Poolside Rails
A Step-By-Step Discovery that Garden Railroading IS REAL Railroading!
- Bachmann
- Bridge Design
- Chinese architecture
- Christmas lights
- Craft Sticks
- Electrical Connections
- G Scale
- Garden railroad
- Garden Railway
- Garden Railways Magazine
- Landscaping
- LGB
- Locomotive Conversion
- Model Railroading
- Modeling in 1/18th scale
- Paris to Peking Railway
- Pola
- Retaining Wall
- Scale Buildings
- SketchUp
- Streetlights
- Styrofoam
- Track Planning
- Trackwork
- Turnouts
- Wiring
All Aboard!
Come along as I build my railroad empire utilizing a beginner's skills, the tightest of budgets, and a vision most grand!
Read the Archives from the beginning as I contend with the elements, a family with limited interest in the project, kids who like to play with "Dad's toys", and a couple of dogs who just couldn't care less about where they do their dootie!
Categories
The Railroad and the State: War, Politics, and Technology in Nineteenth-Century
America
Death Rode the Rails: American Railroad Accidents And Safety, 1828-1965
Brotherhoods of Color: Black Railroad Workers and the Struggle for Equality
Traveling the Pennsylvania Railroad: The Photographs of William H. Rau
A Passion for Trains: The Railroad Photography of Richard Steinheimer
Sunset Limited: The Southern Pacific Railroad And The Development Of The
American West, 1850-1930
POOLSIDE RAILS .COM















Railroad Engineering, 2nd Edition
Parallel Tracks: The Railroad and Silent Cinema
Katy Northwest: The Story of a Branch Line Railroad
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“Now, I won’t hear of it!” roars the CEO. He’s generally an easy going fellow, but this topic has him ready for a fight.
“I’m just saying…” Bill Dimcheap, the Chief Architect starts.
“Oh, I know what you’re saying,” the CEO cuts him off. “And I don’t like it! Not a word of it, sir, not a word!”
“Here, noo,” the Chief Engineer of the Paris to Peking Railway enters the American Suite in the Hotel d’Americain in Paris. “What is all this yellin’ aboot?”
“It’s juicy,” the PR guy says.
“It’s noisy,” the CFO mutters into his scotch.
“Who hired this poltroon?” roars the CEO. “Who in heaven’s name put HIM on the team?”
“Uh, you did, chief,” the CEO guys says, sheepishly.
“I’m just saying…” the Chief Architect starts again.
“I KNOW what you’re SAYING,” the CEO seethes with anger. “I just don’t want to HEAR it!”
“Let the man talk,” the Chief Engineer sits down with his first stout of the evening. “Go ahead, laddie, I’ll hear you out.”
“I’m suggesting we convert the railway to HO scale,” the Chief Architect says quickly.
Stout sprays across the table.
“WHAT?!?” roars the Chief Engineer. “Have ye gone DAFT?”
“My sentiments exactly,” nods the scarlet-faced CEO.
“There’s a good angle here, chief,” the PR Guy says. Bill Dimcheap nods briskly. “Any Joe can have a garden railway in G scale…but how many HO scale outdoor railways have you heard of?”
Bill jumps to his feet.
“Consider this,” he says, pointing at the Chief Engineer. “You get 4.83 times as much track in the same space…that means a parallel main line, and turnouts, and long trains, and everything is standard gauge…”
“Unless you build a narrow gauge subline,” adds the PR Guy.
“Are ye crazy? We dunna have the rolling stock for HO!”
“The rolling stock is cheap!” roars the Chief Architect. “You can pick up half a dozen HO flatcars for the price of a single G gauge car.”
“I like the sound of that,” nods the surly CFO.
“Aye,” smirks the Chief Engineer, “and ye can have me mother’s bloomers for the price of half a can of stout…that don’t prove nothin’. What’ll ye do for motive power, seeing as how there ain’t no way I’m going to be approving of electrifying that much rail in an outdoor settin’? What’ll ye do,” he chuckles, “convert it to batteries? In wee little HO?”
“Why not?” suddenly Bill Dimcheap isn’t bold and strident anymore. He’s calm, and rational. He’s speaking softly. “Why not? We’re limited to this single battery-powered locomotive in G scale unless we make some conversions – why not do ‘em in HO? The per-unit cost of an HO locomotive is nothing compared to a G scale, you can get an accurate profile locomotive for just a few bucks, the cars are cheaper, and, for the price of the rail needed to repair the Parisian line in G scale, you could re-track the entire railway. And don’t get me started on off-the-shelf building components!”
The room is silent for a very long moment.
“But,” the CEO says, tentatively, “nobody’s done it in HO…”
“Why not be among the first?” asks the PR Guy. “That’s good press right there. I can hardly wait to get started on a new press kit!”
“Could be a good source of revenue,” the CFO says. “We need that. A lot of that. Any of that.”
The room is silent again. Many minutes pass as each board member considers the obstacles and challenges.
The CEO rises, slowly.
“Gentlemen, we shall have to consider this thing. At first I was dead set against it. Now…” he looks around the room. “Meeting adjourned…but let us think on this thing, shall we?”
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There’s a reason why people do what they do. Musicians are generally gifted or talented in music, painters in painting, dancers in dancing, and architects in, well, architecting.They say it never rains in California, but, man it pours. We’ve seen a long series of storms, each slamming in on a weekend…and I’m talking rain, here, buckets and gallons and other large volumes. We’re in the middle of a whopper El Nino, a drought-ending series of powerful winter downpours.
But the rain falls on the weekends. And I don’t get home from my job at the Evil Empire until after the sun, she sets. These two facts together mean that the railroad projects have moved indoors.
Last year I discovered Google SketchUp and used it to create a pretty nifty track plan. This time, due to darkness and dampness, I decided it’s time to lay out a plan for Paris.
Now, my plan is not done yet, but, seriously, I’ve got about eight hours into this design. There are roads lined out, and I have a general idea of where the buildings will be.

But the problem is with SketchUp. Oh, the program runs great, and it’s easy and fun and all that. The problem is that it’s easy and fun and all that! The program allows you to add all sorts of detail, and that’s the danger! Look at that big building with all those angled roof panels: I spent a good two hours on those windows! You can actually make each pane of glass in the windows transparent…but you have to click on each individual pane on each window to make it so…that’s a lot of clicking!
As you can see, the large three-storied building across the street has yet to be detailed. It is, in fact, in the wrong place as there appears to be no sidewalk. That means the building’s depth will go down, which means I’ll probably just delete it and start over.
Now, about those columns: they sure are ghastly! Perhaps a building-front skin will hide some of the river rocks from which they are made.
The station itself will stretch between the two columns. It will be backed against the fence, with the platform stretching out to the rails.
But, finishing the plan for the station, while critical to the overall success of the railway, requires more hours on the SketchUp. More hours!
In making the plan, it’s easy to get lost in creating a virtual layout…my brother and I said almost the same thing at the same time: who needs to build it if you can lay it out on a computer?
Because Garden Railroading is Real Railroading, that’s why, or, uh, who. We’re modelers, aren’t we? We build, don’t we? Do we plan? Heck no! I mean, yes, but not for the sake of planning, but for the sake of building! That’s why dancers dance and painters paint – because we’re builders! BUILDERS UNITE!
That being said, I’m going back to SketchUp and finish my plan. Because I’m a builder! And we’ll always have Paris, sweetheart.

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“What’s this?” bellows the Chief Engineer. “Picture day? What kind of ballyhoo is this?”
“Well,” the PR Guy clears his throat timidly. “I just thought that we’ve had so many good pictures of the garden railway, that, well…”
“He means to advertise the progress on the Paris to Peking Railway by using pictures instead of the usual charming text,” smiles the CEO as he pats the PR Guy on the shoulder.
“You mean the usual snide drivel,” mutters the Chief Engineer. He’s on his fourth stout.
“It’s good to celebrate all the things we’ve seen and done so far,” the CEO counters.
“And it’s cheaper than paying writers,” chuckles the surly CFO.
“That’s all a boonch of poppycock do ye ask me!” the Chief Engineer roars. “Why do ye nay tell us aboot the bridge prod-yect?”
“Uh, well, yes, about that,” the portly Bill Dimcheep stands up nervously. “We’ve uhm, well, run into a bit of a cost overrun…”
“What?!?” sputters the CFO, brandy spraying across the table. “What? A cost overrun? Impossible!”
“Well, you know,” Bill says, sheepishly, “the international price of Styrofoam has, uhm, well, skyrocketed…”
“BALDERDASH!” roars the CFO.
“What he means to say,” the CEO says, gently, “is that we ran out of the ‘foam, and haven’t yet purchase any more.”
“I should say we won’t!” the CFO has turned red in the face. “Not until we’ve paid off the Isuzu and figured out where the next paycheck is coming from!”
“Well,” the PR Guy clears his throat, “I believe that’s why we’re seeing a, uh, picture day…”
“Well, it just seems like silly self-promotion to me,” the Chief Engineer mutters.
“Preee-Cisely,” grins the CEO. “If we don’t promote ourselves, who will?”
“It’s quite clear that ye’ve all gone daft,” the Chief Engineer downs his last stout, wipes his mouth, and leaves the board room muttering, “and I’ll have nothing more to do wit’ ye tonight!”
A moment passes, and then he sticks his head back into the room.
“Nice pic-yures, though!”
Thanks for walking down the railway with us! I hope you’ll keep reading as more wacky adventures unfold on the Paris to Peking Railway, the railroad that runs from P to shining P!
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Of course you know that Gandy Dancer is railroad slang for a railroad track worker, and that the term comes from the dancing action old time railroad workers used to exhibit when using their gandy tools to re-align rails through turns. As you know, in the real world rails are held down by the mysterious force known only as gravity (G to mathematicians) and fishplates, and on turns tend to come out of gauge. So the gandy dancers were those guys that worked the rails back into place. But you knew that.What you don’t remember is that we suffered a pretty severe rail alignment issue in the China Section of the Paris to Peking Railway. Yes, someone…we’re not saying who, but his initials are Bill Turner…seems to have stepped on unsupported rails right in the very ding-dang center of a turn. And, as the same unnamed fellow kind of broke out the nice concrete roadbed underneath the rails in the very same spot, well, the rails kind of went “sproing” and are no longer in gauge.
Thanks to my careful rail management, now there are TWO problems in China…well, three if you count the crummy landscaping…actually, four if you count the dog poo lying on the hill next to the crummy landscaping…actually, five if you count…oh my God, I’m going crazy! One of the TWO problems is that the rails have been bent thanks to my size 9’s, and the other is that the concrete roadbed has broken and is now sinking. Yes, sinking…but only half of it, so there’s a bit of a ski jump to the China Section. Oy.
My genius brother came over today, and together we pulled out the dinged rails and reworked ‘em. At first we thought we might carefully remove the mondo dip that I put…ahem, I mean that mysteriously appeared…in the rail by a process of gentle bending. But we realized that in fact there was a pretty serious pinch in the rail, caused perhaps by someone missing with the sledge hammer when breaking through the concrete roadbed underneath. We’re not naming names here, but we ARE pointing fingers.
That didn’t work, but my genius brother’s not-so-bright sibling was able to conjure up some old rail that we could straighten and use to replace the dinged section.
We reassembled the twisted rail section using ties from the discarded track…it was straight track, but by cutting the little web sections between the ties on one side…I believe they’re called spiders, those little web sectiony things…you can twist it around a curve.
Wouldn’t you know? I have enough track to complete the Parisian Section. It’s a little twisted, but only twisted in the relation of one rail to the other…the rails themselves are not twisted. A little bending there, a little snippity-snip here of the spiders between the ties…Step into my Parlor said the Spider to the Ties…and, voila, you got yourself some snappy track.
So, that takes care of problem number one. Next I’ll see about building a leveling layer to sit on top of the sinking concrete to eliminate the ski jump. Plaster? Mortar? Thanks going to take some thinking!
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“Just toss up a Styrofoam facade,” Bill Dimcheep, the Paris to Peking Railway’s new chief architect says. “It’s quick, it’s easy, it’s cheap, and, hey, it’ll probably keep standing!”While the board’s thunderous applaud echoes around the room, the PR Guy takes furious notes, looking for a way to package quick, easy and cheap so that it sounds like durable and economical to the stockholders.
Building a quick and easy facade seemed almost embarrassing in its simplicity. As the problem with the existing Kazakhstan bridge is only one of appearance, why go through the hassle and expense of replacing it? Why not just apply a simple Styrofoam sheet facade? We’ve got some nice ‘foam here, even though it is of the popcorn variety, not the good blue stuff. We’ve got some glue, some scrap wood, and some good ol’ American know-how. What the hey? Why not?
I had to work at the offices of the Evil Empire on Saturday, so my bridge building day was Sunday. Sunday was also the drain clearing day, the clean the garage day, and the fix the rabbit shed so that it doesn’t leak so badly on the few rainy days of the year day. I’m not complaining, mind you, although I do miss that Saturday. This coming Saturday is open, and I’m expecting to do great things…lord knows I didn’t do ‘em on Sunday.
Anyway, it was windy on Sunday. Not breezy, but out and out tear-the-siding-off-grandma’s-house windy. There was so much wind, in fact, that my ‘foam facade rather folded in half when I was dry-fitting it. Years ago my nephew and I took a Sevylor inflatable raft out to the Ventura breakwater. It was a really choppy day, and the sea was pounding over the breakwater, causing yours truly a great deal of trepidation. My nephew, however, thought it was great, and said “dude, this boat folds like a taco!” So, my ‘foam facade, too, folded like a taco!
I have a nice supply of 1x.5×9 inch slats from an old shelving unit in my wood collection. My wife calls it the woodpile, but that’s because she doesn’t use the wood. If she did, she would appreciate its utility. I believe she has a yarnpile. My daughter was playing with the LGB passenger cars on the railway, and I was staring at my folded over facade. She suggested I put some wood behind the ‘foam, and, voila, an idea was born! Why not reinforce the ‘foam!
Because it’s a buttload of work, that’s why! The slats fit perfectly behind the ‘foam structure. They’re glued to the ‘foam, and then screwed to one another. I used my staple gun to attach the ‘foam to the wood from the front, very carefully shooting staples in the grout lines between the bricks so that they wouldn’t show. I got about 14 staples in before I realized that I was shooting ¼ inch staples through ½ inch ‘foam! What we have here is a failure to penetrate!
But I found some crappy old galvanized steel staples that you drive in with a hammer…those guys’ll go through anything!
My little girl helped me with screwing the wood together, explaining that she was a good screwer…it took all my control to leave that one alone.
So, the sun set on Sunday, hours of labor went into the building the framing behind the facade, scribing the facade, hammering in those crummy staples to keep it together, and dang if I don’t have enough ‘foam to complete the inside of the arches! All that work and ran out of materials!
The clutch blew out on the Isuzu today, and will cost most of my house payment to repair. The budget and finance committee is going to have a hard time justifying any railroad purchase, due to the overwhelming financial burden caused by this automotive failure. Dang.So, quick it aint, easy it aint, and now it aint going to be cheap! Darn you, Bill Dimcheep!
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“Now, let’s have your name again, please?” the CEO leans forward across the boardroom table, almost spilling his brandy.
“Bill,” the applicant for the Chief Architect job says, crunching his cigar. “Bill Dimcheep.”
“Well,” the CEO slaps the table, “I like the sound of that!”
“My motto is ‘Why waste money on quality?’” Bill pulls the cigar out of his mouth and smiles broadly at the assembled boardmembers. He’s not a tall man, and quite round. His natty green pinstripe suite makes him look rather like a melon with a grape on top. A bald grape at that.
“Yes,” the gruff CFO looks closely at Bill’s business card, “I see your trade phrase here is ‘Buildings for Tomorrow, and Probably the Day After’. Hmph. I’m not so sure…”
“Poppycock!” The CEO stands up. “I like this fellow! You, sir, are HIRED! Gentlemen, may I present our new Chief Architect, Bill Dimcheep!”
My brother looked at my plan for the Kazakhstan Bridge in the last post and came up with a brilliant suggestion; instead of cutting squares of Styrofoam and stacking them up to build the bridge, why not just cut a whoppin’ big Styrofoam facade? It would take far less ‘foam, and only we initiated folks would know! I’ve attributed the idea to Bill Dimcheep.
“Plus, since it’s just a facade,” Bill pops the cigar out of his little mouth and waves it around for effect, “you only gotta build one side! Nobody’s going to look on the back side of a bridge!”
“B..b.but that bridge is nay safe!” stammers the Chief Engineer.
“Poppycock again, I say” the CEO blasts. “It’s perfectly safe…it just looks ugly, and this will fix that. This will put it into scale!”
“Oh,” pops the PR Guy, “I like that. New Construction Method Scales Down Bridge Problem! I’ll get on that right away.”
Well, I happen to have just enough of the Popcorn Flavor White Styrofoam to build the facade. I have almost exactly enough, although, because of the shape of the ‘foam, I’ll have two pieces and a big seam…I’ll fix it with a drain pipe or something.
Now, this white ‘foam is a little tricky to cut; don’t treat it like styrene or you’ll have a popcorn snowfall. Instead, jam that old knife right on through both sides and cut it like a man…make sure your blade is sharp and GO TO!
I used the end of an “L” bracket from some other project to emboss the shape of the stones into the face of the ‘foam. The stone blocks are two inches wide by one inch tall, and, my God, it took forever to get ‘em in there, but, once done, look pretty snappy!
Pictured is about 60% of the entire facade…the remaining piece of ‘foam has yet to be treated.
Puzzle Part Two: how to attach said facade to said existing bridge structure.
Oddly, Bill Dimcheep hasn’t said much about that!
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As you recall, I’ve been working on planning the Paris Portion of the Paris-to-Peking Railway. I don’t think we’re really going to end up in Peking…the China Loop on the railway is so rural, and makes such a nice contrast to the hustle and bustle of the Paris to Be.
But this is Paris of 1910…not quite the Paris to Be but the Paris What Was. Photographs of Paris are easy to find, but most of ‘em are tres moderne, not pre-WW I Paris. Out of the blue, however, an inspiration swoops in and says “dude, I’m, like, here!”
I had a bad Friday. Wasn’t feeling well. My wife was cranky with me. I forgot our anniversary. I picked up a couple of CDs I thought she’d like, just as sort of a little “oopsie” kind of a thing. I was quickly and swiftly notified that this was unsuitable as an anniversary present. I really didn’t mean that it was supposed to be a bonified anniversary present…but, move over, Rover,there’s plenty of room in the dog house. It was a bad Friday.
Saturday the missus spent the day at her mother’s house, cleaning and cleaning and other stuff. I spent the day at our house, working on the Bachmann Not So Big Hauler and building these pretty cool shelves for the living room and hanging out with my eight year old daughter. We watched The Penguins of Madagascar and Spongebob on Nickelodeon in between our various tasks. Now it was evening, and mumsikins still hadn’t returned, which meant dinner was on dad. Not having two nickels to rub together, I cranked out a batch of macaroni and cheese with a can of tuna in it…see, The Idiot, the little black Prince Edward mix puppy, swallowed something he shouldn’t have, and it cut his throat on the inside, so he spent the whole day making a honking noise like a goose trying to barf up something that wasn’t there because he’d really just irritated his throat. I figured I’d give him the tuna juice out of the can and dose it up with olive oil to make his throat feel better. And if it made him shut up, why, I would feel better too!
So we sat down with our mac/cheese/tuna combo, which, if you haven’t tried it and are not faint of heart, isn’t bad, and put on a movie; let’s watch something old, she says, you know, on video.
As you know, I’ve been trying to get a handle on designing the Paris of 1910.
For our movie my daughter picks out Disney’s The Aristocats. Now, just take a wild guess as to where and when the film takes place…go ahead, I’ll wait. I could not believe it!
Of course you realize that the US Government sent Walt Disney and his artists on a goodwill tour of South America in the 1940’s…it was all rather hush-hush, as we were in fact trying to buy goodwill with glitz and Mickey Mouse (el raton Mickey). Disney’s cover story was that he was doing research for a new movie, which would eventually be Three Caballeros. It was pretty intensive research, involving a lot of parties and drinking.
I realize this is all a long diatribe, but there is a point; Disney did his research, because he was big on accuracy. Because he did his research, he’s done mine, too, because I’m big on lazy! Now I have a really nice reference as to what Paris of 1910 looked like! Of course it’s not a business district in the movie, but the architecture will be similar, and there’s an unmistakable feel in the film that will be great to capture on the PtoP.
You know our motto is Garden Railroading is Real Railroading. I’m not sure how a Disney movie about singing cats fits into that…I’ll let you figure that one out!


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Sorry it’s taken so long to get to this post…goodness, time is fun when you’re having flies! Since the Dreadful Event we’ve been working on my mother-in-law’s house to get it ready for sale…painting, cleaning, moving furniture, getting stuck with the in-laws for a dinner at this shi-shi restaurant picked out for its selection of wines. I had a great chat with my eight year old over a twenty dollar pasta dish of which everybody had to have a taste so yours truly got about three forkfuls…twenty bucks just doesn’t go as far as it used to!
So, On To Paris! Although the rails on the eastern side of the Parisian Loop are, as we say in France, Not There, there is no reason why we shouldn’t start looking seriously at developing the city of Paris itself.
First off, there’s a large backdrop area available along the fence on the western side. There’s a great article in the current Garden Railways Magazine about backdrops. In it the author talks about building faux rocks and mountain ranges up against a fence, but also uses a startlingly realistic photograph of distant mountains to great effect. My only problem with photographs outside, of course, is old Mr. Sunshine, who fades even the prettiest rose…when I was twenty-three I had a whoppin’ affair with a woman who was forty. Now I’m fifty five, which makes her…gasp…seventy-two. Safe to say the blush is off that rose. Way, way off.
My plan is to lay a nice sky blue/white blend down a plywood backdrop and plaster it with layers of false building fronts, probably of that mysterious blue foam. I have combed my local Lowe’s, but there is no blue foam to be had, only the white Popcorn variety.
The resulting background thingy should be about six inches thick, which will add a huge amount of texture to the background. Of course there will be lights in it, too, and that will help give the sense of a large city back there.
One of the biggest hassles we face in Paris is that stupid stump of a mimosa tree. I have cut that thing down three times but never quite got to the root structure. I’m certain the scientific name for the mimosa tree is hellplanticus nokiddingus. I have never in my life seen a nastier, more evil, more management-resistant plant in my life!
So, here’s the plan, and I think you’ll like it: we’ll build around it. Box it in a building, perhaps, or disguise it some other way so that passers by won’t say “my, what an ugly stump!” There’s a great article I saw in Model Railroader last year about disguising posts in your basement with tall buildings…you look at the building and forget that you’re looking at a post. We’ll work up some sort of a treatment for Mr. Mimosa.
I’ve decided not to worry about the rails…for one thing, I’ve planned the Parisian Station to be, well, stationed right in that section of track that is currently lacking in the track department. Why not build city-style rails there, you know, with concrete forming the railway rather than brass rails? Since we’re battery powered there’s no reason not to…unless we rethink electrification. Can you spell Functioning Overheads?
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Now, I’ve come to realize that most of these most recent posts have been filled with whining; whining about the rain, whining about the dogs, whining about the fact that I’ve been whining.Well, here we are, a brand new day, and by George I don’t have anything to whine about! In fact, things are sort of looking up, sort of.
That rainstorm, a whole week of rain it was, inches and inches coming down so fast it overwhelmed the swimming pool drains and caused her to overflow her banks…that rainstorm did nothing, zippo, nada, to the Paris to Peking Railway!

Oh, sure stuff got wet. But there were no catastrophic mudslides, no failed retaining walls, no vast yawning caverns opening under the rails. Even my power lines stayed up!What’s more, as the rain caused us to focus on our indoor selves (using our indoor voices, we reminded our cooped-up eight year old), yours truly was forced to buy himself a new soldering iron – a cool Weller gun-shaped jobby with a gazillion little tips and stuff.
My brother gave me a Cold Heat cordless solderer a couple of Christmases ago. He used it during the installation of the radio in the Bachmann Not-So-Big Hauler and found it to be quite useless. I failed to advise him that I had used the thing extensively in trying to solder a piece of jumper wire to a rail. Here’s a news flash: Garden Railway Rails Discovered to be World’s Largest Heatsink. I may have burned the little guy up trying to heat about fifty feet of brass rail on two AA batteries! I replace the batteries, but I don’t think the Cold Heat soldering iron has ever forgiven me!
So now I have this nifty Weller Solderin’ Arn, and it’s pretty cool. I can hardly wait to go solder something.

Maybe I’ll use it to fix the horn in my trusty old Isuzu Rodeo. Bad enough it sounds like a clown car horn, now it’s taken to beeping whenever I go over a bump. This morning the darn thing started blaring at exactly the same moment some guy was diving in to cut me off! He jammed on his breaks and let me go by…thank you, o bumpy road and ever-prescient clown-car horn! -
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I bought this cool little device for five bucks on the after-Christmas-closeout aisle at CVS Pharmacy. Fifty percent off, and batteries included…how cool could that be? Part clock, part hygrometer, part calendar, part weather glass…it’s the cat’s pajamas, I can tell you!My oldest daughter sighs and says “dad’s toys.” My younger daughter looks at it and says “it’s just a clock!” My wife looks at it and shakes her head. “It’s your five dollars.”
Well, the little picture at the top of the thingie shows rain clouds…the outlines of clouds with little dashed lines pointing down that looks like digital rain. My brother tells me “oh yeah, this is a big one. Expecting four inches here in Ventura, twenty up in the mountains.” Four Inches? It’s a flood!
Knowing how just that sprinkle last week created chaos, I had to step into EMERGENCY GEAR to get the railway ready to meet this devastating monsoon!
Target #1: all rolling stock inside. That means the troublesome trucks, and all the GI Joe guys lying inside ‘em. That means the Bachmann Not-So-Big-Hauler and its remote. AND that means the funky tinplate stationary locomotive given to me by my younger sister at Christmas. It’s pretty cool looking; it’s a slightly undersized American with an insanely wide track; those folks in India got the look right but the dimensions all wrong! Anyway, that thing came in, too.
Target #2: all tools inside. I’ve been working on the railroad, most of the livelong day! And I’m a slob! So, time to go find those three pair of needlenose pliers, the Linesman’s Pliers, the steel rulers, the hand brush, the measuring tape, the voltmeter, the fourteen Phillips screwdrivers and ten slotteds, and all the other stuff I toted from one corner of the yard to the other to work on the track, the cars, or the landscape, and tote ‘em all back into the garage. I had wondered why I didn’t have any screwdrivers out there!Now it’s all clean, and all quiet. All quiet before the storm…the storm of the CENTURY! Well, okay, the first storm of the second decade of the century. Loses a little something, there…
Here in Southern California we’re affected by the El Niño system. I had been considering writing a piece about the El Niño and its impact on garden railroading, but everybody kept predicting a week system. How embarrassing to write a piece about a predicted fierce storm, only to find out it’s a wiener.
Well, BRING IT ON, my friend! We’re ready. I’ve hosed away the mud from that part of the China Curve where the track was lifted, only to find that someone, probably me, has stepped gleefully and forcefully upon rails that were not anchored to the ground. Boom goes the gauge, crack goes those little lugs that hold the ties to the rails, and sproing, one rail goes up, the other down. Heck with it! Let the mud come! This is WAR! Well, anyway, it’s a rainstorm.
As you know, Garden Railroading is Real Railroading. Just like the big fellas, we have to be good stewards of our rolling stock and equipment. And I do believe that this may very well be the first real rain we’ve seen in years!

























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