As I stood on the grass beside the north platform at Kingston station earlier this month, two thoughts crossed my mind. Thought One: Wow it is really hot today. Thought Two, slightly more profound: Just think of the cornucopia of VIA book customers, VIAphiles and uberVIAphiles I have met at this concrete conference-centre as they crisscrossed the Corridor and contemporaneously this fair country of ours: Tom Box, Terry Brennan, Chris Diddy, Mark Fidelak, Tim Hayman, Jordan 'Hollywood' McCallum, Mark '001' Sampson, Jason 'Spadina' Shron, Matt Soknacki, 'Manitoba' Matt Tolton...now Vancouver's Terry Muirhead was the latest to contact me to let me know he'd be riding the rails through Kingston. I should add that Terry has been a faithful Trackside Treasure reader and information source for well over a decade. It was the least I could do to try and meet Terry. So, on July 4, I went to meet his train VIA No 62 from Toronto. This turned out to be a practice session.
VIA No 643 arrived first at 1042: 6436L(ove the Way)-3452-3351F(uture)-3329F-3325 (top photo) with VIA No 62/52 arriving at 1106: 6401-3458-3469-3301R(enaissance scheme)-3312R-3318-4117-6406-4005 D(&H scheme)-4113D-4102-4118-8100D.
Fortunately, our meet-up not only got me out to the station three times, it also became one of my Summertime at the Station posts now in their tenth year, and thirdly, it was a blogging challenge for me. Inspired by The Beachburg Sub blog partner Michael Hammond and his campaign to make 2023 The Year of Different, I tried to do something different during these visits. You can see the photographic results in this post. Adding people to the standard wedge shot (above - photobombed by a family, should I have yelled out "Form a photo line!"? I realized they were paying passengers and I was not!) and working in some trackside treasure (below - vintage baggage cart in fresh blue paint) beside 62's J-trained head-end.
So on July 11, I went to meet Terry's REAL VIA No 62. I was still thinking about Michael's 2023: The Year of Different and whether I was too locked-in to wedge shots. Hmmm, let's see, due to natural perspective, a train hoving into view naturally forms a wedge. As a documenter of consists and photographs, I feel the need to be close enough to record locomotive and car numbers. So, drone and beyond-ballast photography is a no-go for me. But I would try my darnedest to do something to mark this year!
How about starting with a trainless shot? I wandered down to the mileboard at Mile 176 of the CN Kingston Sub, just west of the John Counter Boulevard overpass - completed in November, 2020. Noticing that both sets of crossing timbers had been removed, I also noticed that the bells and gates still worked and that trains still whistled. Once an important access route for the south track platform checked baggage, I wondered about the crossing's future and that of checked baggage. Terry's train soon arrived, part of J-trained Nos 62/52: 6432-3461-3455-3362R-3354R-3345R-4100 and 52's consist behind 6406 the same as the week before.
With no Business Class passengers on or off at Kingston, our meet-and-greet became a wave-and-go! The Business Class attendants were more concerned with getting the head-end crew's coffee orders correct and delivered, then promptly closing the door, even though Economy passengers were still alighting and boarding farther back in the train! That blue step-section sure is Different!
The train was soon heading east - trailing 62's two Business Class cars 3461-3455 behind the engine:
After a recent detour disruption west of Toronto, Corridor consist rotations were rent slightly asunder, with many having a stainless-steel coach, such as 4100, inserted into an otherwise-LRC consist:
May I present The Year of Different? Reminiscent of a Turbo:
VIA No 643's consist was exactly the same as the week before (well that's not Different!) though its timekeeping was off by 30 minutes, arriving after No 62/52 had departed, instead of before.
Returning to my van, I heard the keening kall of the killdeer! Hopping up to a parking lot median was an adult killdeer and its kid killdeer:
Fortunately, we had a third chance to summarize our summer stationside summit on July 15. Terry was returning from Dorval to Toronto aboard VIA No 63, again in Business Class. This arrival became a 'romeo-foxtrot' for everyone waiting for VIA No 63, me included! After noticing two westward-facing redboards at down the track at Queens West after a westbound freight, I wondered if No 63 must be operating on the south track. But no, inside the station, the list of arrivals of trains clearly said Track 1 for No 63, and passengers were not being directed to Track 2. Obediently, I waited. Nothing could have been farther from the truth. Was this The Year of Different having its revenge??
After the westbound that looked like CN No 147 (2862-5743) toted sea cans and empty autoracks west on the north track (above), there was still the matter of the impending arrival of No 63. Sure enough, it arrived on the opposite track! I knew at once because Terry had told me the two locomotive numbers of this double-header. This threw the VIA station staff, "They didn't tell us it was on Track 2 - I'm gonna need help in the tunnel!" as well as the now-huffy passengers into a tizzy, including a non-functioning 'up' escalator at the far end of the tunnel. And here I was thinking, third time unlucky!
But a train without passengers is not much use, so its departure would have to wait at least until we all got over to the south track! I found Terry beside his ride, at the second Business Class car vestibule - probably thinking, third time unlucky(?) We had a good chat, the engine crew had a good smoke, and all seemed jovial to be getting underway.
Your humble blogger and last few passengers (Terry Muirhead photo - above)
Heading west around 1210: 6448-910-3458-3469-3301R-3312R-3318-4117 (same consist at July 4's No 63!) with the two Business Class cars (above and below):
And another mismatched stainless-steel car to boot, 4117:
As Terry's train receded, moving ever closer toward the Left Coast, my good wife and I dispatched ourselves slightly west to Mary Brown's Fried Chicken - fun fact founded in St Jahhhn's, b'y! - for our Batter's Box and then east for the afternoon at the intermodal node known as Kingston Mills Locks on the Rideau Waterway. From this beyond-the-ballast vantage point, I used the iPhone camera to document times and whatever numbers it could discern:
Six VIA trains and two CN freights - including Moncton-Toronto CN No 305 denoted by its Irving lumber loads (below) would clatter over the bridge in the next three-and-a-half hours. I made my way through Hal Carstens' lifetime of photography as Carstens Publications' publisher, digesting both his photography and the fried chicken simultaneously!
1257 EB: VIA 6404 with stainless steel consist
1353 WB: VIA 6424
1400 WB: VIA 6410 (above)
1430 WB: CN No 305 (3292-2802-DPU 3927 ex-Citirail)
1442 WB: VIA 901 with stainless steel consist
1458 EB: VIA 6437L
1506 WB: CN No 149 (2312-2xxx)
1520 EB: VIA 903
Stainless Steel scenes
Heaving my chicken-fuelled bulk out of my comfortable lawnchair, I ventured a few feet east and slightly upgraded my vantage point up the grade to the upper lock, framing this westbound with our sheltering maple tree for a Different angle:
The turning basin is in foreground. When the lock above is emptying, the water fills to within about 6 inches of the retaining wall. When the three lower flight locks are filling, water level is down about 18 inches. The four locks bring boats up or down 45 feet here, passing beneath the circa 1929 CN bridge.
CN No 149 (above) and the last VIA at 1520 (below). The umbrellas are for the seven lock staffers who slowly open and close the lock gates and sluices using 19th-century technology.
It was good to meet Terry, who by this time, was in Toronto and ready to wing his way westerly to the Wet Coast! We made our way home to the A/C, having enjoyed an afternoon of fast food, fast trains, and slow boats!
Running extra...
How to enter the next lock: one of three American cabin-cruisers, accompanied by a lone kayaker who would rather paddle than walk (above). How not to enter a lock: we wondered why two nylon ropes were being deployed across the top of the lock gates --then used to tow this motorless one (below).
I'm always conscious of containing 'mission-creep' on Trackside Treasure. While it would be easy to float a post on cabin-cruisers of the Rideau Waterway, or even Colonel By's malaria-infested workplace, I'm trying to stay on track here! That's just the way I've been trained.
I liked the Turbo shot. It brought back some good memories.
ReplyDeleteDid I fool you? I caught that LRC at the end of the carbody, mainly centred on the VIA logo, and between the trucks, with the sanitary pumpout valve there and it *reminded* me of a Turbo.
ReplyDeleteThe Turbo did produce lots of good memories for sure, with its dissonant both-ends horn and its 'cracked-plate' bell!
Thanks for your comment, Eric.
Eric
I'm glad my call for different inspired ingenious images on the iron! But you do bring up a good point. How do you do different if you need to be close by to record numbers? A conundrum to be carefully considered while capturing cool pics!
ReplyDeleteYes I'll repeatedly ruminate on your reasonable request to reduce repetition, Michael. (Except of consonants, of course !)
ReplyDeleteMan (railfan variety) can not live by wedge shots alone, but by every unique view that comes from the digital card!
Thanks for your inspiration, and I trust others will take up the cause as well!
Eric