Sunday, March 1, 2026

50 Years Trackside ...1981-85 Higher Education, Hired

Welcome aboard this year-long retrospective series celebrating my Fifty Years Trackside - watching trains and taking numbers. This is the Second of a year-long series celebrating those five decades - each month's post is a time capsule; a five-year slice of those fifty years. Following the inaugural post covering 1976-1981, this month, it's That Early Eighties Show! Retrospectively looking ahead on the steps of Hawker-Siddeley CN caboose 79295 parked at the top of the CN Cataraqui Spur at Kingston's Gardiners Road (posed L.C. Gagnon photo - above). The caboose was accompanying Burro crane 50408. My brother David's wedding to Susan on May 16, 1981 was a major family event, immediately followed by a major train watching event. Having read the TRAINS magazine article on Hamilton's Bayview Junction, Andrew Makepeace and I had to travel there. 
Since I didn't have my driver's licence yet, Andrew would be driving his parents' Chevy Caprice station wagon up Highway 401. We photographed our first train from the Royal Botanical Gardens' parking lot, then did most of our train watching from the 'railfan lot' in the triangle of the CN Oakville and Dundas Subdivisions junction. The light-blue wagon is parked behind the shed (above). We photographed the anticipated parade of trains and ate fast food. One example: ore train with 9442-9481-5518-9591-9617 on June 22, 1981 (above) arriving in Hamilton.

That summer it was time to head west to Portage again, timing the trip around my summer job. My 1982 trip west (June 8-26) was on the CP route through Northern Ontario once again. A school band exchange trip to PEI included this stop for the ferry at Borden. Andrew rides the footboards of CN 1751 that was tied down nearby:
In July 1982, my Dad and I made a trip by train to that sacred site of CN passenger operations in Toronto - Spadina Shops. Signing the required release form and donning our yellow hardhats, we were free to roam the ready tracks. Preparing to begin my final year in high school - Grade 13, I later received my acceptance letter from St Lawrence College on April 2, 1982. We toured the KGH labs on November 24, 1982 to get a glimpse of our futures. 

On September 18, I was back at the Amherstview sports field to photograph this golden-hour westbound behind CN 2113-2015-2338 over the CN right-of-way fence:
The following year, 1983, was the only one in my teen years that didn't include a Portage trip. My parents did get there, however. 

For my third year at the Cataraqui Region Conservation Authority, I was the foreman at Gould Lake Conservation Area north of Sydenham. This required a driver's license to drive my crew of...one....around! No Driver's Ed classes for me. No, it was Dad's Ed. On our practice sessions, he had a habit of alerting me to hazards some distance away, increasing his volume as we came closer. For instance, 'Eric, there's a dog on the road up ahead. Eric! There's a DOG UP AHEAD! ERIC!! THERE'S A DOG UP AHEAD!!"

I enjoyed a Canrailpass vacation travelling the Corridor extensively in March, 1984. I finally got my 35 mm camera on April 23, 1984 after the demise of my trusty Kodak Hawkeye during those trips. For $184.59 I walked out of Camera Kingston with a Yashica FX-3. I had a month to experiment with it before heading west on VIA No 1 for a May 26-June 9 trip. I added a Kiron 80-200 men telephoto lens for $200 from Camera Kingston on June 13, 1985. This was to celebrate the completion of the third of three days of CSLT exams, after a celebratory lunch with classmates, now colleagues, at Mino's Restaurant. 

While this was my era of educational enlightenment, it was the dark ages of train watching. My note-taking took a back seat, and documentation is scant and sketchy. There was much memorizing and fraternizing to do. A classmate's wedding changed the course of my life thereafter.  I had been hired right after my third year, and was working across from a certain medical stenographer in the secretarial pool. (Is it too much to say she was a fine specimen?) My date for that wedding became my fiancĂ©e and then my wife. Karen never professed herself to be a train enthusiast, but she was a good sport if we ended up trackside on a 'date'! We're at Napanee with the tail-end of an eastbound freight led by 9634-2547-2583-9588 and caboose 79555 in 1986:
From September 16 to October 3, 1985 I took my first vacation from work - to Manitoba on VIA Rail. Karen, too, travelled west by air to visit family in Saskatchewan. In the era before direct flights, a stop in Winnipeg necessitated blankets distributed to passengers while her plane sat on the tarmac!
VIA trains were an interesting mix. VIA was implementing its LRC and would deal with the technology's teething problems for years. With an armload of gold bars, this conductor who likely started his railway career in clouds of steam directs passengers aboard a jet-powered Turbo at Kingston, in the spring of 1982. VIA's Turbos were removed from service in October, 1982 while its cab units limped along until the new F40's arrived in December, 1986. On October 7, 1985 I rode an LRC to Ottawa on a day trip to Parliament (David J. Gagnon photos):

On a cold December 2, 1985 I treated my parents to a trip to Montreal also aboard VIA. My Dad snapped this photo of me at the east lookout of the Camille Houde Parkway atop Mount Royal:
Thanks for being aboard this year-long train of thought as we retrace, remember, and yes, wallow in nostalgia these fifty years trackside. Watch for an upcoming third part as we enter our third decade -  the 1990s.
Running extra...

Speaking of the '80s, VIA Rail Canada released a social media reel showing the Vancouver open house celebrating The Canadian's 70th anniversary. Sartorially snazzy Mark Sampson, who knows a thing or two about the train's history, gets a brief video VIAntage vignette:

Ontario Northland's first Siemens set is testing at night west of Toronto, where it resides at VIA's TMC with rescue unit ONR 1802.

First past the post...

It's so nice to start talking finances with your financial advisor before shifting into family matters, the sandwich generation, the school system, organized religion and many, many other topics. Oh yeah, and finances. And free coffee. And a free note pad. The Royal Bank, years ago, gave me one Timbit. One. Oh yeah, and a calendar that was so boring and cheap that all it had was monthly date blocks. No pictures. My garage used to give out nicer colour calendars, and the garage had A LOT less of my money than the bank did!

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Wintertime at the Station, Jan-Feb 2026 - Freight Cars

UNPX/Procor 320004
In my two trips in Part 1 and Part 2  previously posted, I profiled the prolific plethora of passenger and freight trains I observed at Kingston's VIA station on two successive, shivering Saturdays. Since I'm a  freight car fan, I'm always watchful for the interesting ones - in what are becoming increasingly boring single-commodity freight trains or manifest freights comprising lease-fleet cars. I had some success. The cars I photographed are minimally-captioned and shown in chronological order, with the train number listed for the first on each train.
Veteran lumber-lugger CN 598156
CN No 372 is one of my favourite daily freights - the January 31 version (above) and February 7 version (below):
WFRX 383996 and ITFX/ITLX coil cars

BNSF Swoosh covered hopper 422628

BN covered hopper 461534

CN136667 'heritage fleet' gondola with scrap tie load
February 7's CN No 305:
AEX 5118 covered hopper minimally-lettered  'organic corn'

COER 804870 all-aluminum assonance

CN flats with imported rail from Halifax heading to Transcona
It's interesting that with all the talk about a flashy new ALTO line to be built, and whether there would be buy-Canadian rules, the Minister of Transport had to soberly admit to the parliamentary transportation committee that steel rails are no longer produced within Canada's borders.
CN No 276:

CN No 271:
'Patchwork' repanelled auto rack

Running extra...

Ever heard the expression, "I'd give my eye teeth for that..."? Well, one of the American Hughes brothers did just that when intercepting former Kingston Frontenac Sam Bennett's stick during the Olympic gold medal game. He seemed happy to have made the sacrifice. It's not always just blood, sweat and tears. This photo makes it look like the injured Sidney 'Sid the Kid' Crosby took it all in from a comfortable spot on the ice.

First past the post...

Analyst Kevin Bieksa put forward defenceman Cale Makar's name for the tournament MVP, while Elliotte Friedman stuck with the easy choice, Connor "Wind Him Up and Watch Him Skate" McDavid.

Thursday, February 19, 2026

Wintertime at the Station, Jan-Feb 2026 - Part 2

In Part 1 of this written wintry winterlude, I was at Kingston's VIA station on two successive, successful Saturdays - January 31 and in this Part 2, February 7, 2026. On this day, I was in the non-southern shadow [wrong] side [of the tracks]. Photo-editing would have to burnish and brighten the images! A VIA Train Marshal was in the station, and later patrolled west toward the dumpsters. Maybe he was concerned about dumpster security, more likely whether I would be requiring a wellness check. Seeing I was a harmless railfan, he eased eastward toward the warm station and out of the -17 degrees Celsius [before wind-chill] weather. There were not many lulls for me, though I would have welcomed warming.

The trains I observed will be listed in this post with by time, direction, train number, locomotive numbers or VIA Venture Set #'s.

1254 EB VIA No 62: Set 32, the newest in VIA's 32-set fleet, was running solo instead of J'd with No 52 as it normally would have. The latter had been bustituted.
Snowbank-view:
No 62 sat on the south track for 30 minutes. I wondered if it, too, would be bustituted. Instead, while waiting atop an unsuspecting snowbank, I slowly realized it was a medical situation for a passenger on board. Frontenac Paramedic Services ambulance 4180 responded at 1320, accompanied by the station pickup truck, formerly used for checked baggage handling on the south track. 
1258 WB CN No 369: 2813, ex-Citirail DPU 3948 (unphotographed)
1320 WB CN No 305: 3224-2779 ex-Citirail-3135, DPU 3807.
No 62 still stopped on south track, seen ahead of 305's lead locomotive:
DPU, here's looking at u:
No 62 finally departs eastward, nine minutes after ambulance arrival:
Heading east toward the John Counter Boulevard overpass:
1355 WB VIA No 53: 915-4002-3334-3369-3307Ren scheme-6402Love the way:

1359 EB CN No 372: 3356, DPU 3382.
CN No 372 almost always includes a few cars of British Columbia lumber, in this case Dunkley (above). Mid-train DPU:
1405 WB VIA No 65: 6417-3338F-3343F-3367-3335-3340-3469-3458-3475-6408.
1412 EB VIA No 40: Set 9 (held at Bath behind stopped No 62 for 30 minutes account trains on north track)

A father hoisting his young son onto his shoulders at the east end of the parking lot to see it venture east:
1427 EB CN No 276: 5682-5783 aging units often assigned to auto rack trains. Loaded auto racks - long train!
Van and shorter snowbank on platform (above). Surveying the scene from a soaring snowbank:
1440 EB VIA No 64: Set 26.

1456 WB CN No 271: 2899-auto rack empties. Not as long as 276!

1502 WB VIA No 47: 6401-3318-3359Future-3333-4007 on south track.
Another mostly-LRC consist with an HEP2 Business Class car, as described in Part 1.
It was time to head home, catch up with my calloused, crafty crafter, and warm up!
Here's an additional post featuring some fortuitously-fotograffed freight cars.

Running extra...

Old car, new refurb: He witnessed the premiere westbound Canadian in 1955, so it seemed fitting that on my Dad's birthday, February 19, VIA's final refurbished diner Louise deadheaded west on VIA No 61 (image courtesy Railstream, LLC) its life extended ready for many more trips to Western Canada.
Old unit, new scheme: one of GO's F59's received its new, limey paint scheme (posted to social media):
Watch for an upcoming post on VIA's Ventures' teething troubles. Furnished with nearly 500 (!) service incidents in just over two years of their service, I'm going to try to bring some veracity to the velocity of complaints from the innuendo-possessed about how the 'Ventures are @#$%^'. It's been an interesting read so far! Venturing on...

First past the post...
Gold, silver or bronze, 5th, 8th or 18th? It doesn't matter where they place, Canada's Olympians are representing our great country greatly. One such is Saskatchewan's Maia Schwinghammer, definitely the best name on our team! Also, have you ever heard of a skier from the Prairie provinces? It's just not true that if you stand on a chair, you can see the whole province! That's just a silly Saskatchewan syllogism! 
Just thought this would give you a lift. Hey, it's all downhill from here!fortuitously-fotograffed freight cars