Sunday, August 7, 2016

Pop-up Post:CN Nos 368/369, August 2016

CN 8868 leads through a forest of lineside poles and hydro wires
The first of what may be more...Pop-up Post! Some photos I took that are presented with a minimum of interpretation, detail, research, formatting or reflection...Trackside Treasure instant gratification, as it were. Enjoy the passage of CN trains No 368 and 369 an hour apart this morning just east of Mi 179 Kingston Sub, from five storeys up. Let the story begin:
CN 8868
SRCX 4096 carbon car
SRCX 3052 carbon car
CN 388408
Colourfully-tagged CNA 404471
Westlake Polymers WLPX 26049
Empty scrap gon AIMX 15208
AIMX 15252
ACFX 51120 OMYA covered hopper
CN 388619 with different reporting marks font
DPU IC 2714. Chris, I See you're paying attention!
WC boxcar having a graffiti-bedecked 'year/jahr'
ICG 978727 empty bulkhead flat car
CN predecessor scrap tie gon loads ICG 295074 and CC 245047
HPJX predecessor! CN 618228 ingot flat car
The future! HPJX 52357
No 369 power 2878-2677
WWUX 4750-4405
BN 462031
BN 461246 with large BN logo
SLSF 86617 no coonskin in sight
 A symphony of swooshes
A concert of centre-beams
CNIS 368251 repaint with ingots following
Long and lumbering CN 598285-598162
DPU 2821
Ingots aboard CN 618102
I used to be CN...Interstate Commodities INTX 38011
Covered today, gon tomorrow MWCX 200463-200509 and friends
Predecessor scrap tie hopper empties: WC, BLE and SSAM
Chciago Central 40218
Ex-BN WC 33062 and IC 365324
The Creature! or It Came From the Hump Yard!


Postscript - Eighth Anniversary Contest

At the stroke of midnight, Steve Boyko sent his correct answers - for each word and the puzzle answers. A nocturnal four hours later, Walker Coe responded with both puzzle answers. Perhaps I should publish a morning edition for Trackside Treasure's dedicatedly diurnal readers (publishing times and days are not scheduled)! Congratulations to Steve and Walker! The Eighth Anniversary Trackside Treasure prize packs are already on their way to your respective mailboxes!

Honourable mentions go to:
  • Malcolm (nearly omniscient Napanee OS'er!)
  • Tim (solved both!)
  • Michael (thinking of a visit to Tim Norton's!)
  • Allison (family discount!)
  • Jason (pen-filled pdf's!)
  • Randy (red-inked pdf's!)
  • Bryan (from the Lakehead!)
The answers were indeed: Half-Baked and Good Ideas. Thanks to all who entered, thereby filling my inbox for several hours after the post was published. I appreciate your entries, your good wishes and kind comments, and this post will have to serve as acknowledgement instead of personal replies. Thank you!

While these two answers do indeed describe the genesis of most Trackside Treasure posts, I add some experience to leaven, ruminated research to please the palate, prototype photos to please the eye, and levity as a final garnish.

Thursday, August 4, 2016

Trackside Treasure's Eighth Anniversary

Another year has come and gone and I'm still hitting the 'Publish' button every week here at Trackside Treasure headquarters. Some headquarters! It's a lawn chair, a TV table and a chipped coffee mug. It's not eating for days (OK, minutes) while doing prototype research. It's my family forgetting who I am, then finding me asleep with a Morning Sun Books volume in my cramped hands (not the Penn Central in Color Volume 2. That is such a joke. Black is not a color!) It's stacks of books, dog-eared little 110-format photos, and notebooks full of such scribblings, good ideas and jotted numbers that makes Russell Crowe's blackboard in 'A Beautiful Mind' look like a cocktail napkin.
Maybe not Russell Crowe. Maybe I'm a Denzel Washington kind of blogger. A George Clooney type of blogger? A Clive Owen blogger with a northern English accent? No, I'm more like a half-baked Roberto Begnini at the Oscars for 'Life is Beautiful'. Euphorically jumping on auditorium seats with unbridled enthusiasm as the just-born post enters cyberspace and finds it way to your screen! 
And here it is eight years on. I've punched the Publish button four hundred and twenty five times. Many more posts are in the can. No blogger is an island, however. Let's remember:
  • Blog partners in my sidebar that are so polished, so prolific, so professional that I may just need a bigger sidebar. 
  • Commenters who consistently, comedically, collaboratively add to posts. 
  • Running Extra items that runneth over. 
  • Contributors that kick it. 
  • Readers who devour it. 
  • Casual observers who, well, you know, observe it casually. 
They all count and are counted on. If I am granted the good health, the good sense, the good judgment, the good coffee and a carved-out corner of cyberspace in which to consistently cobble together cognizance, I'll keep at it. Though blog tracking software is somewhat irrelevantly inaccurate, sometimes it's fun to see which internet searches lead to Trackside Treasure. Here are today's:
EntryPageviews
atlas corn syrup tank cars
2
budd car stationed at agincourt yard
2
cp rail 4242
2
industrial building spur n
2
model railway kingston sub
2
trackside
2
belleville via station
1
cn piggyback
1
cp brockville sub
1
ho scale cn rail mow train
1
Thanks to all of you who make this endeavour worthwhile!
I'm a big fan of the  JUMBLE puzzle which appears in our Kingston Whig-Standard each day. Not so much sudoku or crosswords. I've customized two JUMBLE puzzles here. Each one includes scrambled words that you can unscramble. The unscrambled words are all words you would expect to find on Trackside Treasure. There is only one correct unscrambled word for each scrambled word! Assemble the circled letters to form the puzzle answer at the bottom of each. 
Solve one or solve both! Send your completed puzzle answer to mile179kingstonATyahooDOTca and you win the annually-assembled and interestingly-inventoried Trackside Treasure anniversary contest prize pack! There will be one prize awarded per puzzle. Oh, and since you read this far, giant hint follows: check to see if your answer is correct - each answer is already part of the text of this post!

And sincere thanks for being aboard for the ride each and every week on Trackside Treasure!
-Eric

*Legal disclaimer: Not valid in the state of Nebraska or the South American nation of Uruguay. Professional driver on closed course. May cause swelling of the hands and the condition known as 'hot dog fingers'. Does not contain guacamole. Your mileage may vary. Dealer may sell for less. 'Extra cheese' counts as a topping. If condition persists for more than four hours, consult somebody. Anybody. 

Wednesday, July 27, 2016

Montreal-Vancouver Round Trip Family, August 1968

Travelling along through time, this is part two of a three-part series on our family's 1968 Montreal-Vancouver round trip aboard CN. The scenic first post doubled as a Canada Day 2016 Trackside Treasure homage, and part three provides some railfan-related information on the trip. This second post features family at various points in the trip. All slides are taken by my father L.C. Gagnon (unless you notice he's in a photo!) and scanned by my brother Dave. Some italicized passages are from a trip account typed by my mother. End of a long day: boarding at Montreal's Central Station Aug 5 (top photo).

"We were allowed to board the train about 45 minutes before it left. The children swarmed into our rooms, excitedly exploring what nooks there were. The two bedrooms had unfortunately not been made up en suite, that is there was still a wall separating the two sets of bunks, so we had to go out into the hall to communicate with each other. By the time the train got on the road, we were sitting with lights out watching familiar places go by the window: Montreal, Lachine, Dorval, Valois. I soon quit and settled down to sleep, though I found it rather warm in spite of the fan and 'air conditioning'."
Capreol stop at 1005 the next morning, where we met CN No 2 the Super Continental. 
"We made a lengthy stop at Capreol and we all got out to stretch our legs. But WE were different. MY train-mad family marched up front to photograph the locomotives! Luckily, we hopped back across the tracks just before a train from the west pulled in on them, or we would have been stuck on the other side of it, because our train pulled out before it. I should remark on ice carts running by with melting ice. The blocks, about 2x2x3 ft. were used for cooling the cars and I suppose in the diner for refrigeration as well."  Greenshields at Capreol:
"When the train pulled out, I wanted to make sure the porter remembered to fold back the door to give us one big room instead of two small ones. The room was much roomier made up en suite and it seemed airier, too. From the window we saw a river about 50 feet across and flowing swiftly. We also saw several toppled boxcars - a recent wreck? We wondered. We broke the monotony by playing cards and hangman - something seen out the window, something in the train, the name of a city, something to wear, an animal etc." Onboard entertainment:
"We checked our baggage in the station in the lockers provided for the purpose. We browsed around the station a bit and discussed how we would spend our few hours there. Our taxi driver was very slow-spoken and so what he had to say by way of commentary was drawn out well over the miles. He stopped first, by request, by an old steam engine, the Countess of Dufferin, exhibited outside the CPR station." Stopover in Winnipeg, August 7 aboard the preserved Countess of Dufferin at the Higgins Street CPR station:
"At Edmonton, there was a 30-minute stop. We used the time to walk the full length of the train. It was hard to count the cars, but we agreed there were 15-20. It was chillly, and we were glad of our sweaters. Back in the room, we listened to our new neighbours, another family of five, Americans who had flown to Edmonton from the States and were noisily commenting on the CN facilities!" Buckley Bay during station stop in Edmonton August 8:
"We were a half-hour late arriving at Jasper where we had arranged to make a day's stopover. It would have made an excellent photo if someone had snapped us struggling over to our motel [the not-really-distant Andrew Motor Lodge] with our numerous bags and suitcases! Puff puff!" Jasper, AB on August 8. Note eight-hatch reefers at left; PRR coach at right!
"We had to check out of our room by noon. On to the icefields. Each snowmobile held about a dozen people, and it took about 45 minutes, but there was quite a large fleet of them in operation - about ten. We were back at Jasper in time to squeeze in supper before train time, which was 2005. We had a drawing room, that is just three beds, on this train." Vancouver, BC on August 10 preserved CPR 374:
"We made a rather late evening of it and we had decided not to go on the Pacific Great Eastern train north of Vancouver because it would have made a very long day for the children. That evening, though, Uncle Eric helped entertain them, he played a hockey game (table type) with each of the children in turn and they had a whale of a time." Table hockey with Uncle Eric:
"This day's outing catered to both tastes: man-made wonders and nature; it was an excursion to a logging museum. Uncle Eric drove us the 40 miles along the road from Victoria to Nanaimo (THE two cities on Vancouver Island) to Duncan's logging museum."
Hillcrest Number 9 at Duncan forestry Museum Aug 15:
"Our trip aboard the ferry couldn't have been nicer. First of course, we had our lunch! And our waiter was the best of the whole trip. He smiles, bowed slightly from the waist, said "sir" and "ma'am" and "very good" and practically clicked his heels! He gave me the impression he had had naval service. We admired the speed and grace of the accompanying flock of seagulls, gazed down at the wide wake, and across at the islands we passed in mid-stream and at two ferries crossing in the opposite direction." Aboard Queen of Esquimalt Aug 17 meeting another ferry:
"We left early for the PNE which had opened Saturday. We passed poor Nancy Green, the skiing star, signing autographs at a rate designed to give her writer's cramp if nothing worse. Our family went on a CPR model train ride." Pacific National Exhibition Kiddieland ride - CPR Canadian August 19:
"You can see we were moving right along on this train. First of all, we were going straight home, with no stopovers; secondly, this was the CN's top train, the Super Continental. We travelled through flat Manitoba and were in Winnipeg by noon. Our arrangements for accommodation required us to change cars." Walking in Winnipeg during our stopover eastbound on Aug 22
"Our day was not over. We were due in the dining car for 1:00 and went down to wait in the lounge car - along with about 50 million others! The new crew took an extra two hours to serve us our meal. I could even manage a smile - I was not the kitchen crew with an endless job on their hands and chaos! The last day was pretty tiring. We were still in Northern Ontario, but were appreciative of the many pretty lakes that passed into view at the window. As we got closer to Montreal, we watched the dark countryside swish by without our lights on, and when we crossed the bridge to Ste. Anne's, the west end of Montreal Island, we gathered up our belongings and stood in the vestibule - except for me; I watched by the corridor window till I saw Valois speed by."

Running extra...

Thanks to Edd Fuller of the crisp blog The Trackside Photographer, Prairie Elegy has been born. A unique album elevating the topic of classic Canadian grain elevators.

I've been sitting here in the blogochair populating the blogosphere for nearly eight years now. Coming soon...Trackside Treasure's eighth anniversary, anniversary contest, and the always-surprising Trackside Treasure prize pack!

I tuned in a convention, then an unconventional tune. Demi Lovato serenades Democrats! Would panelling: David Axelrod? Check! Paul Begala? Check! Now, where is David Gergen to expertly enliven and enlighten the panel of experts with his excellent excerpts. Live Tweeting, that's where!