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BEER BARN Locked

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GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Saturday, July 14, 2007 7:24 AM

Good Morning Eeveryone;

Well I found us on page three once again. This can't be happening. Well ... I know eveyone is busy so I guess .... that's okay.

At any rate I'll have a coffee, small orange juice, scrambled eggs, sausage, homefries and rye toast to get my day started. Could I hace a little dill in the eggs please. Not too much. Just a hint. Thanks.

Vacation time is almost here and I still have a thousand things to do at work before I can leave, But leave I must and perhaps some of the work just won't get done ....

Today I need to go shopping for a Memory stick, longer strap for the digital camera, spare battery and perhaps some two ways. Of course there are the usual staples and unmentionables, so I will not mention them here. The wife needs to go to the "Tall Girl Shop" to see if there are any sales before we go.

Tonight, a bunch us are getting together to go over the final plans for the vacation, itenary et al. Need to do the Wasabi Shrimp and if time permits the Prochutto Wrapped Jumbo Shrimp (Grilled). Not sure what else is on the menu. Not my department, this time.

Let's see ... three more sleeps, or one and a half days of work and we'll be driving off to Buffalo. Actually I should say "shuffleling off to Buffalo". Wednesday morning we fly to vegas for an overnight stay. Thursday we fly to LA and then up the coast (3 days) to SF for a full week. Thank you everyone for your suggestions on where to go, eat,drink and what to see both train an non train related.

I guess I had better get going here. Maybe I can get a little modeling in. Still haven't finished painting the Mill's 2nd floor windows. Then there's the 3rd floor... oh my.... then there's the addition to build .... and painting the walls but I have to paint the sills a different colour ... oh my.... It's a good thing that I am not a tight schedule to get the building roofed and closed in like in real life construction. Oddly enough the slow progress doesn't bother me at all. It's very relaxing working on the project for a few minutes at a time, getting one or two windows painted  and then coming back later to do some more. Maybe it's the age thing.... but then again....

I know I am rambling... So having finished my breakfast, I will take my leave and check back in later. Bye for now. Everyone Have a Great Day!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

GUB

  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Olympia, WA
  • 2,313 posts
Posted by gear-jammer on Friday, July 13, 2007 11:48 AM

JB,  I would like to see photos of your wye.  One of our next stages will include one.

Sue

Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.

  • Member since
    October 2005
  • From: Northern Minnesota
  • 898 posts
Posted by colvinbackshop on Friday, July 13, 2007 11:39 AM

Good morning...At least for a bit yet!

Well...Opening night went pretty well. There was trouble with the boat, the generator, the sound system and our Barbershop Quartet got off to a shaky start...But EVERYTHING else went well. I'm thinking it will go better this evening!

I did make it to the Trainroom for a little while yesterday and played with pouring more concrete, but mostly just retreated there for some pondering. Today I have some yard and garden work to get done but will also make some time for finishing up some landscaping between the team track and the wye.

GUB, you asked about my workweek and job. I have a few jobs, but the main one for the summer is working for the school district as their pool operator. I am an hourly employee, but in a way salaried. As the operator, I have to work when ever I can (around scheduled activates and / or doing maintenance) with long days, split days, split shifts and so on. Therefore I am a "flex-hour" employee. This can be a real pain, but it works both ways affording the flexible schedule for both myself and the district and I take advantage of  the "flexing" to my benefit when ever I can. 

In a nutshell, this means that I work when ever I can or have to and as long as the job gets done I have a free reign. This mostly applies to summer with less or no demand for pool use and I can often get my hours accomplished in two to three days....Even though it's a hard schedule for the school year, it is still a win for me regarding the afforded flexibility. 

Gotta' run...

Puffin' & Chuggin', JB Chief Engineer, Colvin Creek Railway
  • Member since
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  • From: Olympia, WA
  • 2,313 posts
Posted by gear-jammer on Thursday, July 12, 2007 11:53 AM

MrB,

You will have to do some creative changes.  How about a special engine shed?  You could always do a scratch built.

Sue

Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.

  • Member since
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  • From: Bedford, MA, USA
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Posted by MisterBeasley on Thursday, July 12, 2007 11:33 AM

The Hudson has an unfair advantage.  It won't fit on the turntable, or in the roundhouse stalls.  So, it's always out on the main line, since I'm short on siding and yard space.

That contrasts with the GP-9s, which are disadvantaged by having no sound.  I've got to pull the shell off of one of those and see how much room there is for a speaker...

Kiwi (the bird) likes steamers better than the Alco RS-3 or the SW8 when it comes to sound.

 

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

  • Member since
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  • From: Olympia, WA
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Posted by gear-jammer on Thursday, July 12, 2007 9:43 AM

I'll bet you exercise the Hudson more now that you have an audience for that great sound.

Sue

Anything is possible if you do not know what you are talking about.

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Bedford, MA, USA
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Posted by MisterBeasley on Thursday, July 12, 2007 9:29 AM

Good morning everyone.  Just coffee for me this morning, Joe.  I've decided to shed a few pounds.  Having trouble bending over to tie my hockey skates.  Yeah, us goalies don't mind being wide, but we want to maintain some mobility, too.  Still, I've never understood why nobody's ever put a Sumo wrestler in the net, at least just to see what would happen.

Well, JB, daughter Annie now has her Junior Operator's License, so she can drive herself to swim team practice in the morning.  They've got a good rule on those Junior Licenses - they can't drive around with any other sub-18-year-olds unless there's an adult in the car.  So what does she do?  Well, she's got herself an 18-year-old boyfriend now.  I don't know if that was part of the decision-making process on this one or not.  The two of them are lifeguards.  Not exactly the Pamela Anderson type, but I'll have to admit that they're an attractive couple.

We've got a simpler pet situation - a parakeet in a cage.  She was recently moved upstairs near the trains, and I've noticed that she brightens up and chirps back when I'm running the trains, particularly the sound-equipped Hudson.  She likes the bell and the whistle.

Now it's time to work on the shopping district along Saint Anne Street.  I built up the base where the City Classics supermarket will go, and I've measured the styrene pieces for the base level that the buildings will sit on.  Besides the market, I've got a theater and 3 ancient Plasticville shops.  I'm going to see what I can do with them in terms of painting and customizing.  I've also identified a spot where I'll put a trolley stop over in that part of town.  That's going to be another cobblestone section, and I'm looking forward to that.

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

  • Member since
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  • From: Wake Forest, NC
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Posted by SilverSpike on Thursday, July 12, 2007 9:12 AM

Mike, sorry to hear about the episode with your dog! Sounds like you have a lot of clean up to do now, so good luck with that stuff. I like the carpet in my train room, it is easier on the knees and I try to vacuum often.

Cheers,

Ryan

Ryan Boudreaux
The Piedmont Division
Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger era
Cajun Chef Ryan

  • Member since
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  • From: Manitou, Okla
  • 1,630 posts
Posted by mikesmowers on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 6:38 PM

   Thanks Colvin, Joe bring me a cold beer please, thanks.

 I got home yesterday and some local kids came down and wanted to see the train, so I lead them out to the train room and as I opened the door, WHAT??? But my 15 year old Austrialian Shepard had apparantly gone in Monday evening and I didn't know it as I locked up Monday night, and was stuck there almost 24 hours in the hot room with no water. It could have been worse. All she did was tear up the carpet in a couple of places, crap in the floor in 3 places and make about half dozen wet places in the floor, and play hell with the layout around the trestles. Not a whole lot of damage. broke the handrail on my NEW loco, broke the railing off the highway bridge, broke several trees, pulled some track loose from the trestle, and the such as that. I am glad she is old and not a young puppy! A young dog would probley have torn it up a lot worse. So, yesterday I was not a very happy modeler.  

  I went in there a few minutes ago and I couldn't stand the smell, as I cannot leave the door or window open while I am at work because of the chanches of severe thunderstormes here in SW Okla. I will more than likely have to rip up all the carpet. Oh well, some say that carpet is not a good thing in the trainroom.

    I guess I'll go for now and have another beer.  Joe a round for the house on me.    Mike

Modeling Trains Is Not A Matter Of Life Or Death, It Is Much More Important Than That!!
GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 6:28 PM

JB

What do you do for a living. It's only Wednesday here and i got two more days to go before the weekend.

GUB

  • Member since
    October 2005
  • From: Northern Minnesota
  • 898 posts
Posted by colvinbackshop on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 6:07 PM

Joe, I'll have a cold one and I'll buy a round for the house too.

Chuck...Sounds like you've discovered a "method" and yes, progress is great and a good thing! Do you have wood moving because of all the heat you folks have been having?  

Wish I could say I'm experiencing some progress in the Trainroom, but Showboat is now taking front and center. We open the show tomorrow! For any of you interested...Our whole family made the cover of Varity (the local paper). If your interested in checking any of it out, go to http://www.grandrapidsmn.com/ and click on Varity. You can also see pictures on there picture service. I'm the "OLD" guy with gray bread escorting my wife Toni and Raeanne is in light Purple on the top left of the boat and elsewhere!!

I've got my workweek in as of today...So I do hope to play a bit with the trains tomorrow, not having any additional demands, before show time...We'll have to see how that all plays out.

So, until latter...

Puffin' & Chuggin', JB Chief Engineer, Colvin Creek Railway
  • Member since
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  • From: Southwest US
  • 12,914 posts
Posted by tomikawaTT on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 11:18 AM

'Morning, Joe.  Coffee and toast, please.

Managed to come up with a faster way to deal with a somewhat problem with some of my plywood.  The steel is great for leveling things lengthwise, but not crosswise where it tilts on curves between risers.  Until yesterday, I'd been forming and attaching wedges, each one only a few inches long (can you say tedious?)  Well, just on a whim, I decided to put a strip along the low edge, then sand it so the subgrade would be level crossways (according to my torpedo level.)  Once it was shaped, I sprayed a little water on and spread drywall mud across the whole subgrade with a 3-inch knife.  Lo and behold, everything held.  Yesterday afternoon I re-moistened the set mud, added a second coat (to make up for shrinkage) and let it be.  This morning I checked it - level enough to support foam!  Finished eight feet of subgrade in less time than I'd spent on the preceeding three, with a better mounting surface to show for it.

So, this morning I caulked down the foam underlayment - cardstock template and flex track to follow.  Progress, it's wonderful!

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Tuesday, July 10, 2007 11:56 AM

Page 3 again? Well... I guess everybody is busy at work, home and play. Besides the weather's been great, perhaps a little to hot. Still at work for another four hours or so. Hope to get a few more windows painted before I go Lawn Bowling tonight. I'll check back later and perhaps have a drink or two.

GUB

GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Monday, July 9, 2007 11:53 AM

Why are we on page 3? Gotta go to a project party this afternoon in Brampton. Not likely I'll be on the computer tonight.

GUB

GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Sunday, July 8, 2007 2:22 PM
 colvinbackshop wrote:

GUB: What have you (your group) decided on for a tour loop while doing your S.F. trip? I sure hope you get to take in at least one (or more) of the railroad related options!  

For starters we are doing the Roaring Camp Railroad on the way up. I am hoping to visit a highly recommended train shop in Santa Clara. Of course the cable car museum in SF. The Nappa Wine Train seems to be the one everyone is looking forward to and because there is Gormet Food, Good Wine etc., I am able to get in a few more requests. It also appears that we  are also going to Sacramento to the Train Museum there. I think that's about it for train related activities. But who knows .....

GUB 

  • Member since
    October 2005
  • From: Northern Minnesota
  • 898 posts
Posted by colvinbackshop on Sunday, July 8, 2007 10:00 AM

Good morning: A coffee, please Joe...

GUB: What have you (your group) decided on for a tour loop while doing your S.F. trip? I sure hope you get to take in at least one (or more) of the railroad related options!

As for here, things are about the same....The Poison Ivy is STILL giving me fits! It's actually much better, but when it's hot and I'm sweaty...I REALLY itch. Yesterday it got up over 90 and the humidity was WAY up too, so I didn't sleep well. Seems I was up every hour or so sloshing more Caladryl on.

The one and very only up side to this "Mr. Itchy" thing that I have going on, is that I am spending some time in the Trainroom during a timeframe that I normally wouldn't be. I've been ballasting, landscaping, pouring concrete, building boardwalks and grade crossings at Sawbill Jct. most every day (at least a few hours each day) all last week!!   

And, I'm going to play trains again today for a while...Before dress rehearsals for Showboat late this afternoon and evening. So, I'm off to build something. 

Puffin' & Chuggin', JB Chief Engineer, Colvin Creek Railway
GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Sunday, July 8, 2007 6:50 AM

Good Morning Everbody;

I'll have a coffee and perhaps an English Muffin to begin with.

Not much planned for today. I'll put the last bench together at the Lawn Bowling club later this morning. Also, I've got to get the doors built for my next door neighbors cupboard that I built last summer. And of course I will continue painting the doors and windows of the furniture factory. Also have plans to build a photo backdrop so that I can take progress shots of the project.

Bought a Revell plastic kit of an HO scale N.Y. Central "Hudson" yesterday that will eventually sit on one of the shelves in the office.

Our trip to SF is getting closer. Smile [:)]

Well that's about all for now. Have a great day.

GUB

GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Saturday, July 7, 2007 9:08 PM

Evening Everybody;

I'll have a Scotch on the Rocks tonight. In between repairing the benches at the Lawn Bowling Club I've been painting the windows and doors for my Furniture Factory. Very tedious work. I'm nearly done the second floor. That leaves the third floor to do. Oh well ... it keeps me out of trouble. Have a good night.

GUB

  • Member since
    August 2002
  • From: Wake Forest, NC
  • 2,869 posts
Posted by SilverSpike on Friday, July 6, 2007 9:26 PM

Chuck, sounds like a cold one was indeed necessary after that scorching 116o F temp!

I'll have a cold one too! Not as hot as your southwest temps, but our heat index up here got to the 103o F level.

I've been working on my Stewart Industries HO Yard Service Facility Work Pit. Filed down the metal castings and cemented the side castings, they are drying now. I need to get some concrete grey paint to give them all a nice coating before piecing them all into the pit shape.

 

Ryan Boudreaux
The Piedmont Division
Modeling The Southern Railway, Norfolk & Western & Norfolk Southern in HO during the merger era
Cajun Chef Ryan

  • Member since
    February 2005
  • From: Southwest US
  • 12,914 posts
Posted by tomikawaTT on Thursday, July 5, 2007 11:19 PM

Guten abend, mein freunden.  And good evening to you, Joe.  Lowenbrau for me, and top up the others.  I'm as dry as this dessicated desert.Grumpy [|(]

Well, the inevitable happened.  Got back from shopping, unloaded the vehicle, then went into the layout room to stow some plunder and, possibly, caulk down the next length of roadbed, which I estimated to be a ten minute job.  When I reached for my tools, they singed my fingers!  That plus sweat cascading into my eyes killed my working plans.Sign - Oops [#oops]

As I left the layout room I checked the thermometer - 116 degrees!Shock [:O]

The weather weenies came up with the same number, which tied the record high for this date and is only one degree short of the all-time high for LAS (Our official temperature is taken at McCarran.)  Not only that, but there's no relief in sight.  Bummer.Evil [}:)]

Looks like progress, which had been moving right along, will now be crawling on its hands and knees from water hole to water hole.  Wish me luck!Sigh [sigh]

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

  • Member since
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  • From: Northern Minnesota
  • 898 posts
Posted by colvinbackshop on Wednesday, July 4, 2007 12:03 AM

I'll take a cold tap too, Joe and in celebration of the 4th. a round for the house too!!

All is right here...Still covered with a major Poison Ivy rash (now blistering....just thought I'd throw in a verbal visual) but not as itchy with the Prednisone in the system and with the use of a lot calamine and an old home remedy of "mashed up" Jewel weed (also known as Jimson weed, I think) as an ointment. With all of the self medicating, I'm doing better!

Mr. Beasley, that turntable is looking really good. Nice job! You have a great eye for detail...I love it.

I still haven't done any scenicing / landscaping at mine or around the Sawyer Lumber shops either for that fact. I did however spend some time ballasting, putting in a grade crossing, leveling dirt, planting grass and shrubs at Sawbill Jct. today. I hope to spend some more time in the Trainroom tomorrow, as I have the day off (no work, no Showboat....Nothing!) and I don't really feel up to working outside....Rain or Shine! So, I'll putts on the RR.

You all have a great, and safe 4th. of July!! 

Puffin' & Chuggin', JB Chief Engineer, Colvin Creek Railway
  • Member since
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  • From: Manitou, Okla
  • 1,630 posts
Posted by mikesmowers on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 6:19 PM

  Happy Independence Day Everyone, Don't forget why we celebrate it.

  Joe I'll have a cold beer here, thanks.  Feels kinda wierd going to work after being off  for the past 4 days but I'm not complaining. Got the day off tommarrow and man do I need it, seems like at least 2 days since I have had one. May get some time in the train room tommarrow if I get the mowing done, as for now I am going to spray on some OFF and go out on the deck and drink a few and hold down my loung chair.

   Have a safe and happy 4th.    Mike

Modeling Trains Is Not A Matter Of Life Or Death, It Is Much More Important Than That!!
GUB
  • Member since
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  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 4:15 PM

Time to head home for the day. I'll have that Scotch in about 25 minutes depending on traffic. Then it's off to lawn bowling. I just might get time to paint a window or two before.

GUB

GUB
  • Member since
    July 2006
  • From: Ingersoll, Ontario
  • 342 posts
Posted by GUB on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 3:15 PM

Good Afternoon Everyone;

It is a little too early to start, but have a Scotch striaght up waiting for me when I get off work in 48 minutes. I'm going to need it. I'm working on a three storey building and I am painting the windows and there are a whole lot of them. So far I have the 1st floor done and I am half way through the 2nd floor. I'm hoping to take some progress pictures and post them when I get a moment. Quitting time is getting closer. Better go and try to finish my work for the day.

GUB

  • Member since
    December 2004
  • From: Bedford, MA, USA
  • 21,481 posts
Posted by MisterBeasley on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 2:00 PM

Heck, it's close enough to quittin' time on the 3rd of July to start the festivities.  Joe, a Harpoon for me, and a round for the rest of the bunch.

Calamine Lotion for you, JB.  Despite all the advances of modern science, this old pink stuff is still what I use for poison ivy.  Well, that and Round Up.  The Calamine goes on me, and the Round Up goes on the weed patch - with a vengeance.  I buy the concentrated stuff and mix it as needed in my tank sprayer.  One application gets the bulk of it, but I usually hit the same area again a couple of weeks later to get the stragglers I missed.

Summer Swim Team season is in full swing once again - we started off 2-0 this year.  Our Annie got some seconds and thirds, and is still working hard at it.  She's on a physical conditioning mission all year long now, and I hope it will last a long lifetime for her.  No meet this coming weekend, but she's still got practice all week.  She's lifeguarding and giving swim lessons to the little ones now, too.  At the meet on Saturday, she and the other instructors all had their little posse's of mini-swimmers.

Chuck, the Revolutionary War was right in my neighborhood.  Our little town of Bedford sits between Lexington and Concord.  I like to tell people it's where they went to get drunks with muskets to start the fighting with.

The Pit-Bash is pretty much done.  This is my favorite photo so far.  I've posted it on a couple of other threads already, but I'm so happy with it that I'm gonna do it again.  (Hey, if you're drinking my beer, you've got to put up with things like this.)

Well, a safe and sane 4th to you all.  We've got a camping trip planned for the weekend, so I might be hard to find the next few days.

Yeah, sure, Joe.  One more...but that's all.

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

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Posted by tomikawaTT on Tuesday, July 3, 2007 1:26 PM

Howdy, Joe.  Ham and Swiss on rye, please.  And a Heinekin's to wash it down.

JB, I feel your pain.  Brings to mind the time when I was your age and "discovered" poison sumac.  No fun!

Just spent about ten minutes in the layout space, removing clamps and otherwise checking on some fresh caulk work.  With the temperature kissing three digits, caulk starts to set up almost as soon as it comes out of the tube.  Working time is measured in seconds, and three hours sees it set up forevermore.

Coming up on fireworks time here.  North Las Vegas stages the city fireworks display on July 3 to keep from conflicting with the big casinos along the Strip.  Tonight and tomorrow, right up to midnight, it will sound like the Revolutionary War is being fought right in the neighborhood.  Then, if anybody lights ONE firework after The Witching Hour, it will be (officially) July fifth, and they'll become proud owners of a misdemeanor citation!

Well, the Boss wants to go shopping, so I'd best be driftin' along.

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

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  • From: Northern Minnesota
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Posted by colvinbackshop on Monday, July 2, 2007 3:10 PM

I'll have a STRONG one today Joe...And a round for the house too.  

Mike: Hope that all is somewhat back to normal and that you haven't been washed away!

Chuck: Glad to hear the the angle irons did te trick for you! I've got one area where my wood moves...It can be very trying!  

As for news here: I got into the lower garden the other day (there is an area, a pretty steep hill-side between the grapes and the potatoes) with the weed whip and unknowingly got into Poison Ivy or Poison Oak...Poison something and have the stuff from head to toe.  

In my 55 years, I have never had it...I guess the immune system had it's toll, because I've got it really bad!   

In a nutshell, I am miserable and still have to sing and dance tonight....Showboat opens in less than two weeks and I need the work dances!

Therefore the need for the strong one...Maybe more than one!  

Latter

Puffin' & Chuggin', JB Chief Engineer, Colvin Creek Railway
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Posted by tomikawaTT on Friday, June 29, 2007 7:02 PM

Thanks, Mike.  I'll have one on you.

Your situation reminds me of why I left Tennessee for the dessicated desert.  I used to live well up a steep little valley, so the (frequent) rain all ran off before it could build up.  Of course, it all collected at the bottom of the hill, where our intermittent stream met the main creek.  I recall deflecting the boss's wrath (about calling in flooded) with a photo of the stop sign at the T-intersection - water right up to the verticals on the octagonal sign.  (Polaroid photo, pre-digital.)

Well, the angle iron did what it was designed to.  Got it all cut (boy, do I need a better hack saw!) and clamped into place before the layout room got  too hot to work in, and the plywood flattened right out.  Tomorrow I'll get it anchored, and then I can move on to caulking down the foam roadbed (fan-fold underlayment.)  Once all the new track is in place I'll have more than doubled the present length of possible run.Approve [^]

Right now, my operations are in the same place that John Armstrong was in half a century ago - take a train out of the yard, back it to the end of track, run it to the other end of the main, then back it to the yard and classify or park it.  (The train at the end of track right now consists of a locomotive and the wedge plow.  Not much classifying involved in that one..Whistling [:-^])

My in-house gourmet cook has just announced dinner, so I have to go.  See you later.

Chuck (modeling Central Japan in September, 1964)

  • Member since
    January 2006
  • From: Manitou, Okla
  • 1,630 posts
Posted by mikesmowers on Friday, June 29, 2007 4:37 PM

   Good Friday to you all. Joe set up rounds for the house and give me the bill.

  Another day off because of flood water. today I got up at 6 am as usuall and looked at the creek and man was it ever flowing, all the way up in my yard, but it never got close to the house.  I simply called in flooded in again. My boss just laughed, I sent some pics to some of my friends so they could see I am not telling a big one. I will probley catch it if I get to go in on Monday LOL, The creek is still way beyong being passible. Probley won't get out tonight. I did get out yesterday long enough to get me some supplies. (BEER)

   These days off are really good on the new train room although I am not sure how I am going to pay for it. Anyone want to help? LOL  Well I best get back to the dry wall in the train room.      Mike

Modeling Trains Is Not A Matter Of Life Or Death, It Is Much More Important Than That!!
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  • From: Orig: Tyler Texas. Lived in seven countries, now live in Sundown, Louisiana
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Posted by jeffrey-wimberly on Friday, June 29, 2007 4:09 PM

I got rest alright! I flopped into bed at about 4 pm yesterday and got up at 6:30 this morning and still felt tired. I went to Alexandria today to raid the lot so local LHS and Hobby Lobby. At the LHS I picked up a Proto 2000 FA1-FB1 set, a wayside warehouse with steam whistle (I want the whistle for my industrial area. The warehouse can go wherever) and two bags of medium gray ballast. At Hobby Lobby I got a water tower with a flashing light and an American Foundry Company structure.

Here's pics of what I got.


The Proto 2000 FA1-FB1 set.


The water tower with flashing light.


The American Foundry Company.


The Wayside warehouse with steam whistle.


The two bags of medium gray ballast.

Running Bear, Sundown, Louisiana
          Joined June, 2004

Dr. Frankendiesel aka Scott Running Bear
Space Mouse for president!
15 year veteran fire fighter
Collector of Apple //e's
Running Bear Enterprises
History Channel Club life member.
beatus homo qui invenit sapientiam


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