I've had the fun experience of actually unnerving the "vampire," instead of the other way around as it usually is. I donate platelettes (and sometimes plasma) every two weeks and so I see my phlebotomist crew very often. Last year when I was still doing my Self Portrait 365 project, I asked if I could get a shot of getting poked for that project. The one phlebotomist suddenly was rather nervous, and had to get her crew leader for the "poke." Sadly, the picture of the actual poke didn't turn out too well. If you're not too squeamish, the picture I did use is here.
-ChrisWest Chicago, ILChristopher May Fine Art Photography"In wisdom gathered over time I have found that every experience is a form of exploration." ~Ansel Adams
mudchickenCSRR: Have a scurvey crew working in Danville right now.....plenty of room on the old "City Main" which is 20 feet parallel to your old C&EI west siding and just south of Danville Junction (Grain elevator might not like their lead blocked, but leaving those rascals on that track would force CSX to poop or get off the pot once they got there - who's scrapping 'em in Danville?)
CSRR: Have a scurvey crew working in Danville right now.....plenty of room on the old "City Main" which is 20 feet parallel to your old C&EI west siding and just south of Danville Junction (Grain elevator might not like their lead blocked, but leaving those rascals on that track would force CSX to poop or get off the pot once they got there - who's scrapping 'em in Danville?)
Carl
Railroader Emeritus (practiced railroading for 46 years--and in 2010 I finally got it right!)
CAACSCOCOM--I don't want to behave improperly, so I just won't behave at all. (SM)
CShaveRRHad to take a quick trip to Glen Ellyn to have a lady display her artistic talents (she drew some of my blood).
Carl, two thoughts come to mind when I read your statement.
1. Be careful when dealing with a vampire. When I was taking chemotherapy, I had to have blood drawn at each visit, I began calling the phlebotomists "vampires;" they did not object. I also called one nurse a "bloodsucker;" she told another patient that that was a term of endearment.
2. Once, I explained to a man why a chimney smoked: it needed art lessons.
Johnny
CShaveRR [snip] UP gondola 30517 has made three or four trips from Proviso to Council Bluffs and back since I last mentioned the car here in the Lounge. One of those crossing slabs now appears to have had some concrete crumbled at one corner. Anyway, I had some inspiration yesterday, when I saw one light UP engine on the UP main line, headed )presumably) from Proviso to Global 3 (it was somewhere around Maple Park, between Elburn and DeKalb, where we saw it). Perhaps that's the kind of move that would be needed to get this gondola spotted in Creston, where it belongs. The crew on that locomotive could take the gon, and only the gon, set it out at Creston, and get on to Global 3 without missing a beat.
? ? ?
Yup - makes sense - maybe too much so. But . . . that'll never happen . . . just imagine what it would do to some official's 'metric' of Gross Ton-Miles Per Train-Hour - ''GTM/TH'' or ''GTMTH'' - if that would occur. Instead of the usual 100,000 to 500,000 or so range, that move would get maybe only - say, 300 Tons x 20 MPH = 6,000 GTM/TH or so - like 6 % of a desirable 'standard'. Would you risk your job, if not career, on approving a move like that ? Not likely. So - let's start a 'pool' here on either how many more 'trips' or a date 'til those crossings finally get to the right location and get unloaded. I'm not holding my breath . . .
Meanwhile - are the charges for moving that gon back and forth accruing to any/ either of the 'Company Freight' account, the M/W budget, the Grade Crossing improvement account, or the 'We really screwed this one up !' account
- Paul North.
Thanks, guys.
Carl, what's LPJ02? I'm still missing one of those CNW units...I really need to get back there and get it photographed one of these days.
CopCarSS The 365 project is an attempt to take a photo each and every day for a whole year. I've tried two similar projects in the past. Both failed. The first was a simple 365 like this one. A lot of times I ended up just posting a shot for each day -- it wasn't necessarily taken on that day (few were, in fact). [snip]
Kind of seems like the precis for Julie & Julia (2009) - see http://www.imdb.com/title/tt1135503/ - only with photos instead of French recipes. [Or does that comment belong over in the 'Diner' thread instead ? ]
Chris, you're way more ambitious - or something - than I am . . . Good luck with that !
Carl-
The 365 project is an attempt to take a photo each and every day for a whole year. I've tried two similar projects in the past. Both failed. The first was a simple 365 like this one. A lot of times I ended up just posting a shot for each day -- it wasn't necessarily taken on that day (few were, in fact). The second go around was a self portrait 365 project. About a third of the way through that, I decided that I really hated it and quit. Self portraits aren't my thing.
This time I'm a lot more fired up about it. I have lots of ideas banging around in my head. I even have some "safety" shots planned for days when I don't get a chance to get something more interesting. I used one of those last night when I shot the whole of my Don Ball, Jr. collection. The shot was terrible and really poorly lit, but after spending 2 and a half hours in a dentist's chair last night, I didn't feel like doing much else.
The Flickr Set link can be found here.
Thanks, Dan! And thanks for your contribution towards the fuzziness.
I did go out yesterday, but a bunch of cirrus clouds and a general lack of traffic where I was chasing left it a pretty lousy day. This is the shot I came away with for the 365 project:
It looks a little better if you look at the big size -- there's a bit more detail in there. Still, not what I'd call a banner day. Oh well, Momma said there'd be days like this...
Awesome shot Chris! I hope I helped out the fuzziness this morning...
Dan
Hey Gang,
I finally got out to take a train picture yesterday for my 365 project! Whoa! Been awhile since I did that! Here it is:
Westbound at Clay
I might get out again today. Listening to the scanner and watching the Moffat ATCS display trying to figure out what direction and course of action I should take.
Hope you all have a great day!
Has anybody else noticed that , as of now, only cafe and lounge bums have posted since the site came back up?
Wow.....that was quick. Good service...Thanks.
Quentin
Amazing! Back up so soon. Back in the dark ages, '55-'60, it would take a week to install a MACHINE!
My hat's off to the TRAINS crew!
Art
I agree...the fuzziness is wracking my brain, too. Especially since I'm worried about This Week's Photos.
Sometimes the world is fuzzy...or maybe the other way around...just count to 1, 2, 3...um...
CNW 6000I know where I'll be chatting when the Trains site goes down soon. Should anyone care to join me there (some from here already have) PM/email me.
You'll have to remind me where that is, as my memory is a little fuzzy...
Brian (IA) http://blhanel.rrpicturearchives.net.
Paul_D_North_Jr Johnny - I'm recalling that it was in Trains during the last half of the '60s, maybe during the '70s - definitely during David P. Morgan's tenure, and maybe quoted by him in an essay, editorial, Second Section, etc. The original is ''Rhyme of the Rail'' by John Godfrey Saxe, and I just discovered it has many more verses and was more popular than I ever knew - I only remembered parts of the repeated first/ last verse, including the catch phrase that you quoted. For the whole poem and the 'back story', see - http://home.mindspring.com/~railroadstories/rrmmv1n1/rhymeof.htm - Paul North.
Johnny -
I'm recalling that it was in Trains during the last half of the '60s, maybe during the '70s - definitely during David P. Morgan's tenure, and maybe quoted by him in an essay, editorial, Second Section, etc.
The original is ''Rhyme of the Rail'' by John Godfrey Saxe, and I just discovered it has many more verses and was more popular than I ever knew - I only remembered parts of the repeated first/ last verse, including the catch phrase that you quoted. For the whole poem and the 'back story', see -
http://home.mindspring.com/~railroadstories/rrmmv1n1/rhymeof.htm
Anybody who enjoys riding trains for pleasure should enjoy the poem, even though some of the refrences may be a bit obscure. I am sure Edna St. Vincent Millay enjoyed it, if she read it.
tree68 CShaveRRProbably in the Diner.Lost track of where I was....
CShaveRRProbably in the Diner.
I know where I'll be chatting when the Trains site goes down soon. Should anyone care to join me there (some from here already have) PM/email me.
CN's been busy today. In the span of about an hour I saw 5 trains! 3 SB and 2 NB. Now if only I had time to stay in one spot and get shots...lol, I guess next time. Off to be busy again!
Larry Resident Microferroequinologist (at least at my house) Everyone goes home; Safety begins with you My Opinion. Standard Disclaimers Apply. No Expiration Date Come ride the rails with me! There's one thing about humility - the moment you think you've got it, you've lost it...
Daughter relates that grandson's window allows a view of a CSX branch line with still gets daily traffic serving a large brewery nearby. Methinks there's a Brio trainset in his future...
Granddaughter likes trains, having ridden with "Papa" on "his" train last spring. I don't think there's a train set in her future, but more time spent with them may bring about the opportunity for some model railroading in a few years.
Now, where's my Hawaiian?
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