The winter of 2017 will go
down in the weather record books as a hard winter in the Willamette
Valley. Where we might experience a
couple of snow storms a winter, we have now had five with measurable snow that
sticks and two more snow events where it did not stick. Our normally mild and soggy climate has been
colder this year. I posted about an
early January storm that forced cancellation of my regular operating session
that month:
http://espeecascades.blogspot.com/2017/01/call-flanger.html
The current storm (it is
snowing as I write this) has dumped modest snow. Fortunately, it happened after I held two
operating sessions this past week.
Early March 2017 snow.
Even the daffodils felt the
impact of the snow.
The first of the two
operating sessions this past week was held on Tuesday evening. A health event for one of the regular hosts
of our mid-Valley operating group provided me an opportunity to invite that
group up to operate my railroad. I have
long sought to host this group for a session.
I would rather not have the reason for the schedule opening, though. Nonetheless, the dozen guys who came were
provided a chance to experience my SP Cascade Line. The photos and captions tell the story.
As usual, the Eugene yard and
depot were active. Rick K. (left) runs
the Eugene City Switcher, while yardmaster Pete J. (right) confers with his
RR-West switcher.
The rest of the Eugene crew
works the classification yard. Gene N.
(near) ran the RR-East switcher. Chuck
C. (far) ran the RR-West switcher.
Victor N. (with hat) ran the Santa Clara Tower position which supervises
and coordinates activities in the Eugene Arrival/Departure yard.
Mike L. did the First
Springfield Turn. He is reassembling his
train using the House track behind the depot area.
Gary N. controls his RR-West
(uphill) train at Wicopee, assisted by helper engineer Scot B. In the background, helper engineer Craig P. brings
his light helper set down through Cruzatte.
Ralph J. (left) watches the action as he awaits a helper for his train
down at Oakridge.
Out on the mainline, Gary N.
pilots his train into Cascade Summit while helper engineer Scot B. watches the
slack point for the two power sets on this RR-West train.
John B. Dispatched both this
mid-week ops session and the later Saturday session.
The second operating session
of the past week was held on Saturday, my normal position in our North Oregon
operating rotation. Health and other
issues trimmed this crew to only a dozen, but all were experienced
operators. That allowed most trains to
run with single man crews. In spite of
the reduced manpower, we ran most of the train line-up and all of the locals did
their work.
Mike B. runs the First
Springfield Turn. Yardmaster Rick A,
Switcher Scott B, and Eugene City Switcher Mike L. work the Eugene area. Rick and Scott performed yeoman service at
Eugene, accomplishing what normally takes four crewmen to do.
A WCEUE (empties from the Los
Angeles area to Eugene) slips into Cascade Summit overhead, while Greg P. and
Buzz A. run their train toward Roseville on the Eugene depot main below.
Steve C. brings the KFEUY
down hill into Wicopee. The block of
cement cars are a clear indicator of this Klamath Falls train. Those cars have come from Gray Rocks, north of
Redding, California, and are destined for Tilbury Cement in Springfield.
Steve C. with his KFEUY train
meets Rodger C. and helper engineer Norm A. at McCredie Springs with a RR-West
train.
Rodger C. brings the LABRT
around the curve at the end of the Springfield-Marcola peninsula. This was the first time the LABRT actually
had trailer flats in the train!. Sorry
about the background “horns” Roger. This
image of a signature train was just too important to not post it. Roger is a prince of a fellow and does not
deserve those “horns.”
I have developed a re-staging
plan that passed the test of getting the railroad ready in there days for the
next operating session. I am working on
some operating scheme changes (expansion of the train line-up to a full twenty-four
hour operation) that should trim that re-staging effort further. Contributing to the re-staging effort is the
re-configuration of trains at Crescent Lake to reflect their appearance
(blocked by car types) for RR-East movement.
That effort pays off by my easy identification of trains on the line
based on car types in train (e.g., the LABRT) or by the obvious blocking of a
train (e.g., the WCEUE). This is a
signature look I have sought for my trains and railroad.
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