debt around. On a good day a factory was considered financially viable if it returnd 3-5%. GE moved more into finance and insurance and let the industries decline. Katrina, 911 and 2008 sure changed all that!

When I left there were 33 hourly and five salaried people left. Honestly, the day before I retired they announced the plant closing. I could have stayed on another year and got an additional two-years' severance pay. I had about 72 hours to decide. Glad I retired Yes Glad, too, I didn't have to depend on that additional severance to survive. Thankfully my pension is still intact... today.

 Pearl_7C_0059_edited-1 by Edmund, on Flickr

I sure miss being with the people, though. Most of my career was as a Millwright and pipe fitter, welder. I really enjoyed my time on the job. Many days it was challenging to figure out a problem and what to do to correct it. We ran 'round the clock and I worked a rotating shift. That's why I'm up typing at 5 AM Whistling

One day I heard they were bringing a telescope mirror blank in for us to load on a flat car. THAT was the kind of neat stuff that went on to make the job interesting!

 NOV_2013_fix by Edmund, on Flickr

I don't see the kind of camaraderie with the people working jobs today. Back then we had company picknicks, bowling leagues, softball teams, Christmas parties for the employee's families and kids, company-sponsored summer camps and a lot of union activities, too.

Most of the buildings have been leveled now and I have no desire to go back and see what's left. 

It was good while it lasted Smile

Regards, Ed

 

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Posted by NorthBrit on Thursday, February 18, 2021 5:26 AM

Good morning all.  If this dark cloud passes it could be a warm day.

Boy am I glad I am retired.  I used to in the road haulage transport industry. I had been around  road transport since I was seven years of age.  With family permission lorry drivers would take me to Hull or Liverpool or maybe Northumberland.  Once I started work I had to be close to road transport. What used to be an interesting and enjoyable job.  Stressful yes, but I enjoyed it.  Then things changed for the worse on arrival of a new manager.  Closure was manipulated  and the Company became smaller.  I and many others left the Company.  I hear it  is now so target orientated it is a nightmare.   Anyone reaching a target is now immediately increased.

Even today if I see a road haulage vehicle I wonder where it is going?  Where has it been?   Sometimes it is 'He's a long way from home'.

On my layout there is an abundance of transport vehicles.

 

Coffee   Coffee Time

 

Thoughts & Peace to All who Require.

 

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 mbinsewi on Thursday, February 18, 2021 6:52 AM

I still have dreams about being on a big job site.  I'm usually trying to get from one end of the job to the other, for a concrete pour, and so many obstacles I have to overcome to get there. Laugh

When I wake up, I lay there and smile, as I hear the early morning traffic on my street, of those going to work.

Get to work!!  Grumpy   Laugh

Non of this bothers me, I've been retired since July 1, 2012, and lovin everyday of it!.

Mike.

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Posted by Heartland Division CB&Q on Thursday, February 18, 2021 8:39 AM

gmpullman

 

 
Heartland Division CB&Q
Ed ..... I watched the interesting video about ships crashing. There is a picture to the link showing the ship that crashed in recent years on Kentucky Lake near here where I live. So, I watched the video and did not see that crash.

 

I see that pretty often from the YouTube people that try to get "click bait".

I normally wouldn't have posted one like that but I just happened to see it the other day and remembered it to show TF that, yes, sometimes ships DO crash like highway vehicles.

If something was designed or operated by man ...

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eggner%27s_Ferry_Bridge

Cheers, Ed

 

Ed .... That's an interesting video explaining how fishing was affected by the Eggner's Ferry Bridge collapse. There is a lot of fishing on the two lakes that form the Land Between The Lakes. 

The ship involved in the accident is an unsual design. It carries rocket parts for NASA from Huntsville, AL to Cape Canaveral, FL. Its route is Tennessee River northward to Ohio River. Then west to Mississippi River where it goes south to the Gulf. From there, it follows the coast of the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean. ... I'm not sure why they ship over the waterways, but I suspect some of the cargo is too big for railroads or trucks. 

Most of the cargo on the waterways here is coal, sand, rocks, grain, or other bulk cargo, and it is hauled on barges instead of ships. 

Rest of the story....... Reportedly, the crew of the ship was drunk.

The accident was on January 26, 2012. 

 

 

GARRY

HEARTLAND DIVISION, CB&Q RR

EVERYWHERE LOST; WE HUSTLE OUR CABOOSE FOR YOU

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Posted by maxman on Thursday, February 18, 2021 10:50 AM

gmpullman

 

 

I don't know what happened, officer.  We were just sailing along minding our own business and the bridge jumped out in front of us.

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Posted by CNCharlie on Thursday, February 18, 2021 11:16 AM

Good Morning,

I retired Nov/13 and I too have work related dreams. Mine are usuallyvin the office or I'm on a work trip and there is a flight problem or hotel mix-up. Always imaginary places never actual towns or airports I've actually been.

Ed, my first job out of Uni in '71 was with CGE in the Housewares Div. plant in Barrie,ON. I was in the Finance Dept there doing boring accounting work. I only lasted a year before going to work for Sunoco as a Retail aSales Rep, a job I really did like. I was a very restless fellow when young and being on the constant move going from station to station suited me.

TF, it is getting warmer out there so won't be sending cold air down to you for a few days at least. Sorry, I do know how you enjoy it.

Dave, saw that Mc Keen car on another thread, what a beauty! 

Time for more coffee.

CN Charlie

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Posted by Track fiddler on Thursday, February 18, 2021 11:21 AM

Oh Man!!!

No more blue toes and Frozen Finger extremities?  Darn it!  And just when I was getting used to it tooSad

 

 

 

LaughTF

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