Saturday, October 28, 2006

Steam's Return

10/23/06
I knew the OC's 1293 would be returning to Zanesville on Monday, because it had to. There is no other way to get back to Coshocton. A crew member told me Friday that it would be in steam, too.

I had some appointments to deal with Monday morning, and I just assumed I missed the 1293's return trip when I went into work later in the morning. But as I was sitting in the office, I heard a familiar whistle, and went out to find the train.

There was no sight of the train at the yard, and no puddle under the hydrant used to fill the steamer on Friday. I figured I would have plenty of time to get to the scenic overlook that affords a view of all of down town- and the OC's bridge over the Muskingum River. Something made me look at the bridge from ground level.

That is when I found the 1293. Going across the bridge. Guess they didn't need any water.

Back to State Street. I didn't really have any other options. Not that it is such a bad place to take pictures of steam engines in snow flurries.




The train sat at State Street for a minute, and then backed down the connection and up the former WLE. I raced over to Keen St to get a shot of the train backing up. There is a funny crossing here, as the tracks cross two streets in the middle of an intersection. I told the guy who got off the train about the photo I put in the paper, and asked if they would back all the way to Coshocton. He told me they would run the engine around in Armco Yard and then head north.



After shooting the train going away, I headed back to the office. I told the City Editor about the steam engine, and she said she had heard it, but didn't seem all that interested in using it was wild art, despite the 2000 hits on the web gallery and two reprints we had sold. Oh well. I figured I would get a shot I had hoped for anyway, just in case we needed some wild art (slow news day art, for lack of a better term)

I rolled down an alley beside Armco and watched the 1293 hook up to it's train. As it started to pull, I headed north along West North River Road to the fields I had shot the train crossing the first time around, and I had shot the coal train passing several times before, most recently in the post titled 'heavy train in the heavy rain.' Before I did though, I shot the train passing the marina, and then curving into the woods along the road. And then north, to the field, where three other people were waiting to see the train.

A steamer looks somewhat awkward running backwards, but it was still pretty cool to see. As the train disappeared down the straight stretch of track along the road, it almost looked timeless.


Sunday, October 22, 2006

Steam!

When I heard that Ohio Central would be loaning their ex-CP Pacific 1293 to the Byesville Scenic Railway I was pretty excited. Not because I planned on heading out to Byesville (I don't get out much any more) but because you can't get from OC HQ near Coshocton to Byesville without passing through Zanesville. By rail, at least.

I figured that they would tow the 1293 cold to Byesville, and I heard that the engine would be facing east for the runs out of Byesville, and thus be towed tender first south of Coshocton to Zanesville.

Even so, it would be nice to see a steam engine, even if it would be cold.

I heard Thursday night that the short train to Byesville would be pulled by the 1800, of ballast train fame, and consist of the 1293 and some support cars. I planned on heading out early Friday, to at least get a few shots. After all, an RS18 isn't so bad either.

It was raining when I woke up, and I headed north. The rails looked pretty shiny for a rainy day, so I thought I might have missed the train. But north of town I saw a fellow with a tripod, and stopped to see what was afoot.

Turns out he had chased the train from Coshocton in the dark. Also turns out the steam engine was very much alive, and pulling the train.

So I settled in across the tracks, and waited for the train. There was no mistaking it's approach, even if it was at a crawl. The gentle chuff and melodic whistle were magic. I squeezed a few frames, and tore ass south, to get the train against some fairly colorfull hills across the river.

As I arrived at my spot, I saw the steam drifting across a corn field, and got a timeless shot of distant steam. The effect was made complete by the jointed rail.



After the shot, I ran like hell up the road to get my broadside shot. There was no place to park closer to the spot, and the train was going slow enough that I would catch up easily.



I passed the guy with the tripod and another guy I knew further down the road, at a small private crossing. I was heading toward a curve closer to town, just outside the city limits. The hills would make a nice backdrop, although when I got to my spot I realized I should shoot looser, to include the Muskingum River. Oh well. A vertical and a horizontal were the result.




After the shot at the curve, I headed toward the next crossing, where the train would pass under I70 and cross Linden Avenue near a bar. I tried to find a way to include the bar, and gave up, heading to State Street instead. The train would have to stop to line a switch anyway.

As the train approached State Street, it slowed to a crawl, barely moveing around the sharp curve, once a connection between the Wheeling and Lake Erie and Baltimore and Ohio. I don't know if they worried about derailing or just wanted to give the crew member a chance to get to switch, but the train was crawling. Every few seconds the 1293 would let out a chuff, and shoot darker steam skyward. I can only imagine the sight if it was 10 degrees cooler.



The crewman walked toward the switch, bent down to unlock it, and then appeared to go through most of the keys on his keyring to unlock it. The steamy brute behind him glared with her single headlight.




The short train pulled across State Street and stopped, simmering in the gloomy morning. I took the opportunity to shoot some typical steam detail shots of the valve gear, and then noticed the quiet simplicity of the trailing driver.



The train sat for a few minutes, during which a little boy and his dad came out to see the train. They stood on the porch and looked, and the little boy yelled out a hello. I waved, pleased to see a youngster getting to see the steam engine.

And then, with a short blast of the horn from 1800, the train began to move. A huge cloud of steam enveloped the 1293, and I scrambled to get in better position. I shot the train disappearing into the cloudy sky, and then backing past a trackside house.





One more shot as the train receeded into the distance, and then it was time to drive like hell again. From State Street I made every light to the Y-bridge, a rare feat that includes a left turn light, and two more stoplights and then a right turn on the bridge. I don't think I have ever done it before. At the bridge, I stopped to get the train disappearing through the dog food factory.




Downtown, the train stopped at the yard office, a runty little former CSX trailer. The crew got out and milled around, but there was not nearly as much engineer-checking-his-steed stuff as I expected, although a fellow did roll out a fire house and run it over to a nearby hydrant. Eventually a guy from the water department showed up, and I took his picture connecting the hose. I recognized him from my newspaper duties, and we chatted about the steam engine for a little while as the tank filled.







After the hose was recoiled and put in the tool car, it was time to go. The 1293 let out a whistle, and remembering the display at State Street, I knew the steamer would let out a cloud as it started to roll. I got a few shots of it obscuring itself, both with a little of the former PRR station in the background, and then a few more as the train disappeared out of sight.






Look for the 1293's return soon, and one more photo from this batch that I just can't get blogger to upload.

Wednesday, October 04, 2006

Rainy Night at the Yard



Call this one forced futility. After heavy rain most of the afternoon, I figured a quick stop by the yard on the way home would yield a shot or two.

It did, kind of. The rain started as soon as my rickety tripod was set. I didn't have a lens hood, and I had to wipe my lens a few times while figuring out my exposure. It would be a short shoot, two frames, it turns out.

My first wide view of the yard, although I was hoping to shoot longer, as the yard was nearly empty. But better to preserve my gear, as the rain was getting heavier. The shot is of an abandoned switch, the blobby shadow beside it a photographer, holding a floppy hat over his camera, hoping his tripod doesn't slip. What is more futile than the fear of rain and a busted switch?

Thursday, September 21, 2006

Mysterious Local

I had an assignment at 7:45 in the morning Thursday, with a following assignment at 9 am. I awoke expecting fog. There was some, but it was clinging to the ridge on the edge of town, instead of along the river. But as I was shooting my assignment the fog began to roll off the ridge and into the valley until it filled most of down town.

My assignment was short, and after I went to find the local. He was across the river, switching some cars. The morning sun was on him, and despite their faded paint, the Super 7 twins looked good.

While I was turning around, they dropped their cars and zipped across the river. Which made the shot I was hoping for impossible. I went back across the river, and the train headed south toward the Glass House, as Owens Illinois is known locally. It beat me across the river, but the fog was too thick to do anything except shoot through the bridge, which would have resulted in a big blobby triangle of light. And I couldn't get across the river in time anyway.

But I did get to the narrow spot where the Maysville Pike and the railroad come together, the pike slipping underneath via an ancient, rusting, center pier bridge that is the bane of local truckers. I could hear the train coming as I changed lenses, and as I ran across the road the triangle of lights appeared through the foggy trees like a UFO and the Super 7 twins and their two hoppers burbled toward me, their crisp lines softened by the fog. I shot wide, leaving in the foggy trees of the cemetery, the road, and the signs that hint at the narrow bridge. The fading blue B23-7rs rumpled past, the 4095's headlights and ditchlights casting long yellow rays through the thin fog.

Tuesday, September 19, 2006

Return to the Quiet Yard

During the short days of last year I would stop by the Ohio Central yard in downtown Zanesville and take photos. At the time the local's locomotives would spend the night downtown, leaving for Newark in the morning. The first thing that attracted me to the yard was the tiny front-porch light on a rebuilt geep. Then I looked around a little more, shooting the rickety tracks and the tank cars that occupied them. I shot a ballast train in the snow, and the peeling and flaking 40-foot C&O boxcar on the edge of the yard.

And then I stopped. The days got longer, and the local began to leave in the early evening- affording great opportunity to shoot in the nice evening light in a variety of locations- but ending my night shooting.

It was raining when I returned Monday night. Something about the drizzle- light, but soaking- drew me back. The local was long gone, but the tank cars gleamed in the misty night. The shots are not as good as the best from last year, but a start of another series. The night's are getting longer, and before long, the local will leave after dark, affording a world of new possibilities.


Sunday, September 17, 2006

Recognition

09/14/06


I was passing through downtown Thursday afternoon when I noticed the ballast train was in town again, this time with the caboose on the north end. I couldn't see the power, but I figured it was the 1800, and hoped it was facing south. When I turned the corner, I could see that is was, the first time I have ever seen the thing without cars coupled to it's snout.

I parked, and walked trackside along Market St. The engineer looked up from his paperwork with something like alarm, and then gave me a 'ah, it's just you' look. I asked which way they were going, and he said to Newark, and asked me if I wanted him to turn off the lights on the engine. I said it was fine as it was, and he went back to his paper.

It wasn't long before he notched out that little MLW and it thundered off toward Newark. I would have chased it all day if I could have, but I had to go back to work. But it was a nice little break on a nice sunny day.

Wednesday, September 13, 2006

Heavy Train the Heavy Rain

09/12/06
It was pouring on Tuesday when I was on my way home for lunch. On into the house, I heard the coal train, and decided to eat quickly. When I hear the train across town when I get home, I have plenty of time to eat and still get north of town to shoot the train. I still ate and ran. The dog was disappointed.

As I drove north, the train got to a spot north of town where the road and tracks come together at the same time I did, and I slowed down to listen to the two big GEs on the front thunder along. While I am getting tired of the seeing the same two locomotives on the train for the past several weeks, they sure sounded good.

I went to a usual spot north of town, where the tracks curve between the cornfields and there is a place to park. I waited as the train crawled north, watching the trail of smoke as it rose above the corn, now head high.




If you look closely at the low quality web images, you may be able to pick out the rain drops. The engineer gave me a 'you again' look as he passed, but still waved.

Light in Retreat

09/06/06
The crew was getting on the local when I passed the yard on my way home from work, so I headed to the small lift bridge across the Muskingum River Canal to shoot the train. I had shot the local there before two times earlier in the summer, from both sides of the tracks when Gp30 4218 was leading. The Super 7 twins were on the train, and I thought about a different way to shoot the train.



With a bit of zoom, you can look through the bridge, and shoot the train passing through the dogfood factory along side a row of boxcars. So I did. The power is in light shadow, while much of the rest of the scene is in hazy sunlight.

Having shot the train at State Street too many times to count, I headed west to the first crossing outside of town, by the foundry I repeatedly try to shoot the train passing.

This time, the sun was behind the trees before the train came, meaning the chasing season was just about over. Soon I will be lucky to get the train at the bridge, and then it will be nothing but night shots until next spring.

Friday, September 01, 2006

Locals of the Ohio River Valley

08/31/06
With a day off Thursday, I wondered where to go in this great state o' mine. Somewhere new? Somewhere once visited? Nowhere? I looked at the rail map of Ohio in a recent Trains magazine. My wife suggested Steubenville.

It was an intriguing idea. I had been there several times before, most recently in April, which was my first trip devoted only to trains. It was close, scenic, but not a lot of trains. The light would leave the valley early, but since I had to be home by 6 for Lemaz class, it would work out ok. If it didn't rain.

It was solid cloud cover when I woke up Thursday, so I didn't hurry out the door. I made my wife lunch, and saw her out the door before getting ready to go. Ended up leaving at around 7:30, well past sunrise, not that it was visible anyway.

By the time I was east of Cambridge, the sun was breaking through the clouds, but by the time I got to Bridgeville, it had settled behind some thin clouds that cast a soft yellowish light over the region. By the time I got to Steubenville, it had grayed somewhat, but it was still not too terrible.

The scanner was going on and on, with scarcely a pause for breath, and I didn't really understand any of it. Both the NS and WLE appeared to switching the yards in Mingo Junction, but I couldn't tell if any actual trains were out there anywhere. So I headed across the river to take a look at the steel mill in Wierton, Wva.

It is an impressive place, sprawling in every sense of the word, sitting on the edge of town like a benevolent monster, slowly enveloping the area.

And yet it was fragile, too. The backside, away from town, was silent and decaying. Bumpy alleys lead to more abandoned buildings, and weeds and trees covered empty lots. I got out and took a photo of an abandoned tire place with the mill in the background, and then dashed back to my car as a Mittal (the company that owns the mill) security van drove past at the bottom of the hill. With Lemaz class, I really didn't want to spend all day getting my balls busted for taking a picture of an abandoned building.



With nothing much stirring in the train department, I headed south along the West Virginia side of the river. I poked along through Follansbee without any real idea of where I was going or why. Turns out the town is celebrating it's centennial this year. I rolled south, into Wellsburg, where I crossed the tracks to see if I could see into Mingo Jct yard, across the river. The rails were rusty, although there were some hoppers by a cool looking factory in the distance. A weed cutter was at work, thus precluding any trains, I figured. I thought wistfully of locals on rusty branch lines, and turned back north.

Just south of Follansbee I saw that wonderful, magical triangle of lights, and my heart leaped. A train. On the rusty branch line.

I was in a near panic as I looked for a place to turn the car around. Then I realized that the train might not continue south, and if it did, it would be moving pretty damn slowly.

I raced back to a wide spot in the road, and walked across the four lane road to shoot the local coming under the massive Wheeling and Lake Erie bridge. Then I walked back to the car, since the train didn't seem to be coming. No sooner had I gotten back across the road than the headlight appeared, and the train trundled under the bridge.

Across the road again, I climbed up on the guard rail, and did my best to balance on the post holding the thing up. I wobbled a bit, and when I gained my balance, I did the crane pose from Karate Kid, for the entertainment of the crew. I don't know if they got it, but the brakie gave me the metal fingers when he passed.



I headed south again, back into Wellsburg, and drove around a little bit looking for my shot. The giant lawn mower headed south, stopped in the weeds at what I presume would be the end of the line. The train slowly eased it's way through town, and an employee of the factory came out on a little porch to watch the train for a minute.



The train eased to a stop, and the brakeman went to find someone in the factory. When he came back he got up on the front porch for the short ride to the switch, after a brief exchange with the engineer through the cab window. (I should have shot this from the other side, but I didn't want to run in front of the train) The brakie hit the ground in front of him, having to nimbly step over the ground throw, and as we both grimaced from the engineer's horns blasts, he told me he hates those horns, they are so loud. He then threw the switch and hopped aboard the last car before I could reply. My brain was still temporarily addled from the close proximity of the horn blast anyway.





The train backed into the siding, and set about dropping off it's single hopper car. I watched from the crossing, and then the power came back, and the brakie stepped off in front of me again. He asked if got a lot of photos, and I told him I had. Is this the end of the line? I asked, and he replied he didn't know how far the line continued. I asked if they come down here often, and he replied only about twice a week. I said that yea, they had to clear a path for him and pointed to the weed cutter, and he said they didn't do a very good job. I wished him a safe trip back, and he bade me farewell.

I left the two engines to make their way back to Weirton. It appeared they were heading back light, and I wanted to find out what the Wheeling was up to. Back north.

From just north of Wellsburg you can see the back side of the steel mill at Mingo Jct, and some of the yards to the south. A train was switching the wheeling yard, and I wondered if they were going to go somewhere. Pondering this, I headed over to Mingo to sit and wait for something to happen. I wandered around some more, trusting the same instincts that found me the local to find me something else, but then ignoring them and sitting restlessly in a parking spot, listening to both the scanner and the radio. Suddenly I realize that the track closest to me carried the Ohio Central, hit or miss for trains at best, and the NS was behind the mill, and the WLE south of it. So I headed south.

No sooner had I turned the corner past the mill than I saw a the WLE's Akron, Canton and Youngstown painted GP35 on a bridge over the tracks, coupled with a shiny WLE-painted partner. The bridge was part of the enormous former Pittsburgh and West Virginia bridge over the Ohio that I had photographed before. I turned around and headed back across the river.

The train had pulled out on the bridge when I arrived, and after a quick shot through the trees, I thought perhaps it would head toward Pittsburgh. I went to find a spot, did, and headed back to make sure it would indeed go to Pittsburgh. I felt my afternoon slipping away.



The train backed across the bridge and disappeared. So back across the river I went. Again.

This time I followed the river north, hoping to intercept a train to chase south, and then leave for home. The yard chatter on the scanner disappeared, replaced by the sounds of someone switching somewhere else. As I neared the power plant at Stratton, the voices got louder and clearer, and then I spotted another former Conrail engine across the parking lot power plant.

Huzzah! I turned around, and drove over to the tracks. There was an engine on the other end, too, and I lingered long enough to make sure the train was heading north, and then split. My last visit to the area around the plant had me being unceremoniously booted, as I wasn't allowed to take pictures of a nearby GE 25 tonner.

I headed to Wellsville (not Wellsburg, which is in Wva) and found the little park I had shot from before. It was cloudy again, like last time. I read my book until the train showed up a half hour later. I shot it passing the little memorial, and headed north again.



At East Liverpool, I tried to remember my way through town. The funny little down town was crowded, and then I crested the hill and went down to the tracks. The train was already there, switching out an asphalt tank car. I set about photographing them switch a few other industries there.



When the ageing geep eased past on the weedy siding, I noticed it's cab side was betrying it's southern roots, with the gold band and unique sublettering system (in this case an X) of the Southern Railway begining to show through it's Norfolk Southern black. The SOU under the number was a sad tribute to one of NS' predecessors, the peeling gold band just made it worse.






I bounced back and forth between a few crossings as the locomotives on each end of the train set about spotting cars at an industry. At one I met a trucker from Ontario who was a few yards shy of his destination when the train blocked the crossing. When I told him what I was doing, he asked if I had ever been to Berea. He was impressed with the number of railfans in the parking lot there, hundreds, he said, waiting for a special train. I wished him luck in his travels, and moved down a crossing, where the rear engine, a former Conrail engine with red eyes was moving down the weedy siding.



While the engine was out of site, the conductor/brakie ignored me and a fellow from the business who's driveway I was using came over to see what I was up to. It took a few tries to convince him I wasn't from the paper, and told him I just traveled around taking pictures of trains. He told me it seemed like a good hobby, better than mine, he said. I asked what his hobby was, wondering if I really wanted to know. He was into RC cars, and we talked about how expensive they are for a really good one. When the engine coupled back on the train, I said goodbye and told him I was going to head north with the train. He wished me luck.



And off I went. The train was ahead of me by the next crossing, only a few hundred feet down the line. They stopped again, switching a grain elevator. I got a shot, but not a very good one, and headed north, now east, following the curve of the river toward PA to find one last shot.

In what the Delorme calls East End I found the almost last shot of my previous trip, and moved down a bit to include the former PRR position light signals.

The local would be on the far track, and the near one had a clear signal, so I kept looking down the tracks behind me, hoping against hope another headlight would appear. It didn't, but the local charging through the gloom past the signals was a fine sight. The weather had certainly deteriorated since the morning.



With the local roaring back toward Pittsburgh, I headed home. I was later than I wanted to be, and the specter of a late arrival to Lemaz class was haunting. Near Wellsville I saw a coil train in the distance, which almost tempted me, but I resisted and pressed on.

Just past Brilliant everything went topsy turvey when I came up against stopped traffic. After sitting a while, I saw a fire truck zip up the nearby on ramp, and I knew I was in trouble. A pickup came the other way, and the guy had his arm out, pointing to the on-ramp. I took the hint, as did others, and went down the on ramp. I felt clever until I came to the next off ramp down the road, and found there was no on ramp. I had a past a lot of smoke, and a large crowd of people standing around, but I couldn't see what was afoot. A line of cars disappeared into the woods, and I followed them until there was a place to pull off to check a map.

The map was not reassuring. The narrow red line I was on went way north, and connected to another to go way south again and get on the highway. But at least I was moving, so I pressed on. A few miles later I came across a tanker truck trying to back into a driveway, and I hopped out to guide him. When I stopped him from backing into a ditch, he jumped out and asked me where the road went. I told him it looked like the road came to another one about the same size, and you had to make a sharp turn to head back to the highway. I asked if he wanted to see it, and he said no, that he would follow me. I turned around, and there was a line of cars behind me. I women rolled down her window and as she was about to say something I said I hoped that someone knew where we were going. She laughed and said 'we are following you.'

So off we went. The road got even worse, to dirt, and then we came upon a traffic jam, with a pair of big rigs clogging up the intersection. A bunch of cars found a way around, and we all traipsed back into the woods. I wondered about my tanker friend, but figured he would be able to find his way out. Finally I got back to Ohio 7, and no cars were coming my way. So I guess we beat the reopening of the highway, even if it did mean a 20 mile detour. The rest of the trip home was uneventful, apart from a little rain, and I still made it home in plenty of time to get to Lemaz class.

The trains today were the C17 to Wellsburg, and the C10 on the main line.

Here is a photo that didn't really fit into the narrative. A lonely Conrail 2-bay hopper siding in a siding. The local didn't pick it up, and it looked kind of forlorn alone in the siding, next to a door that would be of no use to unload the car.