Tuesday, July 31, 2007

7/31/07

-1) Big Dog type custom motorcycle:

The Keed.
The superwide rear tire on the back of my niece’s husband’s Big Dog. (That’s a car-tire for comparison at left.)
Yesterday (July 30, 2007) I encountered a Big Dog type custom motorcycle.
Actually, it wasn’t that extreme. It didn’t have a bulbous phallic gas-tank three feet ahead of the rider at chin-level.
Nor did it have an enormously extended front fork giving it an eighteen-foot wheelbase — or monstrous and unwieldy ape-hangers.
What gave it away was its superwide rear tire, similar to that pictured, and the infernal and ungodly racket it made.
It also had Iron-Cross mirrors and skull-shaped taillights.
Other than that, it looked pretty normal. Were it not for the superwide rear tire, I would have mistaken it for the usual garden-variety GeezerGlide, of which there are so many.
And the rider looked fairly pedestrian, as opposed the the usual frightening chain-smoking aging grizzled beer-sodden Hells Angels wannabee.
No chromed spiked Wehrmacht helmet.
The only giveaway was a faded black “Bike Week” T-shirt.

-2) Another stroke-survivor:
Yesterday the final minutes of my workout at the vaunted Canandaigua YMCA witnessed the following conversation:
“I had a stroke,” some guy said.
“Wait a minute,” I said, wheeling around. “Did I just hear you say you had a stroke?”
“Yep.”
“Well so did I,” I said; “a little over 13 years ago.”
“Did it do any damage?” I asked.
“Well, everything works, but I don’t have any feeling in my right forearm.”
His speech was slightly scattershot; I could tell he was having trouble putting words together — the same problem I have.
“Everything works for me,” I said. “But my speech is a little wonky and I have slight lability: the tendency to cry.”
“Same here,” he said.
“My stroke was caused by a patent foramen ovale (I had a hard time saying this): a hole in my heart that was repaired years ago with open-heart surgery. The PFO passed the clot.”
“That’s what I have, but the PFO wasn’t repaired, so I’m on blood-thinners (Coumadin) for the rest of my life.”
The hospital was very hot to perform that surgery, but now they are no longer (according to Linda’s Internet-research). The guy’s stroke was about a year ago, which might explain why there was no PFO repair.
“I guess we’re not the only ones,” I said. There is a lady at the Y who lost her whole left side, and a guy missing part of his brain.
This guy is a big bimbo, but I told him “You are where you are because you thought you could still do things. Every time you do anything at all it’s rewiring your brain. I’m running on what’s left, as are you. I always say I’m running on seven cylinders.”

-3) Dubya T-shirt:
Yesterday while driving to the Canandaigua YMCA, a giant tow-truck pulling a large GMC flatbed pulled outta the Porta-John place right into my eastward path on 5&20.
No Dubya-sticker, but as he pulled onto the shoulder to let me by, I noticed the driver had a red Dubya-Cheney ‘04 T-shirt on.

-4) Window-replacement project:

The Keed.
“Onto the ‘Web.”
And so begins our gigantical window-replacement project, wherein we got royally fleeced and taken to the cleaners because we didn’t take my all-knowing brother’s cogent advice to buy our replacement windows from the back of the faded blue Econoline in the Rochester slums for only a “hunderd” dollars per unit, to be installed by ourselves with bobbie-pins and paper-clips. (“All ya gotta do is hose off the blood!”)
My Uncle-Bill built the entire Ben Franklin suspension-bridge single-handed with only one toothpick.

  • “GeezerGlide” is what I call all Harley Davidson cruiser-bikes. My loudmouthed macho brother-in-Boston has a very laid back Harley Davidson cruiser-bike, and, like most Harley Davidson riders, is 50 years old. So I call it his GeezerGlide.
  • “Linda” is my wife.
  • “Dubya-sticker” is a Bush-Cheney 2004 bumper-sticker. All insane traffic-moves seem to involve Bush-supporters. They seem to think they have the right.
  • “5&20” is the main east-west road through our area; State Route 5 and U.S. Route 20, both on the same road. 5&20 is just south of where we live.
  • There is a “Porta-John” place nearby on 5&20; called Crescent Moon. It has 89 bazilyun Porta-Johns standing at attention.
  • “Hunderd” is how my blowhard brother-in-Boston noisily insists “hundred” is spelled.
  • RE: The huge Ben Franklin suspension-bridge, over the Delaware River between Philadelphia, Pa. and Camden, N.J., opened in 1926; and at that time was the largest bridge in the world.
  • My “Uncle-Bill” was the first-born of my mother’s family, and was a blowhard who claimed he knew all, and also claimed he was the “world’s biggest leprechaun.” He weighed well over 200 pounds.
  • Finger-Lakes Railway

    FINGER-LAKES RAILWAY
    The Keed.
    Finger-Lakes U-boat #2301 at Geneva, a GE U-23b.
    My September issue of Trains Magazine has a giant article on the nearby Finger-Lakes Railway shortline.
    Finger-Lakes is the fallout of Conrail’s giving up on lines that radiated out of nearby Geneva, N.Y.: the Lehigh-Valley main, and New York Central’s old Auburn line.
    The old Lehigh-Valley Buffalo-Extension was largely abandoned, which is a shame, because it was an excellent railroad — good for 60+ mph running; and no cities to bottle things up.
    But a few segments remain, like a short portion into nearby Victor operated by Ontario Central (a shortline), and a small segment south of Geneva toward Ithaca that served the old Sampson military-base. (The segment doesn’t actually go as far as the military-base.)
    New York Central’s old Corning-line, the Corning Secondary, is still extant — Lyons to Corning via Geneva — but operated by Norfolk Southern. That line continued on to Williamsport, Pa., but south of Corning is mostly Tioga-Central (abandoned by Conrail). Finger-Lakes has trackage-rights on the Secondary.
    The article clears up a few things. The Auburn was indeed the first railroad across the state into Rochester, but was built in two segments: the Syracuse & Auburn in 1838, and the Auburn & Rochester in 1841.
    The entire line became the Rochester & Syracuse in 1850, but was superseded by the Rochester & Syracuse Direct Railroad in 1853; now the CSX Water-Level.
    The Direct railroad conquered two topographical obstacles the Auburn avoided: namely the huge Irondequoit Creek defile, and the vast Montezuma Swamp north of Cayuga Lake.
    the Irondequoit Creek defile, the outlet of the Genesee River previous to the ice-age, required a long fill. And a lot of the Water-Level across Montezuma Swamp is still on pilings.
    For a long time I thought the Auburn-Road was constructed as one line, and the “Direct” was a bypass of that line built by New York Central. But not so.
    When formed, NYC included both the Auburn and the Direct.
    Finger-Lakes also operates a segment of ex-Pennsy, the old ex-Northern-Central line from Elmira (and Williamsport) to Canandaigua and later Sodus Point.
    But all Finger-Lakes operates is a short segment to Watkins Glen, plus a segment to Penn Yan — all from Himrod Junction where the Corning Secondary intersected with the Pennsy line.
    The Pennsy line is long abandoned — in fact, I’m surprised the Penn Yan segment is still extant, since it was very torturous.
    Watkins Glen has a salt-mine; Finger-Lakes serves that.
    North of Penn Yan the ex-Pennsy line is abandoned, as well as south of Watkins Glen.
    The line continued north to Newark, where it becomes extant again, although operated by the Ontario-Midland shortline. The Ontario-Midland ends at a junction with the old NYC Hojack Line (the old Fonda, Johnstown & Gloversville), and no longer goes to Sodus Point; where Pennsy had a large coal-wharf for loading lake steamships. That wharf is long-gone.
    Years ago I rode Ontario-Midland excursions to Newark with Alco power.
    I also have ridden Finger Lakes excursions east of Geneva, Shortsville to Canandaigua, and Shortsville to Geneva. The one east of Geneva was interesting, in that it crosses a long fill and trestle that skirts the north end of Cayuga Lake. Apparently NYC thought this was worth doing.
    Trains out of Shortsville are torturously slow; particularly to Canandaigua; about 10 mph.
    But Finger-Lakes uses four ex-VIA coaches for excursion service (though unheated), and has many of their locomotives painted up in the old NYC lightning-stripe scheme. Including GE U-boats.

  • “Pennsy” is the Pennsylvania Railroad, no longer in existence. It merged with New York Central Railroad in 1968 as Penn-Central, and that went bankrupt in about two years. “Pennsy” was once the largest railroad in the world.
  • “NYC” equals New York Central railroad. NYC had three lines across New York (four if you count the Peanut — ex Canandaigua & Niagara Falls, which NYC came to own). The Water-Level was the mainline, and the Auburn and Hojack were secondary.
  • “Norfolk Southern” and “CSX” are the two railroads that divided (and bought) Conrail, successor to the bankrupt Penn-Central and a number of other eastern railroads, including Lehigh-Valley.
  • “Alco” is American Locomotive Company in Schenectady, N.Y. Alco was a long-time builder of steam and diesel railroad locomotives. But they couldn’t compete and went out of business. As such Alco locomotives are rare and revered.
  • “VIA” is the Canadian Amtrak.
  • The locomotive pictured has the “old NYC lightning-stripe scheme.”
  • “GE U-boats” are General-Electric’s early entry in the utility road-switcher railroad-locomotive market. “U” stands for “utility;” the number is the horsepower (e.g. 20 = 2,000; 23 = 2,300); and the “b” or “c” stands for the number of wheels in the motor-truck: “b” = four, and “c” = six.
  • Monday, July 30, 2007

    Little children are starving in China

    Yesterday (Sunday, July 29, 2007), in consequence of my being the child of Depression parents (“Clean your plate! Little children are starving in China.”), we consumed the remainder of the chicken-broccoli casserole Linda made for the relatives when they were here.
    Ugh! Tasted fine, but too much.
    I can see making it again, but I could get by on half what we had last night.
    Then, similarly, we set about consuming the tons of chocolate-chip ice-cream we had left over.
    Again, ugh!
    We usually eat ice-cream every weekend, but it’s Ben & Fat Jerry’s fair-trade chocolate in non-caffeinated Coke.
    I had bought Hershey’s dark-chocolate syrup to pour over the chocolate-chip ice-cream, but the whole kabosh was too much.
    KEE-YUCK! I’m used to eating so-called bird food; the opposite of the pig-out menu.
    Spare; just enough to get by.
    Beyond that is overkill: too much!

  • “Linda” is my wife.
  • Sunday, July 29, 2007

    Lo-and-behold

    Yesterday (Saturday, July 28, 2007) we had the awful temerity and unmitigated gall and horrific audacity to attempt two ‘pyooter functions.

    -A) was my attempt to order the all-Pennsy color calendar online from Charles Ditlefsen, which I’ve done before.
    Audio-Visual Designs, in Herkimer, NY, my other All-Pennsy calendar (black & white) is still snail-mail, and I had already done that.
    The only ‘pyooter-functions were -1) entering the check in Quicken, -2) printing the check with Quicken (1 and 2 are one combined function), and -3) printing an envelope with Word’s envelope-printing function.
    But ordering online seems to be more involved — I began with great fear and trepidation.
    “Okay, we’ll see if we can do it with FireFox,” I said.
    I fired up FireFox and cranked in the Ditlefsen web-address: http://www.cedrr.com/ from a large Trains-Magazine back-cover ad.
    Immediately FireFox burped because “www.cedrr.com” wasn’t a valid address; apparently it wanted me to add the “http://.”
    So I cranked in the “http://,” and FireFox burped again, and sent me to a page listing various links, one of which was Ditlefsen.
    Okay, I probably typed in “cedco.com,” Ditlefsen’s old company, that went bankrupt.
    So I clicked the Ditlefsen link, which sent me to Ditlefsen’s calendar-site, and began filling in all the info.
    Finally I clicked “submit,” and it spun for a while.
    After about two minutes, “cancel;” I ain't got all day. So much for FireFox.
    I fire up Internet-Explorer, which supposedly suffers from a wonky ISP, and copied the Ditlefsen web-address off the FireFox interface and pasted it onto the IE interface.
    Boom: “Not a valid address!”
    “What? I just copy-pasted it off of FireFox.”
    I crank the Ditlefsen web-address directly into IE from the Trains-Magazine ad.
    Again; “Not a valid address.”
    I look at it carefully and see that a mysterious additional “/” has appeared in the address.
    So I take that out, and again I’m at Ditlefsen’s calendar-site.
    So I “autofill” all the info — only IE has autofill; FireFox has a close approximation: it remembers all previous typing. (Who knows; it may have an autofill too, but I’d need to research that. It was a simple IE menu-button.)
    It also apparently autofilled the shipping-address, which was to be left blank if shipping to the billing-address.
    I click “submit” and get an error-message: “You forgot to fill in a country!”
    Why yes, it’s blank; so I scroll down and click “United States” on the billing-address, hit “submit,” and again: “You forgot to fill in a country!”
    “What?”
    I look at the billing-address, and it says “United States.”
    So much for changing the spark-plugs on the zero-turn.
    A simple five-minute online purchase is turning into an hour-long wrestling-match.
    I threw up my hands. “I guess we have to start over. No country and the order stalls.”
    I start over, still with IE, and notice that their autofill is also filling in the shipping-address without a country.
    So I delete each autofill entry in the shipping-address to make the order conform with their sacred paradigm, and it processes — lo-and-behold.

    -B) Linda attempted to transfer from our Franklin Tax-Free Income Fund (our savings) online into our Canandaigua National Bank checking-account.
    This was so we could pay the remainder of what we owe Rochester-Colonial for our window-replacement project.
    Nice idea: transfer funds without relying on phonecalls or snail-mail.
    To do anything at all online with your Franklin Tax-Free Income Fund you need a password.
    Linda set one up years ago — probably the last time we transferred funds from the Franklin Tax-Free Income Fund was when we purchased the Bucktooth-Bathtub, which was October of 2005.
    We still had record of it, so Linda set about trying to transfer funds.
    “Authorization required!”
    “What? It’s our account. If we’re not authorized, who is?”
    Forget the help-desk. It’s the weekend, baby. No help until Monday morning; and that’s Pacific-time.
    Okay; more dickering required........
    Turns out “authorization” is a snail-mail letter to them authorizing us to transfer funds.
    A PDF was online, so Linda printed the form. “Notarization of signatures required.” So much for a timely transfer of funds.
    We have to have our signatures notarized, and the bank has to validate the form (whatever that means).
    We are left with a 20th-century way of doing things: Franklin issues us a check which we drag to the bank and deposit into our checking-account. The check arrives in the mail. “Please allow two weeks for processing.”
    Meanwhile the window-replacement project is long-completed and we get to pay for it out of our dreaded home-equity loan, which shouldn’t even exist. —Which means pay interest or let the contractor hang.

    A third ‘pyooter-function, which I ain’t lookin’ forward to, is a purchase from eBay.
    This brings up the PayPal problem.
    I successfully used it years ago to buy a calendar, and Linda used it again to purchase a replacement stoneware pitcher, after much weeping and wailing and gnashing of teeth.
    Apparently our PayPal was set up associating my name with our Visa-account, so that when Linda tried to use it with her name, it refused.
    PayPal also apparently wanted a password, and apparently it wasn’t my old RTS badge-number (the password we always use), so PayPal had to tell us what the password was, and then Linda reset the password, so I may get thrown for a loop if I try to use PayPal.
    All I wanna do is purchase something from eBay; and it’s getting turned into a three-day project.

  • “Pennsy” is the Pennsylvania Railroad, no longer in existence. It merged with New York Central Railroad in 1968 as Penn-Central, and that went bankrupt in about two years. “Pennsy” was once the largest railroad in the world.
  • RE: “which supposedly suffers from a wonky ISP.......” My loudmouthed macho brother-from-Boston visited recently, and loudly declared the whole reason his laptop was so erratic with the Internet was our ISP; which was “junk.” Our Internet is nowhere near as bad. (“ISP” equals Internet-Service-Provider;” ours is cable.)
  • “The zero-turn” is our zero-turn lawnmower: a V-twin.
  • “Linda” is my wife.
  • “Rochester-Colonial” is the name of our window-replacement contractor.
  • “The Bucktooth-Bathtub” is our 2005 Toyota Sienna van; called that because it’s white and like sitting in a bathtub, and appears to have a bucktooth on the grill.
  • RE: “dreaded home-equity loan, which shouldn’t even exist......” My loudmouthed macho brother-from-Boston loudly insists our home-equity loan should be closed — we don’t even have a mortgage anymore; since that was paid off years ago. The only remaining lien on our house is the home-equity loan, which we could pay off; but we keep it open in case we need it.
  • RE: “old RTS badge-number......” RTS equals Regional Transit Service, the transit-bus operator in Rochester, NY, where I drove transit-bus for 16&1/2 years. My “badge-number” was my employee-number.
  • Friday, July 27, 2007

    Park Ave.

    THE MOST AMAZING STREET-SIGNAGE I HAVE EVER SEEN
    The Keed.
    HMMMMMNNNNNN........
    So here I am quietly driving east (north south west WHATEVER; looks east to me) down the West Avenue hill into deepest-darkest Canandaigua headed for the vaunted Canandaigua YMCA.
    West Avenue used to be 5&20 from the west, until they built the bypass, which actually skirts Canandaigua.
    I remember that West Avenue is being reconstructed, such that a portion is closed and a detour posted.
    But that detour has me going all over Canandaigua to get to the shopping-plaza where I park.
    So I decide to take a side-street, and do my own detour to the shopping-plaza.
    I turn left (north) on the side-street, and then right (east) on what I think is W. Gibson St., except it’s signed as Park Ave.
    HMMMMMMNNNNNN......
    The Canandaigua YMCA is on Route 332 (the main-drag in Canandaigua) at Park Ave. — but that’s two blocks south and parallel to the street I’m on. (That Y is at least a mile away.)
    Well, WHATEVER; they got Park Ave. zig-zagging all over the city, so maybe that makes sense.
    Turn right before the railroad-crossing, the street that takes me to the shopping-plaza.
    So I do, and find that again I’m on Park Ave.
    Well okay; they got Park Ave. zagging two blocks over to the Park Ave. I just turned off of.
    Then I bomb through a T-intersection of Park Ave. with Park Ave. (pictured).
    HUH???????
    Leaving the YMCA I went back to get a picture. A guy was coming out of his house, and wondered why I was taking a picture.
    “The most amazing street-signage I have ever seen,” I said.
    Reminds me of the house-numbering on our side of the street: 2403/2415/2435/2407.

  • RE: “east (north south west WHATEVER; looks east to me).......” My loudmouthed macho brother-in-Boston and I have been having an argument as to compass-direction of a road in northern-Delaware. He noisily insists it’s north-south; what I long ago walked on was west-east.
  • “5&20” is the main east-west road through our area; State Route 5 and U.S. Route 20, both on the same road. 5&20 is just south of where we live.
  • “(ENGINEER ALERT!)” because my loudmouthed macho brother-in-Boston was trained as an engineer, and claims he is vastly superior to anyone who wasn’t.
  • Thursday, July 26, 2007

    You-tube

    Yesterday morning (Wednesday, July 25, 2007) I fired up my mighty Curve story because it has that You-tube link of Cassandra Railfan Overlook.
    You-tube has a search-window, so I cranked in Horseshoe-Curve. Whoa! Obviously You-tube has 89 bazilyun videos, as I got 89 bazilyun Horseshoe-Curve hits.
    The first one I clicked on was Railfan Bob on the HorseShoe Curve..Video #3 (Give that man a tripod).
    It was dreadful. First the video-camera was tightly focused on shrubbery, but a train could be heard climbing.
    Then the camera started dancing all over, zooming in-and-out.
    It was the mighty Curve all right: there’s 7048, and there’s the funicular-pagoda, and there’s the small stone switchtender’s shanty that’s been there for eons (all fleeting glimpses thereof).
    Back-and-forth we go, zooming and angling all over the place.
    Tightly zoomed on the shrubbery again, the train creeps slowly into view, baby-blue Conrail units partially hidden by branches.
    The train rumbles slowly around the Curve, GramPaw zooming in-and-out.
    By now the slow-moving train is almost to the viewing-area, and is blowing its horn.
    So GramPaw decides to pan the whole Curve, angling madly around like a drunk.
    GramPaw is along the fence, and the climbing train passes 7048, so GramPaw zooms in on the cab, then the hood (by mistake); then the trucks-and-wheels — then backs off to swallow the entire unit; what appears to be an SD50.
    GramPaw is in his glory; gaily pirouetting his camera all over the Curve, zooming back-and-forth.
    Slowly the train starts across the south fill, so GramPaw booms-and-zooms all over it.
    It’s a train of empty coal-hoppers; so GramPaw whips around and zooms in on the passing hopper-trucks.
    As the train slowly departs up the Hill we get a tightly-zoomed rendering of the rear panel of the last hopper.
    I would be embarrassed to fly such a disaster. It reminded me of GramPaw madly aiming the web-cam all over the Curve when you could do that. (Thankfully they gave that up.)

  • Horseshoe Curve (the “mighty Curve,”) west of Altoona, Pennsylvania, is by far the BEST railfan spot I have ever been to. (Horseshoe Curve is a national historic site.)
  • “7048” is a retired diesel-locomotive on display in the Curve viewing area. It’s in Pennsylvania Railroad paint.
  • The Curve viewing-area can be accessed by a steep funicular inclined railroad.
  • The viewing area is fenced.
  • The part of a locomotive over the diesel-engine is “the hood.” The crew rides in “the cab.”
  • Two fills comprise major portions of Horseshoe-Curve; a north fill and a south fill. By doing so the tracks jump across a large valley.
  • RE: “The Hill.” Horseshoe-Curve, opened in 1854, is part of the Pennsylvania Railroad’s crossing of Allegheny Ridge. That crossing is known as “The Hill.” Pennsylvania Railroad merged with New York Central (Penn Central) and went bankrupt. It was replaced by Conrail, which was eventually split and sold to Norfolk Southern Railroad and CSX (railroad). Norfolk Southern operates Horseshoe-Curve.
  • Horseshoe-Curve has a web-cam. (A while ago viewers could control it.)
  • Wednesday, July 25, 2007

    the 94-year-old nosy neighbor

    Last night (Tuesday, July 24, 2007) I went across the street (next-door, WHATEVER; I say “across-the-street”), supposedly to see the new Dish-TV installation recently installed at the behest of Vern’s son Billy.
    “Billy” is Vern’s onliest child, and since Billy’s wife died recently, he has come to live with his aging parents. (Billy is 71.)
    “I can’t believe they don’t have cable,” he said. He was sick of looking at everything through snow; particularly sports.
    Margarite’s sister had recently gotten a satellite-dish through the phone-company, and also had sprung for Internet-service; something we might do.
    Our Internet is undependable, although I don’t think it’s “junk,” as Jack loudly claims. Undependable in that if the power goes, it also goes at the Internet substation, so we go dead even with the standby.
    We don’t have the issues Jack was having. Jack is fiddling FlagOut, and can’t even scroll through it. HMMMMMMMMMMNNNNNNN....... We never have that problem.
    What I suspect is his contorted security was making everything flaky, which gave him an excuse to badmouth me — what else is new?
    Um, Linda doesn’t have the problems he was having, and like him she’s driving a PC with Internet-Explorer. I don’t have his problems, and got a speed of 5.6 megabytes per second, which is awesome.
    So Billy decided to get Dish-TV to make his sports watchable.
    “I’m over here to look at your Dish-TV installation,” I said.
    Vern walked in behind his walker. I guess he wants me to show up more than anyone.
    And I gave him the business.
    “How come there’s grass-clippings in your driveway?” he asked.
    “Because we haven’t had a chance to sweep it up and put it in your driveway,” I said.
    “Eight chipmunks so far,” Billy said, pointing at his have-a-heart trap.
    “But I hear tell ya don’t kill ‘em,” I said; “just take ‘em down the road and set ‘em loose in the woods.”
    “Yeah, but I set ‘em loose on your side of the road,” he said.
    “Believe you-me.” I said; “if we see any chipmunks we send ‘em back across the street where they belong.”
    Vern swallowed all this, and then complained about the robins sullying his driveway.
    “They’re your robins,” he said.
    “Yep,” I said. “I send the robins across the street to make a mess of your driveway. They ain’t messin’ up mine!”
    “And I better not find any purple leaves in my lawn come fall.” Vern has a purple-leaf maple.
    Any purple leaves go into his mailbox.

  • RE: “across the street” versus “next-door...........” My wife (Linda) says the 94-year-old nosy neighbor lives “next door,” although actually it’s “across the street.” It just that our actual next-door neighbors are 100 yards or more away here in the country, so we don’t know them. The only neighbors we do know are the 94-year-old nosy neighbor and his wife, Vern and Margarite.
  • “Jack” is my all-knowing macho brother-from-Boston. He visited recently.
  • “The standby” is our standby generator.
  • “FlagOut” is our family’s web-site.
  • Tuesday, July 17, 2007

    7/17/07

    18,400 smackaroos
    Yesterday (Monday, July 16, 2007) a snail-mail letter arrived from Chase-Visa raising our credit-limit to $18,400.
    Why thank-ya, Chase; but I think that’s rather silly. It’s almost as much as our Key-Bank home-equity line-of-credit — $20,000 — which I get loudly excoriated for for not paying off.
    The last major purchase on the Key-Bank line-of-credit was the dreaded LHMB (2003).
    Other than that, I use it to pay the real-estate taxes each year, and paid the staining-contract with it. (Brought the balance to $3,450.)
    I could close it, but keep it open to maintain a line-of-credit. Closing it and opening another would be a mess. We originally got it to buy the Faithful Hunda, which new cost $14,000+. (The CR-V and Bucktooth Bathtub were both paid for with savings.)
    Since we paid off the mortgage, that line-of-credit is the onliest loan outstanding against our house.
    But an $18,400 Visa-limit is ridiculous. I’ve never seen the account-balance go above $7,550, and that was only because of a $5,102 window-project down-payment.
    The highest that account goes is about $2,500.
    What’s really silly is I pay it off every month. (Wherein is Chase making any money?)
    Visa bills me for the month’s charges, and I pay ‘em off in full — I never maintain an outstanding credit-balance. At 19%+ are you kidding?
    Our Visa account is very old — it goes clear back to 1969.
    It got stolen once, so we closed the original and opened a new account. No loss for us — Chase ate it; we snared it almost immediately, both them and us. Apparently they have software that monitors your charges, and the thief was charging ‘pyooter equipment willy-nilly.
    I’ve always paid it off in full — I never borrow against it. (—Maybe once, long ago.)
    By doing so, I’m putting float onto charged purchases, that lasts until Visa bills. And I never pay cash for anything anymore. Most everyone takes Visa.
    We get bombarded with credit-card applications. Anything with my name goes in the shredder, and the prepaid-postage business-reply envelopes go back, full of junk, with a flowery Easter-Seal on the back flap.
    To me, an $18,400 credit-limit for us just reproves the old adage about “thems that don’t need it, get it.”
    In late 1966, when my Corvair tanked and needed a tranny-repair, I applied for a $325 loan and got tossed on the street. (I had to save up to repair the Corvair.)

    Renovations
    The vaunted Canandaigua YMCA is renovating, and expanding, its exercise-gym.
    I guess it will be a year-long project; it started last week, but I wasn’t able to hit the Canandaigua YMCA last week for various reasons.
    Yesterday, the onliest evidence of this great project was transferring all the cardio-equipment from the old cardio-room to another room that had previously been an anteroom for a counter (which had been removed).
    Supposedly at some time an exterior wall is to be removed, and the exercise-gym extended to lawn-space outside.
    But there was no evidence of that. (The exercise-gym was what it was weeks ago.)
    The anteroom doesn’t have the satellite-radio feeds. I was doing the treadmill entertained by a flurry of ads from a boombox tuned to a local FM-station.
    Amazon-Lady was there, and a cohort commented about the various minor changes.
    “You have to be more flexible,” she said. “The promise is project done when the snow flies, but I’ll believe it when I see it.”

    “I give up!”
    This morning — trash-day in our area; at least for Pratt Disposal — the shredder-head for our shredder got consigned to the mighty Flint landfill.
    The shredder-head is the gizmo atop the shredder waste-basket that actually shreds the documents.
    About a year ago we fed it too much, and it jammed, probably blowing a fuse.
    It looked repairable, so I set about taking it apart — it looked like all it needed was a fuse.
    The motor on it was big-enough to turn a Small-Block, but things were rather inaccessible, so that assembly would take a while.
    Meanwhile, I could never find time to actually assemble it; plus it kept weeping grease all over the newspaper we had it on.
    That being the case, I wasn’t sure I wanted to reassemble it. I could get it back together, but it might lunch again from lack of grease.
    At this point cue noisy Bluster-King; except I have a Husqvarna string-trimmer that I fixed, plus a wind-chime, which together put the kabosh to all his noisy posturing.
    A new shredder might cost 140 smackaroos — so its either that or fix the errant shredder we have (had).
    So the shredder-head got deposited with the trash this morning for Pratt. —So it goes; similar to the off-kilter shed. I ain’t what I was before the stroke.
    Pratt appeared as I set out to run at the so-called elitist country-club; so I said “watch that thing; it’s heavy, and it’ll cut your fingers.”
    They took it; lobbed it into the smelly maw of their mighty trash-truck.

  • “LHMB” is my 2003 Honda 600-cc CBR/RR motorcycle. Seeing a picture of it, my sister-in-Floridy declared “Lord-Have-Mercy;” and my loudmouthed brother-in-Boston, a macho Harley-guy, seeing it was yellow, pronounced it a “Banana.” So LHMB equals Lord-Have-Mercy-Banana.
  • “The Faithful Hunda” is our 1989 Honda Civic All-Wheel-Drive station-wagon, by far the BEST car we ever owned, now departed (replaced by the CR-V). (Called a “Hunda” because that was how a fellow bus-driver at Transit [Regional-Transit-Service in Rochester, where I once worked], pronounced it.)
  • “The Bucktooth-Bathtub” is our 2005 Toyota Sienna van; called that because it’s white and like sitting in a bathtub, and appears to have a bucktooth on the grill.
  • Amazon-Lady is a YMCA-employee. We call her that because she is extremely muscle-bound.
  • Our private trash collection-company, “Pratt Disposal,” dumps at the “Flint landfill.”
  • The “Small-Block” is Chevrolet’s V8 motor, introduced in the 1955 model-year.
  • “The almighty Bluster-King” is my blowhard brother-in-Boston, who badmouths everything I do or say. Supposedly I am incapable of repair of any kind, unlike him.
  • RE: “The off-kilter shed.....” Our storage-shed had to be a prefab design; i.e. I couldn’t design it. As such, its roof is not centered atop the shed.
  • I had a stroke October 26, 1993.
  • “The so-called elitist country-club” is nearby Boughton (“BOUGH”-tin) Park, where we walk our dog. It was called that long ago by an editor at the Canandaigua Daily-Messenger newspaper, where I once worked, because it will only allow taxpayers of the three towns that own it to use it.
  • Monday, July 16, 2007

    no Dubya-sticker

    So here I am driving east on Routes 5&20 toward the mighty Weggers in Canandaigua.
    I skipped going to the YMCA today (Wednesday, July 11, 2007), because a) dickering the “mighty Curve” story took a couple hours, and b) a thunderstorm was approaching, and I woulda had to leave about the time it hit, leaving Killian alone in the house in a thunderstorm. Linda was working all day in the vaunted West Bloomfield post-office.
    Approaching the village of Bloomfield I first encounter a T-intersection, where State Route 64 intersects 5&20 from the north with a stop-sign.
    Granny was sitting at the stop-sign in an ancient powder-blue four-door Cavalier, barely visible at all — a tiny stump behind the wheel, probably looking through it.
    Suddenly Granny pulls right out in front of me — I had to slam on the brakes.
    She turns east on 5&20, same direction as me, so phenomenal-avoidance concluded I fall right in behind her, where I can check out the rear bumper-stickers.
    Sorry, no Dubya-Cheney ‘04 — she musta torn it off to avoid inflaming the citizenry. It was liberally festooned with 89 bazilyun “protect our troops” and “God bless America” ribbons along with a pink “desiring a cure” ribbon and a black “POWs never have a nice day.”
    But sorry; no Dubya-sticker.

    So here I am sedately motoring toward mighty Weggers this afternoon (Sunday, July 15, 2007) to do our remaining weekly grocery-shopping.
    I’m driving east on Routes 5&20, approaching Bloomfield, and it’s a rerun of the same encounter I had with Granny in “no Dubya-sticker” the other day.
    Only this time Granny is driving a black Ford Five-Hundred (instead of an ancient powder-blue Cavalier), and is visible — i.e. not looking through the steering-wheel.
    I’m approaching the T-intersection where state Route 64 intersects with 5&20 at a stop-sign, and Granny is inching into the intersection.
    Uh-oh........ Take foot off accelerator-pedal, and put on brake-pedal.
    Sure enough; Granny pulls right out in front of me, requiring that I slam on the brakes. I coulda copy/pasted the Cavalier-incident.
    Phenomenal-avoidance concluded, I fall right in behind the 500 so that I can look at her stickers.
    Sorry dudes; no Dubya-sticker. But plenty of stuffed toys and a bobbing-head dog in the rear-window. I didn’t think they any longer made such things — wha’d she do; keep hers from the ‘80s?
    Don’t get in Granny’s way when she’s going to Bingo.

    AMAZING......
    I managed to get by Route 64 this morning (Monday, July 16, 2007) without any life-threatening dramas.
    No Granny-alerts; no slamming on of brakes.
    But Granny was farther up, and driving a white Crown Victoria.
    But not threatening me; just the beige S-10 pickup ahead of me.
    On the other (east) side of Bloomfield is a crossroad atop a hill; not far from the place the five girls died.
    Granny was anxious to get on 5&20, so she pulled right out in front of the S10; so he had to slam on his brakes.
    I looked at the back of the Crown Vic, but it was at least 200 yards ahead — too far to make out if it had a Dubya-sticker.
    But I couldn’t see even a hint.

  • “Mighty Weggers” is Wegmans, a large supermarket-chain based in Rochester we often buy groceries at.
  • “The mighty Curve” is Horseshoe Curve west of Altoona, Pennsylvania, by far the BEST railfan spot I have ever been to.
  • “Killian” is our dog — a rescue Irish-Setter.
  • “Linda” is my wife. She works part-time at the West Bloomfield post-office.
  • “Dubya-sticker” is Bush-Cheney ‘04. (Seems I’ve seen plenty — every insane traffic-move seems to involve a Dubya-sticker.)
  • Just east of Bloomfield is a place on 5&20 where a teenybopper overcorrected into an oncoming semi — five recent high-school graduates died.
  • “Routes 5&20” are State Route 5 and U.S. Route 20, both on the same road. It’s the main east-west road through our area.
  • safety-wallet

    About two weeks ago, just prior to our trip to the mighty Curve, I finally retired my RTS (Regional Transit Service) safety-wallet and consigned it to the Flint Landfill. (“Funeral arrangements by Pratt Disposal and Flint Landfill;” “Don’t produce that; it might go into print!”)
    My safety-wallet was one of many awards I received over the years for a safe-driving record at Transit. All were fairly cheap; probably the cheapest of all was the safety-mug. Nicest was a tile with a fired image of one of our 700-series Starships on it (pictured).
    I tried to get our builder to include it in the tile tub-surround in our bathroom, but -a) it wasn’t standard size, -b) it wasn’t the thickness of standard tile, and -c) it had a cork backing.
    We use it as a hot-plate in our kitchen.
    The safety-wallet was a bone of contention.
    At that time, our Union was trying to negotiate a new contract, and management had stonewalled.
    Almost a year had passed since the old contract expired — we were working under the old contract.
    But management in its infinite wisdom had awarded us safety-wallets, so we marched for the local TV-news cameras holding up our empty wallets.
    I never got around to using my safety-wallet until after my stroke — my old wallet was disintegrating. In fact, I may have been still using it when Jack and I rode motorbikes to the mighty Curve and Steamtown — although what I remember is how much worse Jack’s wallet looked: all moldy and matted, and full of moths and dust.
    Actually my safety-wallet was still pretty sound — it was leather.
    But to keep using it, I’d have to replace the plastic credit-card folder; and even then, a plastic credit-card folder seems to destroy credit-cards.
    My new wallet has separate slots for each card; hopefully avoiding deterioration of the magnetized strip.

  • “The mighty Curve” is Horseshoe Curve west of Altoona, Pennsylvania, by far the BEST railfan spot I have ever been to.
  • I drove transit-bus 16&1/2 years at Regional Transit Service, the transit bus company in Rochester, NY.
  • RE: “Funeral arrangements by Pratt Disposal and Flint Landfill;” “Don’t produce that; it might go into print!” ...is an obituary I proposed at the Canandaigua Daily-Messenger newspaper, where I once worked. “Pratt Disposal” is the local private trash-collection company, and they dump their trash at “Flint Landfill.”
  • “Starships” were General Motors RTS-series buses — the best styling-job GM ever did.
  • I had a stroke October 26, 1993; it ended my bus-driving career.
  • “Jack” is my blowhard brother-from-Boston. We rode motorbikes to Horseshoe Curve, and also Steamtown, a railroad-museum in Scranton, PA. At that time Steamtown had a steam-powered railroad excursion, and we rode it.
  • Jack is always loudly excoriating me for not spending money: “ya need to crack that dusty wallet and let the moths out!”
  • Saturday, July 14, 2007

    Sign

    The Keed & Photoshop.

    7/14/07

    Today, Saturday, July 14, 2007, is Bastille Day, and celebrates the storming of Bastille Prison, July 14, 1789, the beginning of the French Revolution.
    The French Revolution was partly inspired by the American Revolution, since it followed it.
    The same sort of ideas were swirling around France as were used to justify the American Revolution; namely, the rights to individual freedom and the pursuit of happiness.
    The French were dealing with a despotic monarchy, as were the Americans, although on the other side of the planet, and separated by an ocean.
    But the French Revolution descended into madness — heavy use of the guillotine.
    France has always gone its own way, including against the Dubya Administration when we invaded Iraq. Rather than kowtow to invading Brazil for the Pearl Harbor attacks, they disputed the so-called divine wisdom of Dubya.
    —Thereby prompting utterly predictable blustering from Limberger and his lackeys.
    “We saved their butt when the Nazis overran Europe, and what do we get.....?”
    Freedom Toast and Freedom Fries.
    Funny; still looks like French-Toast when my wife orders it.
    Maybe they could dip it in red-white-and-blue food-color, although I think they’re also the colors of the French Tricolor.

    —At least two local motor-festivals have gone by-the-by this weekend:

    The Keed.
    BDah-BDah-BDah-BDah.....
    -1) is the John Deere Tractor Festival, organized by the local Two-Cylinder Club.
    It’s a celebration of all things Johnny-Popper — BDah-BDah-BDah-BDah.
    Eric Milner’s father, a powerful Vice-President at DuPont, had one at his Chadds Ford estate, also a farm.
    He’d start it by heaving the massive flywheel, and stall it by leaning into that same flywheel.
    It probably had electric-start, but that was kaput.
    Sandy Hill had one too.
    Apparently quite a few have been saved.
    They get repainted and gussied up, and look a lot better than they looked in actual farm-service.
    Once in a while you see a rusty old critter. A nearby truck-farm has one, abandoned in the weeds.
    There’s a “For-Sale” sign on it, of course.
    Rusty as it is, it will probably get restored. It’s only surface-rust.
    But the motor’s probably frozen, and the fuel-line gunked.

    The Keed.
    Counter-rotating props.
    -2) is the Geneseo Air-Show.
    Geneseo air-strip is a small grass-strip, but they harbor a bunch of WWII warbird geeks, that hold an air-show every year.
    They have (or had) a B-17 and also a PBY, and also a Curtiss P-40 fighter-plane.
    For some time they’ve held a warbird airshow every year.
    I’ve been a few times — I remember standing under the wing of a DC-3 to get out of a thundershower, and watching once as a P-51 Mustang did aerobatics.
    The last airshow I attended, a P-38 Lightning flew in — it was my excuse for going. Very few P-38s are left, and this one was trash, but it was an operable P-38. I rode in on the mighty Kow, and was in awe as it circled to land. Counter-rotating props; I remember that.
    See one airshow and you’ve seen them all — rather boring; especially the surfeit of B-25s and Texans.
    The next one I go to will have a Lockheed Constellation — the most beautiful airplane of all time. A DC-4 was at Geneseo, but so what!
    And every American, BY LAW, should be required to see, and hear, a P-51 fly.

  • “Limberger” is Rush Limbaugh. I call him that because I think he stinks.
  • “Eric Milner” was my age; and in my high-school age Sunday-School class.
  • “Sandy Hill” is a Christian summer boys-camp I worked at 1959-1961; I also was a camper there 1954-on.
  • “Geneseo” is a nearby local town in western New York. It has a state college.
  • A “PBY” is a twin-engine amphibious airplane used in reconnaissance during WWII. The one Geneseo had probably would have sunk.
  • “The mighty Kow” was my previous motorcycle, a 1996 Kawasaki ZX6R.
  • “Counter-rotating props” are propellers that rotate in opposite directions. A P38 has counter-rotating props; i.e. the right (starboard) motor rotates one way, and the left (port) motor rotates the other way. By doing this the airplane is not effected by motor-rotation: the motor-rotations cancel.
  • Friday, July 13, 2007

    Errand-overload

    As seems to often be the case anymore, I find myself swamped by a surfeit of errands, so many the Canandaigua YMCA this week has become utterly impossible.
    Monday was driving back from the mighty Curve, and Tuesday was walking the dog and mowing lawn.
    Wednesday Linda worked at the post-office all day, and I skipped going to the YMCA because a thunderstorm was approaching, and I didn’t want to leave the dog alone in the house. I also had to hit Weggers that afternoon, an errand I usually connect with the YMCA since both are in Canandaigua.
    Yesterday (Thursday, July 12, 2007) I ran at the so-called elitist country-club, and mowed the rest of the lawn that afternoon. At least 2-3 hours went into doing footnotes for “the mighty Curve” story, which aren’t on this here site — don’t need to be. But the ne’er-do-wells aren’t gonna know who Jack-a-Bill-a-Sue-a-Tom are, and why it’s pronounced that way; or who Uncle Ethelbert is, or what the Ben Franklin Bridge is, or a 1.75% grade, or why the spelling of Foulk (Faulk) “Rode” is so important.
    Today’s errand is the Hairman at 9:30 a.m., only because it’s the onliest chance I’d get before Elz shows up.
    Hairman puts the kabosh on the YMCA today, and since I’m running an errand, I might as well do two others that are rather pressing.
    -1) is the lumber-yard, to get cedar-siding for the porch-door removal project, and........
    -2) is The MAC Shack, to order a larger USB scanner, along with a TV-tuner so I can put video-clips in this site’s File-Cabinet.
    Next Monday is the free oil-change for the CR-V, but that’s at 2 o’clock, so the YMCA may be possible. The Honda-dealer is in Canandaigua, and we did it before.
    Sometime I have to hit mighty Weggers again; and that will probably be Sunday afternoon.
    YMCA Wednesday and Friday are out because of Elz (which is okay, Elz).
    We hope we can do better than just slamming Elz, etc through the torrid mish-mash, but grass grows and the lawn will need mowing. —No doubt the bluster-boy will noisily insist on trying the zero-turn, and we hope we don’t have to extract it outta the ditch.
    89 bazilyun errands are on hold — -1) mighty Lowes, -2) Hahn Graphic, -3) Office Max, and..... -4) Verizon.
    Lowes is light-units, and more might tank before we get there, plus we need carpet for the porch; Hahn Graphic (in faraway Rochester) is a camera-bag for the D100 and a lens or two; Office Max is a new shredder — the old one jammed, and I’ll never get to fixing it; and Verizon is an upgrade of our cellphone service, and probably new phones.
    Verizon and Office-Max are in the same plaza so can be combined.
    And then there is the hairball of trying to buy a car.
    People foam it takes us too long to do such a thing, but then we have to find the time to wedge in road-tests and visiting the vipers.
    I have pretty much decided in favor of the Suzy-Q SX4, but there is the possibility it makes too much racket at highway-speed; so we need to road-test that.
    Assuming it still passes, we need to do the Internet-inquiries as to the value of an SX4 and our CR-V; same things we did buying the Bucktooth-Bathtub.
    Wedge this all in with 89 bazilyun other errands, and it’s no wonder buying a car takes so long. It ain’t Paul forever cogitating a car-purchase — it’s wedging all the errands together.
    —At the lumber-yard I got to see the official M&F (Matthews & Fields, the name of the lumber-yard) stress-relief “poll.”
    Inside a building is a large rectangular “poll” holding up a center-beam on which rest the floor-joists for the second floor.
    The “poll” is finished with gypsum wallboard painted white, and on it is drawn a target, with the admonition to “bang head here.”

  • “The mighty Curve” is Horseshoe Curve, west of Altoona, Pennsylvania, by far the BEST railfan spot I have ever been to.
  • “Linda” is my wife.
  • “Weggers” is Wegmans, a large supermarket-chain based in Rochester we often buy groceries at.
  • “The so-called elitist country-club” is nearby Boughton (“BOUGH”-tin) Park, where we walk our dog. It was called that long ago by an editor at the Canandaigua Daily-Messenger newspaper, where I once worked, because it will only allow taxpayers of the three towns that own it to use it.
  • “This here site” is our family’s web-site. Everything on this blog also goes on the web-site.
  • “The ne’er-do-wells” are a list of people I e-mail my stuff to: former co-workers, companions, students. They seem to want me to.
  • RE: “Rode,” “poll,” etc. My loudmouthed macho brother-in-Boston insists this is how words are spelled, and that he has a right.
  • “The Hairman” is my hairdresser.
  • “Elz” is my sister in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. She will visit next week. “Elz” equals Elizabeth equals Betty.
  • “The bluster-boy” is my loud-mouthed brother-from-Boston: Jack.
  • RE: “....the zero-turn, and we hope we don’t have to extract it outta the ditch.” A zero-turn lawnmower is a special application that turns on a dime, driven through levers for each side. I’m sure my all-knowing brother Jack has never driven such a thing; and it has a learning-curve. (He will visit along with my sister.)
  • “The vipers” are car-salesmen.
  • “Suzy-Q” equals Suzuki.
  • “The Bucktooth-Bathtub” is our 2005 Toyota Sienna minivan; called that because it’s white, and like sitting in a bathtub, and the grille appears to have a bucktooth.
  • “Paul” is my baby-sister’s husband.
  • Thursday, July 12, 2007

    THE MIGHTY CURVE

    THE MIGHTY CURVE
    The Keed.
    On-train down past the mighty Curve.
    So here we are at the mighty Curve; it’s Sunday, July 8, 2007.
    Linda had to work at the post-office yesterday morning, so we couldn’t even set out until she returned about 12:30.
    After that, we had to load up the Bucktooth-Bathtub, so we didn’t actually set out until 1:25.
    Meanwhile, a torrent of noisy serenading was hitting our various phones.
    The first onslaught apparently arrived while I was taking the dog to the slammer about 10:45.
    And I had forgotten to take along my cellphone, so everything went onto answering-services, both cellphone and landline.
    One cellphone message seemed to be Bill, but he kept cutting out, so what it seemed like was intermittent screaming.
    The other messages were Jack, loudly trumpeting the usual tiresomely-boring posturings about “I beat,” interspersed with locomotive air-horns, and “hup-hup!”
    There were frequent blusterings about “Where are you, dewd? Hairman? Nappy-poo?”
    Here it is 11 a.m. and them guys are already at the Curve.
    This contradicts previous notifications:
    -1) Jack wanted to know if he should ride his GeezerGlide to the mighty Curve, so we indicated Linda had to work and said we would not be able to set out until 1 p.m. or later; and that getting there would take 4-5 hours.
    “Fine,” he said. “If I leave that morning, I would get to the mighty Curve about the same time as you.” (Do yaz remember that, Bubby? What you said was “I thought both you guys were retired.”)
    But apparently all that was forgotten about, so Jack set out the day before, so he could arrive at the Curve before I even left.
    -2) Bill-a-Sue (and Tom) left us with the impression they weren’t coming to the mighty Curve at all (“not us”). Yet here they were; although Bill split hairs saying their response was to whether they’d ride the train.
    (Railroaders’ Memorial Museum is running excursions up-and-down the Hill in conjunction with their “RailFest” festival, and we are reserved.)
    Linda came home and declared “Here we got this fantabulous Famblee-Site, yet getting any useful information is utterly beyond-the-pale.”
    “All we get is fevered blustering about the spelling of Faulk (Foulk) ‘Rode.’”
    The Keed.
    The gorgeous E8s.
    So finally we set out, and every time I unholstered my cellphone there was another message on it: always Jack blustering noisily about “Where are ya, dewd?” and “Turn your phone on!”
    No matter my phone was on the entire trip down, but there’s a fair likelihood we’re out where there’s no cellphone service — plus why answer, when all it is is the usual tiresomely-boring blustering?
    Finally about 6:15 p.m. we arrived at the Econo-Lodge in Altoony, checked in, so I called Jack from the parking-lot, thereby frightening the clerk inside with all the yelling and screaming.
    My import was that I couldn’t get to far-away places in 30-seconds-or-less — that the Bucktooth-Bathtub wasn’t capable of warp-speed.
    So finally we arrived at the Curve parking-lot about 6:45 p.m.; which meant Jack-a-Bill had been there all day waiting for me. (Jack was noisily bellowing from up top.)
    Not my fault (foult) when 1) Jack seems to have forgotten our original time of arrival, and 2) I was of-the-impression Bill-a-Sue weren’t even supposed to be there at all.
    We get noisily held-to-account for foul-ups that ain’t even us; plus there is the apparent impossibility of getting any useful information from those pursuing a fevered-agenda.
    Of course, supposedly the whole reason for Jack’s showing up was the much-ballyhooed race up the Curve steps (194).
    Sue allowed to Linda she had never actually seen Jack do the steps; although he loudly claimed he did — first two times, then three times, then four times. The number of times he climbed the steps kept increasing with each retelling.
    So I ascended the steps, marching up without drama as I always do, taking 2:15 according to my stopwatch (this got loudly exaggerated to 3:20 later).
    Finally we descended to go to supper, but then Jack wanted to stage the great race.
    He immediately leapt ahead, doing his best hare-imitation, two steps at a time, starting before I did.
    As before, I just marched up the steps as I always do, in full regalia, camera, rail-scanner, jacket, hat.
    Jack slowed about half-way up — no more double-steps — and I’m told I was catching up.
    But of course he got to the top first — he beat me by about 23 steps. It wasn’t enough of a climb for me to overtake his initial lunge.
    “All your conditioning at the YMCA, and I still beatcha,” he crowed; but he was clearly winded, too much to bellow his triumph to those below.
    I started back down, but Jack had to keep stopping. He’d stop at the landings to catch his breath.
    “All that conditioning means the Old Man can climb and descend the steps without histrionics,” Linda observed. When I got to the bottom I was at least 75 steps ahead of Jack.
    When he finally got to the bottom he was still huffing-and-puffing like a locomotive. With me there was hardly any impact at all.
    In fact, I would say I am better on the steps than I was last year.
    And at least we weren’t taking Jack to Bon Secours. Linda-a-Sue (and me somewhat) were worried.
    A noisy triumph of insane stubbornness over at least 150 extra pounds.
    The Keed.
    Es up at the mighty Curve.
    That completed, we set out for dinner, but via the famous Brickyard grade-crossing in Altoony which apparently no one else had been to.
    —A frenzied conga-line of me leading Jack on his blatting GeezerGlide, and Bill doing 152 mph while glomming 14 hard-boiled eggs.
    We took back streets I hadn’t traveled often, so Jack was noisily complaining about indecisiveness.
    Uh, sure; ride decisively into a dead-end, or miss Brickyard altogether.
    “Brickyard” because there’s an abandoned brick-kiln adjacent. But I think the street is actually Pine St., a twisting serpent of climbing hairpins.
    89 bazilyun railfans were at the crossing, and Jack was upset the onliest parking was on stone railroad ballast.
    The railroad-crossing is the old Pennsy main west (north, east, south; WHATEVER) out of Altoony and up the Hill.
    First an eastbound descended, and then a westbound came, and then another eastbound descended — a loaded coal-train.
    Only three tracks remain at Brickyard (years ago there were four), yet here we had three trains as the same time — i.e. all tracks occupied.
    Railfan overload. Jack pronounced it “worth it,” which I guess means parking his motorbike on two-inch rock ballast was okay.
    After that, we proceeded to the infamous spaghetti-joint (Lena’s), which was closed prompting Jack to wisecrack about all the people lining up in the empty parking-lot to patronize it.
    Seems they have some deal where they close in July for a week or two. We’ve had it happen before.
    So we went to Olive-Garden (“I ain’t eatin’ at no Arbys!”), where Jack got into an animated discussion with the staff about his family never charging him for a meal.
    “I thought you guys always say ‘at Olive-Garden we treat you like family’ in your ads, which means a free meal; right?”
    Of course, it was Linda and I who planted the seed, but we had enough class to not say anything.
    Jack, of course, ran with it.
    Mindless-management-minions were trotted out. They were taking him seriously.
    Also, it may be a touch of Italy, but it sure sounded a lot like south-Philly — heavy on the Delaware Valley accent.
    Tom was trying to tell a story. I’m left thinking he has potential — he kept referring to pre-1957 spellings of words; e.g. before 1957, “blog” was spelled with an “A.”
    But to successfully compete a story in this famblee you have to bellow. It’s the onliest way to override the interrupters.
    The Keed.
    Es up at Gallitzin.
    Our next adventure was the excursion, the whole reason we were here — not some great race.
    Jack, who could only find a motel out-of-town, was planning to ride home to West Bridgewater; and Bill could only find accommodations in far-away Johnstown, an hour away from Altoony.
    RailFest had sold out all the motels, and in fact, the only reason we were at Econo-Lodge was it was the first place we could find room. Tunnel Inn and the old Daze Inn (now Holiday-Inn Express) were both filled. And that was making reservations months ago.
    So Jack-a-Bill weren’t planning to ride the excursion, although Bill was kicking it around.
    Doing so would have meant setting his alarm, and the availability of excursion-seats.
    I called Bill from our coach-seat: “Are you guys on this thing?”
    “No. It woulda meant setting an alarm, and I went on their web-site last night, and it said the 10:20 excursion was sold out.”
    “We’re sitting in an empty car,” I said. It was only 10 a.m., but the car never filled, and when we left it was still only about one-fifth occupied.
    The Railroaders’ Memorial Museum in Altoony has held RailFest every year for some time, but previously it was in October.
    RailFest always has excursions up around the Curve, and we “road” it once a few years ago, but it was raining, and the coach-windows were so fogged we couldn’t see anything.
    At that time they were renting Maryland Rail-Transit (MARC) equipment, which included locomotives (Geeps) at each end of the train.
    This was so they didn’t have to turn or flip anything — the train just yo-yoed.
    Up and around and down, and then up-and-down again with the other engine leading. All the train does is loop at the top — a connector-track for looping helpers (Pennsy called ‘em “kickers”).
    The Keed.
    At the Altoony station.
    This time the Museum rented two privately-owned restored E8 locomotives (pictured) painted in Pennsy tuscan-red with gold. It ain’t the original cat-whisker scheme, but the single-stripe scheme of the ‘60s. (Pennsy was merged into Penn-Central in 1968.)
    They looked gorgeous, as did a couple restored ex-Pennsy club-cars the Museum was also using.
    The coach-seats were a bunch of SEPTA (Southeast Pennsylvania Transportation Authority) coaches — what we were in.
    Up and around the mighty Curve we went — up our view of the viewing-area was obscured by an eastbound (down) train.
    At the top of the Hill (Allegheny Ridge) we dove into the Allegheny Tunnel and came out the other side in Gallitzin, within sight of Tunnel Inn.
    Then around the loop-track we went, and then back down the Hill, first through New Portage Tunnel, and then down The Slide. (It’s called “The Slide” because its much steeper than the other grade; 2.36% as opposed to 1.75% — New Portage wasn’t originally Pennsy; the railroad had to build up to it.)
    The whole trip was at about 35 mph, which I think is the passenger speed-limit on The Hill. 12 miles up and then 12 miles down — about 45 minutes.
    Bill-a-Sue-a-Tom were apparently on the bridge just beyond the Allegheny-tunnel mouth, but we didn’t see them until the bridge over the New Portage approach, also in Gallitzin. We were in the first SEPTA-car.
    Back in Altoony we saw Bill-a-Sue after our train had unloaded — they were driving into the station parking-garage. They saw us.
    We met them again in the station-lobby; and Tom played back 89 bazilyun pictures of our E-units coming through Gallitzin.
    It was like watching a movie — what I woulda called “motor-drive” with Mother-Dear.
    But things are different. The coming of digital-photography makes this all possible. No longer are you limited to filling a 36-exposure roll (“role?”) of film. With digital photography you can process your piks without a darkroom — just take out the flash-card, and put it into your ‘pyooter.
    I still live under the film-induced requirements: that I have to be spare in what I shoot. Yet a flash-drive can accommodate 89 bazilyun piks, which you can process immediately.
    So I still wait until the Es are filling-the-frame before I shoot; whereas Tom is shooting both before-and-after.
    The Keed.
    Eastbound at Cassandra Railfan Overlook.
    A number of things are memorable:
    -A) Here we are at the mighty Curve and Tom says “Hey look; a gondola-car full of toothpicks. My great-uncle Ethelbert built the entire Ben Franklin Bridge single-handed with only one toothpick.” —Potential, Tom; but ya gotta get in touch with your Connor-genes.
    -B) “See that there bug splattered across that windshield?” Jack said. “In Massachusetts I would have to do up a written report!”
    -C) Bill was relating his trip from Gallitzin down to Altoony, on the giant Route 22 Expressway, much like an Interstate. It’s parallel to Pennsy’s grade, although of course quite a bit steeper. All-of-a-sudden Tom is yelling “Lemme out. Lemme out. I don’t care where ya stop; just lemme out.” The excursion could be seen descending the grade across the valley, and Tom wanted to get a picture.
    Makes sense to me. Years ago we are quietly eating breakfast at our old house on Winton “Rode,” it’s 9 a.m., and I note that Amtrak’s “Niagara Rainbow” should be in the Rochester station, and in about 15 minutes would be passing the Cut-Out.
    All-of-a-sudden DROP EVERYTHING and go out and get in Bill’s Volvo. We zoom to the Cut-Out, and I scream “Get out, get out; the lights are on. It’s in-the-block.” It blew it’s horn as it passed; I had Tom wave.
    -D) We’re at the mighty Curve. Conrail Historical Society has set up a tent, selling trinkets, baubles, and other Conrail paraphernalia. A member has set up a tiny video-cam atop a tripod, and has it aimed at the north part of the Curve, awaiting the next train.
    A train is coming up The Hill. It heaves into view, so member starts shooting, but a big burly Harley-guy strides right in front of him.
    “Aw, man; you’re blocking my shot.” So much for that. 275-pound greaseball Harley-dude ain’t movin’. Hee-yuhh; hee-yuhh — Mr. macho-man. “Make me, wuss-boy.”
    -E) Sunday morning, the day of the excursion, it was suggested I should check in with the almighty Bluster-King, to make sure he had been actually able to set out for home.
    I’m not that worried about him, but others are: blood-pressure, cholesterol, excessive blood-sugar.
    “If anything happens, the cleaning-ladies will find him.” —And it wasn’t Linda that said that, dear bluster-boy.
    So that afternoon I called.
    Bluster-boy answered, supposedly on-the-road.
    Obviously he has his GeezerGlide and helmet wired for answering cellphones.
    “Just checking in, “ I said. “Just checking to make sure you set out.”
    “Well of course,” he blustered.
    It’s all right Jack. If I have to be a punching-bag to get the old points-scorer in better shape, I’ll be it.
    -F) My railroad-scanner was essentially kaput, mainly because the antenna was broken.
    The telescoping antenna has a threaded nylon fitting, and it had stripped, making mounting the antenna impossible.
    So it goes; a trip to Radio-Shack for a new antenna.
    The scanner ain’t what it could be. It receives fairly well, but a lot of what it gets -1) cuts out, -2) is indecipherable gibberish, or -3) is incomprehensible jargon.
    Were it not for -1) talking defect detectors, and -2) enginemen calling out signals, it would be a “waist.”
    With the telescoping antenna it would even get faraway Brickyard from the mighty Curve. Brickyard has a detector and a signal-bridge.
    If it sounds like a train is climbing Track-3 at Brickyard, I ain’t leavin’ the Curve.
    -G) Our reward Sunday-night was that our keycard wouldn’t open the door to our room at Econo-Lodge.
    So we trudged over to the faraway office and began a long wait for a clerk.
    At least 15 minutes passed. “Anybody home?” Linda said.
    By now the almighty Bluster-King woulda started pounding the counter, and I was sorely tempted, but sat down instead.
    I did that long ago at Sears — started ringing the desk-bell willy-nilly.
    “Ya didn’t hafta do that,” the clerk said angrily.
    “Got your attention, didn’t I.”
    I also succeeded in getting abysmal service.
    Sometimes it pays to not be a Connor.
    When the clerk finally showed up he was greatly embarrassed.
    After the excursion we a) went to Gallitzin, b) went to the mighty Curve, and c) went to the Cassandra Railfan Overlook; where I concluded it was near-impossible to shoot a 300-mm telephoto hand-held. The picture loaded is hand-held, but a lucky shot. 300-mm needs to be done with a tripod (which scotches the point of 35mm photography), or on a rifle-mount, which I still have.

  • “The mighty Curve” is Horseshoe Curve west of Altoona (“Altoony”), Pennsylvania, by far the BEST railfan spot I have ever been to.
  • “The Bucktooth-Bathtub” is our 2005 Toyota Sienna van; called that because it’s white and like sitting in a bathtub, and appears to have a bucktooth on the grill.
  • Jack (lives in West Bridgewater, Mass., south of Boston) and Bill are my remaining younger brothers. Sue is Bill’s wife, and Tom his only child. “Linda” is my wife.
  • “Hairman” is my hairdresser.
  • “Railroaders’ Memorial Museum” is a railroad-themed museum in Altoona (“Altoony”), Pa., once the major mechanical shop fortress of the Pennsylvania Railroad (“Pennsy”). It once employed thousands, making Altoona a railroad-town. The museum also operates the Horseshoe Curve national historical site.
  • “The Hill” is the Pennsylvania Railroad’s assault on Allegheny Ridge. Horseshoe Curve is part of it. It’s now operated by Norfolk Southern Railroad.
  • “Famblee-Site” is our family’s web-site.
  • When we moved to northern Delaware in 1957, “Foulk” Road was spelled on the signs with an “A.”
  • “Bon Secours” is the hospital in Altoona.
  • “GeezerGlide” is my brother Jack’s Harley-Davidson motorcycle; called that because it’s a very laid-back cruiser-bike, and he’s 50 years old.
  • My brother Bill from Delaware once claimed his turbocharged Volvo station-wagon would do 152 mph; and that he eats two hard-boiled eggs while driving to work, and apparently boils them 14 at a time.
  • “Geeps” are Electromotive-Division (GM) four-motor road-switcher units: e.g. GP7, GP9, GP35, GP38, GP40, etc.
  • RE: “helpers........” Additional road-power has to be added to a train to surmount “The Hill.” Altoona keeps “helpers” on-hand for adding to trains.
  • “The cat-whisker scheme” was the first painting-application on Pennsy’s passenger-locomotives; five gold pin-stripes on a tuscan-red body (or brunswick-green). The original design was by Raymond Loewy.
  • “1.75%” is 1.75 feet of climb every hundred feet. “2.36%” is 2.36 feet for every hundred feet — fairly steep.
  • RE: “Bill-a-Sue-a-Tom.......” I had a mentally-retarded (Down Syndrome) kid-brother who always pronounced “and” as “uh.”
  • RE: “roll (‘role?’) and “waist.” My brother-in-Boston misspells words, and then noisily claims he’s entitled.
  • The Ben Franklin Bridge is a giant suspension-bridge over the Delaware-River between Philadelphia and Camden, N.J. It opened in 1926. I had an uncle Ethelbert (“Bill”); who claimed to be “the world’s biggest leprechaun,” and was a civil-engineer and blowhard.
  • “The Cut-Out” is a prime railroad viewing-spot in Rochester.
  • RE: “It’s in-the-block.” The train was in the section of tracks before the signal-bridge. Each block is a mile-or-more long, which means the train would soon be coming — and it was pushing 79 mph.
  • “The almighty Bluster-King” is my brother Jack.
  • My mother’s (“Mother-Dear”) maiden-name was Connor. We surmise it’s why we have a tendency to have no class whatsoever.
  • “Cassandra Railfan Overlook” is a You-Tube link, which will play.
  • Saturday, July 07, 2007

    Aricept

    So here we are the other night (Thursday, July 5, 2007), quietly watching the national TV-news.
    It’s not like the old days, where we used to lob smelly socks at Tricky-Dick sonorously telling the nation their president wasn’t a crook.
    A commercial-break begins with an ad for Aricept, the anti-Alzheimer's drug.
    Take this here magic pill, and all-of-a-sudden your memory flows back. If you experience death, contact your physician immediately.
    A doddering husband and wife appear at a piano on the screen. Wife is guiding hubby’s hands around the keyboard.
    “We’ve been married 42 years,” she says.
    “Wait a minute,” my wife says.
    “We’re pushing 40 years, and my husband doesn’t look like some old bald-headed geezer headed for the grave.”
    Similarly, my wife doesn’t look like some simpering douchebag, puttering tentatively about.
    My parents made 53 years, and didn’t look this bad when they made 50.
    “Dad sure looks a lot better,” some nattering daughter says.
    Sure; if he’s capitulated to doing things her way.
    I keep getting reminded that I ain’t in that bad shape for 63. People patronize my wife’s post-office using walkers with oxygen. —And they’re only in their early 60s.

  • “Tricky-Dick” is of course President Richard Nixon. Following the Watergate break-in, he told the nation “Their president wasn’t a crook.”
  • RE: “my wife’s post-office......” My wife works part-time at the local post-office.
  • Friday, July 06, 2007

    Many years ago......

    WHERE IT ALL BEGAN
    Robert Long.
    Eastbound seashore train with Pennsy K4 east of Haddonfield station, probably headed for Atlantic City. (The caption says: K4 #1120, PRSL Train #1073 from New York city to Atlantic City via Trenton and Burlington [which means it came down the old Camden & Amboy, all in Jersey].)
    ......in fact, April 7, 1946 is the date on the picture (below), when I would have been a couple months over two; over 61 long years ago — my father plopped yours-truly in the front wooden basket of his heavy, balloon-tire Columbia bicycle to inadvertently begin an avocation that will probably last the rest of my entire life.
    I can imagine my mother having something to do with this: “Thomas; will you take your son and do something?” —But maybe not......
    We took a dead-end street east of Haddonfield’s railroad-station, adjacent to the Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines mainline to Atlantic City.
    (The actual location is pictured at top. Watching trains was also free.)
    The location is also where the long-abandoned Philadelphia, Marlton & Medford Railway once branched off — the right-most track.
    All that was left of the PMMR was a wye in the woods, and PRSL would use it to turn an accommodation that ran from Haddonfield-to-Camden, N.J.
    The original railroad was the Camden & Atlantic, built about 1850, that ran from a ferry-slip in Camden to Atlantic City. (Atlantic City became the premier seashore resort it is because of that railroad.)
    But Pennsy bought it, and also built the mighty Delair railroad-bridge over the Delaware River in north Philly in 1896. (It was the first bridging of the Delaware in Philly).
    It made it possible for seashore-trains to go all-the-way to Philadelphia.
    But there were still passengers for Camden — and there was probably a charter-requirement.
    Trains to Philly branched off the old Camden & Atlantic west of Haddonfield; i.e. they didn’t go to Camden.
    Which explains the Camden accommodation.
    PRSL sent a small train of only two-or-three coaches out to Haddonfield, reversed it on the old PMMR wye east of the station, and then sent it back through Haddonfield to Camden after the Philly-train passed.
    That way, the railroad could oblige its Camden passengers.
    There was also a water-tower at the turnout, along with a standpipe (pictured).
    The steam-engine of the Camden accommodation would top off its tender at that standpipe. Seashore trains on the mainline could also top off their tenders.
    All kinds of goings-on were viewable.
    Every once in a while a K4-powered train to-or-from the seashore would blast by. Eastbound, they were accelerating away from Haddonfield station, and westbound they were slowing to stop.
    “See it, Bobby? Here it comes! Cover your ears, and wave.”
    Seeing a little kid waving, the engine-crews always blew the whistle. (“You are required by law to whistle at all waving kids.”)
    I was thrilled.
    Here we had an occurrence similar to a thunderstorm, but I wasn’t scared. In fact, I could stand right next to a throbbing, snorting steam-engine without crying.
    I suppose it was because my Old Man took the time to warn me about what to expect. With thunderstorms I was on my own. (“The Lord is rolling barrels,” my mother would scream.)
    Probably my mother.
    YrFthflSrvnt and my father, behind our house in Erlton.
    How the Camden accommodation reversed was kept a mystery — in fact, I didn’t see the wye until many years later; when I also traced much of the old PMMR right-of-way.
    Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines is an amalgamation of Pennsylvania and Reading Railroad lines to the seashore in south Jersey. It was a response to too many railroads in south Jersey. Railroads were being built willy-nilly; if Reading built a line to a seashore resort, Pennsy built a competing line, and therefore neither line made money.
    The end result was far too much railroad capacity in south Jersey, so all were merged and rationalized in 1933 as Pennsylvania-Reading Seashore Lines.
    The old Reading Railroad to Atlantic City (actually Atlantic City Railroad) was torn up, but out of Camden the ACR (Reading) was kept-in-place — it goes through Haddon Heights, south of Haddonfield.
    Halfway across the state, the two lines were close enough so that the Reading line could be switched into the Pennsy line (Camden & Atlantic) at Winslow Junction.
    Winslow Junction is also where the Central of New Jersey line down the middle of the state crossed (and junctioned with) both railroads. That CNJ line (since abandoned) was partly how Baltimore & Ohio ran from New York City to Atlantic City; also including the Reading-line to Atlantic City.
    PRSL also switched off to the old Reading Lines to Wildwood/Cape May and Ocean City at Winslow. Lines to other seashore points (like Sea Isle City) were abandoned.
    Steam was still running on the PRSL when I first went there late ‘40s/early ‘50s. In fact, the last steamer I saw in revenue service was a Mikado (or Consol) from a Piper Tri-Pacer out of Echelon Airport in 1956.
    Apparently I am also a possessor of what our family calls “the steam-gene;” an affinity for railroads. 44 has it too.
    There’s no practical reason to like “those dirty old railroad-trains,” as my mother called them. (“Look, Mommy; there’s a train up at the railroad-station!” DROP EVERYTHING! My son wants to walk up to the railroad-station.)
    (Here we are at Dr. Glover’s office in Haddonfield, which was about 100 yards from the grade-crossing. “Look, Mommy. The gates are coming down!”)
    My avocation has taken me all over the country.
    I’ve been to quite a few of the railfan pilgrimage-stops, including Cajon Pass, Tehachapi Loop, and Helmstetters Curve. Also mighty Tunkhannock viaduct.
    Years ago we rode (“road”) Amtrak’s Lake Shore Limited from Rochester to Boston, to visit my brother Jack, instead of driving. And about 20 years ago I rode behind Nickel Plate 765 up New River Gorge in West Virginny.
    765, a steam-engine, was incredible; more powerful than anything I had ever seen on the PRSL. At one point we were doing over 70 mph!
    And little kids were at trackside waving; and the engineer was whistling back — a rerun of me.
    I also have been to the Pennsylvania Railroad’s Horseshoe Curve “hunderds” of times — first time in 1968 or 1969 when it was still four tracks; now it’s three. (All railfans should be required by law to visit the mighty Curve at least once; the greatest railfan spot I have ever been to.)
    In late 1966, after finishing college, and moving to Rochester, my whole world was crashing mightily-in-flames, so I went and watched trains on the old New York Central mainline through town.
    And after my stroke, realizing I was still in the real world came with seeing an Amtrak Metroliner crash through Claymont station at about 100 mph. Pantograph bouncing up-and-down, and giant arcs flashing between the pantograph and the catenary, was just like watching the mighty GG1s when I was a teenager.
    We moved away from Haddonfield to northern Delaware in 1957, and I switched to watching electric locomotives on what’s now called “The Corridor.”
    Sometimes I wonder about meshing being a railfan with 40 years of marriage. I’m told it beats chasing women.

  • “Pennsy “ is the Pennsylvania Railroad. Their premier passenger steam-engine was the “K4” Pacific — 4-6-2.
  • The “Camden & Amboy” was one of the first railroads ever built — between Camden, New Jersey and Amboy, New Jersey. Freight got ferried from Philadelphia to Camden (across the Delaware River), and then ferried to New York city from Amboy, which was across New York harbor from New York city. The Camden & Amboy was a lot quicker than shipping entirely by boat, or horse-and-wagon. Eventually the Camden & Amboy was superseded by better railroads, and canals. Camden & Amboy eventually was bought by Pennsy, and still exists (I think).
  • During my early childhood, we lived in “Erlton,” New Jersey; a sleepy suburb of Philadelphia (in Jersey) north of adjacent “Haddonfield,” an old colonial town. When I was 13, we moved to northern Delaware.
  • “Philadelphia, Marlton & Medford Railway” was a tiny farm-railroad that went defunct during the Depression.
  • “Reading” is pronounced “Red-ing,” not “Reed-ing.”
  • Central of New Jersey and Reading were both affiliated with the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, the nation’s first common-carrier railroad (1828). They were how B&O could access New York city and Atlantic City.
  • “Wildwood, Cape May, Ocean City and Sea Isle City” are other south Jersey seashore resorts.
  • “A Piper Tri-Pacer” is a small single-engine, high-winged private airplane Piper built at that time. “Tri-Pacer” because it had tricycle landing-gear (but not retractable).
  • “Echelon Airport” was a small private airport (a fixed-base operator) in south Jersey. It’s since been replaced by a large shopping-mall (Echelon Mall).
  • A “Mikado” is a 2-8-2 steam-engine. A Consolidation (“Consol”) is 2-8-0. Both are freight-engines. I said “Consol” because I have a hard time imagining PRSL using Mikados.
  • “44” is the nickname of my brother-in-Delaware’s onliest child: Agent-44.
  • “Dr. Glover” was my first medical-doctor.
  • “Cajon Pass and Tehachapi Loop” are both in Californy. “Helmstetters Curve” is a scenic horseshoe curve near Cumberland Maryland in the Western Maryland’s assault on Allegheny Ridge. (WM is abandoned, but Helmstetters Curve is still operated by a tourist railroad.) “Tunkhannock viaduct” is a huge reinforced-concrete viaduct built by the Delaware, Lackawanna & Western Railroad across the Tunkhannock Valley in Pennsylvania near Scranton. It’s still in use, but only as one track — it had two at first.
  • “Hunderds” is how my macho brother-in-Boston (“Jack”) noisily insists “hundreds” is spelled. He also likes to swap “rode” and “road.” “Road” is spelled “rode;” and “rode” is spelled “road.”
  • I had a stroke October 26, 1993.
  • “The pantograph” is the gizmo atop the electric-locomotive that contacts the overhead-wire, which is a part of the “catenary,” the whole overhead-wire distribution system.
  • The giant “GG1” electric-locomotive was the finest passenger railroad engine ever produced. It was produced by the Pennsylvania Railroad, and ran from New York city to Washington, D.C. for many years. Many were in use when I came to Delaware. The greatest thrill was to be passed by a GG1 at 100 mph.
  • Tuesday, July 03, 2007

    “Get outta the way!”

    -1) So here I am last Sunday afternoon (July 1, 2007) being dragged north by Killian up the right (eastern) side of State Route 65 — we are returning from Michael Prouty Park after our daily walk.
    Of course, I probably have this completely wrong, being a pathetic and utterly clueless Democrat Liberial-loser, instead of an all-supreme and superior tub-thumping conservative REPUBLICAN.
    I’ve always thought of State Route 65, at least the part we live on, as a south-to-north “rode.”
    Walking north, the sun dawns to the right (east), and sets to the left (which is west).
    But apparently not to a proper REPUBLICAN. That makes Route 65 west-to-east, and I am reprehensible to think it goes south-to-north.
    Anyway, here we are trudging north (south, east, west; WHATEVER), back to our house.......
    ......when a giant beige Chrysler Pacifica, same direction as us, brushes by, headed off the “rode” toward our property.
    Route 65 is a slab of asphalt (bituminous-concrete, rebar; WHATEVER) 30 feet wide without gravel shoulders. The traffic-lanes are 12 feet wide, leaving three feet on each side of the traffic-lanes.
    That three-foot area is where I walk the dog, but the Pacifica had clearly crossed into it and was headed for our shrubbery.
    If I had been about 20 yards further ahead, I would have been hit.
    Suddenly GramPop realized where he was headed, and arrowed the Pacifica back toward the traffic-lane.
    Or maybe it was a teenybopper looking up a cell-number.
    As the Pacifica disappeared I looked on the back. NOPE, no Dubya-sticker.
    Sure fit the mold of a Dubya-supporter. Maybe he tore off the sticker, knowing what hot water it might cause.
    -2) Yesterday (Monday, July 2, 2007), as I was entering Bloomfield returning from mighty Weggers and the Canandaigua YMCA, an ancient Ford pickup, stripped of its pickup-box and wooden platform installed, pulled out of a side-street onto 5&20 right in front of a giant Chevy van headed east (I was headed west).
    The van-driver lunged for the shoulder — he didn’t even have time to blow the horn.
    Dust flew as the right-front tire of the van jumped the curb, and ended up on somebody’s lawn.
    Apparently the van hit the Ford, but only slightly. Both were pulling over as I drove by.
    I glanced in my mirror as I kept going, but it was too late.
    I couldn’t see if the Ford had a Dubya-sticker, but I did see the tiny white cartoon of Calvin peeing on a Chevy bow-tie. And that was despite the Confederate-flag in the rear-window.
    He sure drove like a Dubya-supporter. “Get outta the way!”

    (As our Tioga-Central excursion-train crossed Route 15 south of Lawrenceville, the people stopped at the grade-crossing were angrily blowing their horns.)

  • “Killian” is our dog; an Irish-Setter.
  • My loudmouthed macho brother-in-Boston, a “tub-thumping conservative REPUBLICAN,” loudly excoriates me for having the wrong politics. He also insists “road” is spelled “rode;” and “liberal” is spelled “liberial.”
  • RE: compass-directions: my brother (in-Boston) and I have been having a torrid argument over whether I can sense direction as well as he. It started when I mentioned that a certain road in northern-Delaware went mainly west-east. He loudly claims it’s north-south. Actually it’s mainly northwest-southeast. But next to the suburban development we lived in it mainly went west-east. (So that walking eastward along it, you were walking into the dawning sun.)
  • RE: “Asphalt (bituminous-concrete, rebar).......” I was loudly instructed the kerreck engineering-nomenclature for asphalt used in road-paving is “bituminous-concrete.” —“Rebar” is the kerreck engineering-nomenclature for reinforcing-rod. I once called it “rerod;” yet wasn’t thrown out of the metal-supply store when I did. The builder who built our house called it “rerod.”
  • “Dubya-sticker” equals “Bush-Cheney ‘04.”
  • “Mighty Weggers” is Wegmans, a large supermarket-chain based in Rochester we often buy groceries at.
  • Tioga-Central excursion-train” is the train we rode last Saturday (June 30) with the Rochester Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society.
  • Monday, July 02, 2007

    Monthly calendar report:

    Two of my July calendar-entries have images worth noting:

    SUNRISE OVER THE KEY WEST EXTENSION
    Painting by Howard Fogg.
    -1) My Howard Fogg railroad-calendar has a print of Fogg’s painting of a train on the famous Florida Keys extension of Florida East Coast Railroad.
    The Florida Keys extension of the Florida East Coast Railroad was the most audacious railroad project ever completed.
    Henry Flagler, promoter of the Florida East Coast Railroad, extended his railroad all the way to Key West in 1912.
    It involved building a huge number of bridges over open water, and a hurricane took out some of those bridges in 1935, and washed out much of the railroad.
    The train is on one of those bridges — a long, narrow viaduct of continuous concrete-arches.
    After the hurricane the railroad was never rebuilt, but the bridges were converted to highway use, and washed-out sections rebuilt.
    The highway bridges were rather rudimentary, so the highway was rebuilt as a newer, grander thoroughfare that skirts Flagler’s bridges.
    The remaining Flagler bridges still stand, and are used as fishing-piers.
    Like the partially-collapsed Kinzua Bridge (in northwest Pennsylvania), the bridges just end where what’s gone is gone.

    1964 289 Cobra.
    -2) My Oxman sportscar-calendar has a 1964 289 Cobra for its July entry.
    The Cobra was a sensation when it hit the market while I was in college.
    The AC-Cobra was the British AC sportscar chassis and body with a Ford Small-Block V8 installed in place of the Bristol inline-six.
    The Cobra was intended to put Ferrari on-the-trailer, but it was not to be. —It was instigated by Californian Carroll Shelby, an ex-Ferrari driver.
    Too many compromises — the AC-Cobra was more a road-car than race-car; which the Ferrari was.
    But even now the Cobra is still in demand.
    Later Shelby re-engineered the chassis and installed the 427 Big-Block. A huge cottage-industry has arisen making 427 imitations and kit-cars.
    The 289 V8 in this car has four double-throat Weber carburetors. That’s a throat for each cylinder.
    Just imagine trying to synchronise all those carbs — only in a race-car.

    -3) My Oxman hot-rod calendar for July has a ‘32 Ford Phaeton hot-rod that looks rather ugly.
    Like all phaetons it looks rear-heavy; a motorized bathtub.
    Actually, it’s a two-door sedan with the top cut off; Ford didn’t make two-door phaetons in 1932.

  • 289 and 427 cubic-inches.
  • Sunday, July 01, 2007

    Tioga Central

    TIOGA CENTRAL
    The Keed.
    Yesterday (Saturday, June 30, 2007), we went along on a dinner-train excursion sponsored by the Rochester Chapter of the National Railway Historical Society on far-away Tioga Central Railroad near Wellsboro, Pa.
    We did this because: -1) We never do anything much, and -2) I’ve always wanted to ride that railroad, although I thought it was in New York state.
    The Tioga Central is what remains of New York Central Railroad’s Williamsport Division, from Corning, N.Y. to Williamsport, Pa., although it had a long and storied history even before NYC leased it in 1899.
    Quite a bit remains; in fact, only the Wellsboro-Williamsport segment was abandoned.
    The remaining railroad was purchased by local governments (through a development-agency) to continue rail-service when Conrail abandoned the line.
    Tioga Central began passenger rail-excursions in 1994.
    So here we are bombing south (at least it seemed south; since Wellsboro is south of Corning) down Interstate-390 and Route 15, about a “hunderd” flaccid geezers and flirtatious grannies (Linda observed we don’t fit; despite being seniors), in two giant Prevost luxury motor-buses......
    .....When suddenly: “PRAAAAAMP!”
    “Who’s phone is that?” some geezer asks. “Is that your phone, Dave?”
    “I don’t know, but if everybody answers their cellphone, someone will have a call.”
    (The riders were all railfans, and they had downloaded the diesel-locomotive air-horn ringtone from the GE locomotive site. They had installed it into their cellphones.)
    Later an aging geezer, who was sitting in the middle of the bus, refused to get up and walk 15 feet forward to talk the tour-director, who was sitting in front.
    Instead, he called him on his cellphone.
    “Make sure the driver knows to get off at the Sonyea (Sohn-YAY) exit, Route 36.”
    Great! Backseat driving via cellphone — somehow I don’t think the developers of cellphone technology were thinking it would come to this.
    And riding the Prevost was an adventure. Wham-bitta-BAM. Boink-a-bounce.
    I had to hit the bathroom; as I was carrying a large serving of coffee.
    I accessed the on-bus bathroom, a tiny fiberglass installation about two feet deep by 1.5 feet wide — and was immediately slammed into the wall.
    A sign said don’t try peeing into the toilet; sit.
    Was it any wonder? If you’d tried standing up you would have peed all over the floor.
    I then had to pull up my pants — almost impossible when you’re getting slammed all over.
    I could just imagine some poor Granny trying to use that restroom.
    The Keed.
    The rust-bucket RS1. (The RS1 was introduced in 1941. This one was built in 1950, and is ex-Washington Terminal.)

    On the train, we walked to the front car, the only open car; which was placed right behind an old Alco RS1 rust-bucket (pictured). The RS1 had a fabulous air-horn.
    I unholstered my cellphone to call Jack, but no signal. We were out in the country, where no cellphone-service was available.
    Finally a cell-tower came into view on a far-away ridge-top, so now I had cellphone service, but I can’t say calling Jack was fruitful.
    -1) There was so much clatter and flange-screech I could hardly hear anything; and -2) what I could hear was the usual tiresomely-boring blustering about physical supremacy.
    Time was passing, and I had no idea if we’d ever encounter a grade-crossing, but then we did; and the RS1 let loose.
    “I hear that!” Jack said.
    There was a club-car in the consist: “Canyon-Club” (TIOC #500); unlike the coaches it had club-seating with seats-and-tables along one side, and the aisle on the other side.
    We prefered the open-car, since the air in the closed cars was fetid.
    Later was dinner-in-the-diner, probably the messiest entrè they could have possibly served: barbecued chicken and ribs.
    Dessert was strawberry shortcake, and then they passed out pre-moistened towlettes — not part of the standard railroad-diner drill, but sorely needed.
    I guess we were dinner-serving one. The remaining half were dinner-serving two.
    After dinner we returned to the open car; and the train stopped over the New York border, but not as far north as Gang Mills, where Norfolk Southern has a small yard for sorting trains on their old Erie-mainline. “We’re not authorized to go to Gang Mills,” a trainman said. Probably the freight-trains do, but not the passenger-trains.
    The RS1 uncoupled so the open-car would be unobstructed on return; and we had an ancient RS3 (also pictured) on the other end. (That RS3 had been on the back-end going north [I guess; but what can I possibly know, being a reprehensible liberial].)
    The railroad passes a man-made lake, part of a massive water-retention project that was installed after Hurricane Agnes. The teenaged son of the RS1 engineer related how the railroad (and adjacent highway) originally followed the bottom of the valley, and had to be relocated when that lake flooded everything.
    The Keed.
    RS3 and our train.
    Which explains why the relocated part was welded rail, and the original parts (most of the railroad) were stick-rail.
    “Clickety-clack;” up-and-down; flange-screech on every turn. Not as bad as the Arcade-and-Attica, but fairly rough.
    Northbound was about 20-25 mph; return was 30-40 mph.
    Strangely enough, the slow-order was the welded-rail segment: 10 mph.
    Returning, we rode past the boarding-site and up the hill into Wellsboro; a 2.1% grade. There was talk of needing the RS1 to help push, but that didn’t happen.
    We stopped at the old NYC depot in Wellsboro and reboarded the two Prevosts to travel back home — including through a short deluge.
    Rather boring, but only because it was like so many other train-excursions on antique equipment — weeds and backyards along the right-of-way, and discarded trash. Including a decaying speedboat full of auto-trannies.
    It got dark as we rode the Prevosts north; but all-of-a-sudden a screaming white light was glaring in the seat ahead.
    The lady in front had turned on her cellphone.

  • “Hunderd” is how my brother Jack insists “hundred” is spelled. He also noisily insists “liberal” is spelled “liberial.”
  • “Linda” is my wife.
  • “Jack” is my macho, blowhard brother-in-Boston; who bad-mouths everything I do or say. Like me he is a railfan; although not as much.
  • RE: compass-directions: my brother (in-Boston) and I have been having a torrid argument over whether I can sense direction as well as he. It started when I mentioned that a certain road in northern-Delaware went mainly west-east. He claims it’s north-south. Actually it’s mainly northwest-southeast. But next to the suburban development we lived in it mainly went west-east. (So that walking eastward along it, you were walking into the dawning sun.)
  • “Welded-rail” is rail welded into lengths of a quarter-mile or more. “Stick-rail,” otherwise known as jointed-rail, is what was in use before “welded-rail:” rail in 33-foot lengths jointed together to be a continuous rail. The “clickety-clack” was the sound of railcar wheels running over rail-joints.
  • “The Arcade-and-Attica” is another excursion-line, but so rough it’s only good for about 10 mph; it was laid in a creekbed.
  • A “2.1% grade” is fairly steep; you can’t get much steeper and still hold the rail — and a train climbing a 2.1% grade will probably need helper-engines, unless it’s light enough. (Our train apparently was.)