QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie I'm trying to find a house, duplex that is right next to the tracks! Something that is in rentable shape! So don't have much sympathy for the "winers". I would be the real snowbird sitting in the yard this winter! Mookie I too would love to live in a house that's right next to the tracks! I can hear trains from my bedroom at night and I find the sounds of the trains going by quite relaxing and if anything they help me fall asleep faster. I actually saw one of those relaxation tapes somewhere that was of steam locomotive sounds. My advice to these people, if you don't like hearing the trains, buy a house somewhere else!
QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie I'm trying to find a house, duplex that is right next to the tracks! Something that is in rentable shape! So don't have much sympathy for the "winers". I would be the real snowbird sitting in the yard this winter! Mookie
Deshler Ohio-crossroads of the B&O Matt eats your fries.YUM! Clinton st viaduct undefeated against too tall trucks!!!(voted to be called the "Clinton St. can opener").
QUOTE: Agent Smith, Matrix Reloaded "I'm Sorry, this is a Dead end."
yad sdrawkcab s'ti
She who has no signature! cinscocom-tmw
Quentin
QUOTE: Originally posted by jchnhtfd Amen, brothers... I fly, too -- and there are some airports where the dimwits (who've ALWAYS moved in after the airport did!) have actually forced the FAA to mandate traffic patterns in the air which are just plain unsafe, like low-altitude turns and power reductions (try Boston/Logan International and New York'/JFK, for examples). Scary stuff[:(]. But the ones who really blow me away are the ones who manage to get an ordinance passed forbidding whistle signals in the community (yes, there are some) and then rise up in (un)righteous wrath when someone gets nailed by a passing train which they didn't hear...[xx(] Funny world, isn't it?
Have fun with your trains
QUOTE: Originally posted by JoeKoh QUOTE: Originally posted by Sask_Tinplater QUOTE: Originally posted by Mookie I'm trying to find a house, duplex that is right next to the tracks! Something that is in rentable shape! So don't have much sympathy for the "winers". I would be the real snowbird sitting in the yard this winter! Mookie I too would love to live in a house that's right next to the tracks! I can hear trains from my bedroom at night and I find the sounds of the trains going by quite relaxing and if anything they help me fall asleep faster. I actually saw one of those relaxation tapes somewhere that was of steam locomotive sounds. My advice to these people, if you don't like hearing the trains, buy a house somewhere else! there is a house in Holgate Ohio youd really like![:)] stay safe Joe
QUOTE: Originally posted by techguy57 See and thats what really irks me![:(!] "Lets give up safety for convenience! I don't like hearing the train's horn so lets get rid of it." And you know the moment is going to come along when somebody is going to be driving at night talking on their cell phone or watching their DVD player they just had mounted in the front of the car, or maybe even just dog-tired from having to work a double shift and they don't see the train and can't hear it because they aren't paying attention and the hogger can't sound it loud because of some stupid noise restriction ordinance and someone, if not everyone ends up injured, or worse yet someone loses their life, because the guy living in the house 1/2 a mile away finds the train's horn too loud! [xx(] (wow, hopefully no Engli***eachers reading this, that was a nasty run-on sentence!) Then there are lawsuits, probably citing the railroads negligence, all because a couple of people couldn't go to the Walgreens or CVS or Osco and get a box of Nytol to help them go asleep![:(!] The real problem to these people who are complaining seems to be the matter of convenience. Its inconvenient for them to hear the train horns, the crossing gate bells, the hum of the diesels (all the stuff most of us here get excited about). Its inconvenient for them to get stopped by the train on their way to work, even though its probably delivering the lumber to build his deck. Now take that same guy, and send him auto shopping for his new SUV. Imagine if there were delays in the freight service that brings parts to the factory that makes the SUV he wants to buy because the trains have to run at reduced speeds because of noise ordinances and related safety precautions. These small delays add up to a larger production delay meaning that his SUV is back ordered for 6 months. He can't drive home his new car and he's mad as hell and he's not gonna take it any more. He'll scream about the car company, and the freight train, and probably tell the whole story to everyone he knows. But if you think about it he is the reason for all those inconveniences. [:0] Okay so I'm exagerating and getting a bit philosophical, but I think you understand what I'm trying to say. I'm all for convenience and comfort as much as anyone else, but not at the expense of safety. I'm sure that Ed an Joe and most everyone else will agree with that. If only we could teach common sense as a class in schools. Of course there would still be people who'd flunk that. Okay, I'll climb down from my soapbox now.[:I] Mike
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