Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Then Everything Ground to a Halt

For years, model railroaders have been applying scenic materials. First it was dyed sawdust. Then ground foam. Then blended turf. Now it's static grass. But until now, no-one has bothered to ask why the changes. Well, until now. It's because of the worldwide ground foam shortage. Trackside Treasure is here to answer the question no-one is asking. Sorry, that should read the question no-one else is asking [edit this before publishing this post - E]

Turns out that model railroaders have no-one to blame but themselves. Especially those modelling Appalachia and the Deep South. Spreading the stuff for years with abandon on veritable oceans of dilute white glue have led directly to the current crisis. Sustainability? Sidelined. Future generations? Forgotten. Nobody cared. As long as there was enough ground foam to cover this hillside or that open patch of plaster, it was let's-make-scenery-while-the-sun-shines.
Now, Woodlund Scenics is scrambling to find new sources of ground foam production farther afield. Countries that might be willing to allow their ground foam crops to be harvested, processed and exported are few in number, though. Outstanding in his field, this farmer did not want his identity shared. Look at this bountiful ground foam crop that he stands to profit handsomely from:
But there is not a total absence of hope in this story. The scenic flavour-of-of-the-month is static grass and that will certainly exert downward pressure on the pace of production. Recovery is possible. It remains to be seen if this will have any impact on the scenic spectrum available to model railroaders.
As you read this, the dwindling stocks are being closely-guarded and production is extremely limited. Having just painted the last patch of virgin plywood on my layout, I have to admit I'm part of the problem. My next step was to be to apply some Woodlund Scenics ground foam. But I'm reconsidering that. Is it ethical? Is it responsible? I'm considering making my own, using everyday supplies readily available in most Canadian households or at your local dollar store - sponges, green dye, kitchen blender, paper towels, sifter, chopsticks, a small trowel, elbow macaroni, rubber bands found on broccoli, wooden matchsticks with the heads removed, two or three water balloons, one and a third cups of aviation gas or JP4 jet fuel, a chocolate chip cookie, Montreal steak spice, 24 inches of dental floss, two bottles of beer (do NOT add to the ground foam, these are just for drinking while you think about how the hell this is ever going to work) and a quarter-cup of McDonald's special sauce.
LATE UPDATE - turns out those lines of cars being 'stored' on out of-the-way and little-used spurs include some cars that are actually carrying a precious lading - you guessed it - ground foam. They are stored on lightweight-rail branchlines - this stuff is foam after all. If you're trackside and see a covered hopper rocking and perhaps trailing a small stream of green particles trickling out, you may have found one of these cars of green gold heading to the Woodlund Scenics production facility!

AS IF THIS WEREN'T ENOUGH - Nobody listens anymore. I said...Light, RAPID and Comfortable. Pay attention, people.

6 comments:

Canadian Train Geek said...

Good thing I have a stockpile of ground foam.

Step 1. Stockpile ground foam.
Step 2. Wait.
Step 3. ...
Step 4: Profit!

PS - I think this post may have come out a day or two too early. ;)

Anonymous said...

the spelling of woodland scenics is wrong.. it is spelled woodland not woodland scenics

Eric said...

Steve, I like your thinking. The profit part, especially! I was going to wait a couple of days, but then readers would just think this post was some sort of an elaborate April Fool's Day scheme.

Anonymous, thank you for your suggestion. There is no-one hoo taykes speling more siriouslee than I dew. Nohbuddy. Trust mee. I wood not kydd yew.

I have been advised that use of the name to which you refer might cause certain legal entanglements that would open Trackside Treasure to litigation. Hence the 'u'. Speaking if 'u', it's actually Woodland Scenics, not woodland scenics. Oops, just used it!

Thanks for your comments,
Eric

Zartok-35 said...

I have a new recipe to try out!

Michael said...

A curveball with the timing, but a good addition to the tomfoolery-themed posts!

Eric said...

Thanks, Michael and Elijah, for your comments. Yes the timing of this post is unfortunate that people might think it is some kind of April Fool's Day shenanigans. There is surely lots of ground to cover here, and more than meets the eye.
Eric