Photo: Nebraska State Patrol |
Friday, August 26, 2011
Amtrak's California Zephyr Hits Crane, Derails - 22 Hurt
Tags:
Amtrak,
BNSF,
California Zephyr,
derailment,
passenger,
service disruption
Location:
Benkelman, NE 69021, USA
POTD - Beneath One Bridge and Over Another
Rounding out this week's theme for Photo of the Day of Tennessee Pass, Carl Weber returns to Colorado Railroads with a worthy photo indeed! How could I not include Red Cliff? Those who haven't been, should, despite the lack of rail traffic. The town is as aptly named as any. Good way to go out on a Friday.
PS: If you love Tunnel Motors, check out 5379's factory fresh paint job in 1977.
It's September 4, 1990 and the warmth belies the proximity to autumn and aspen gold. Rio Grande SD40T-2 5379 passes beneath the soaring US 24 bridge at Red Cliff, Colorado Photo: Carl Weber, B_And_A_Fan collection |
PS: If you love Tunnel Motors, check out 5379's factory fresh paint job in 1977.
Location:
Red Cliff, CO 81649, USA
Thursday, August 25, 2011
POTD - Minturn Years Later and Months Before
We are in Minturn for the second time this week for Photo of the Day and our theme of Tennessee Pass. This time, however, we are only a few months away from the Southern Pacific merger with the Union Pacific, 5 years to the day before 9/11.
The sun glares off the remarkably clean and unaltered nose of Geep 3099 as she leads a colorful consist and train into the yard at Minturn in July 1996. Photo: John Jauchler |
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
POTD - At the Summit, Cresting the Continent
Colorado Railroads continues the theme of Tennessee Pass for Photo of the Day by going to the summit of Tennessee Pass, where a tunnel pierces the divide, emerging after half a mile on the other side of the pass.
Railblazer is a veritable shrine to the Rio Grande. It hasn't been updated in 4 years and the photos are small by today's standards, yet I can't help but go to it to find vintage photos of the Grande in her glory.
Railblazer is a veritable shrine to the Rio Grande. It hasn't been updated in 4 years and the photos are small by today's standards, yet I can't help but go to it to find vintage photos of the Grande in her glory.
Geep 3117 a GP40-2 is westbound on Tennessee Pass in September 1980. In seconds, she'll plunge with her stable-mates into the tunnel beneath the summit Photo: Railblazer |
Tuesday, August 23, 2011
POTD - Has Anyone Seen My Right-of-way?
It's hard to believe that only 10 years before this photo was taken, this right-of-way was part of a well-maintained transcontinental railroad system, a vital national link carrying goods and commodities from Pueblo and points east to Salt Lake City and points west. In 2006, It's hard to see it among the weeds as nature attempts to reclaim the land for its own use.
PS: If you'd like to see more of Todd's trip, he posted some of his photos on RailroadForums.com.
A ballast train eases itself along the weed-choked main at first is east of MP 325 east of Eagle,Colorado on June 29, 2006. Rusted rails makes you go slow as snails Photo: Todd Busse |
Tags:
MOW,
POTD,
Tennessee Pass Route,
Union Pacific
Location:
Eagle-Gypsum, CO, USA
Mudhen 463 Frame Mated To Boiler In Mammoth Crane Event
Some great news has come out of Monte Vista this month! Denver & Rio Grande Western steam engine 463 has taken a major step in her return to steam. The frame and boiler were finally mated back together at last. Everything appears to be on schedule for the K-27 class Mudhen to return to steam at the beginning of the 2012 Cumbres & Toltec Scenic Railroad summer season.
Tags:
Cumbres and Toltec Scenic,
Denver and Rio Grande Western,
heritage railroad,
narrow gauge,
Preservation,
Restoration,
steam,
Volunteers,
web videos
Location:
Monte Vista, CO 81144, USA
Monday, August 22, 2011
POTD - Theme of the Week - Tennessee Pass
This fourth week of August, our POTD theme is Tennessee Pass. I know that a lot of folks would like to see the line return to service. Conversely, I know a lot of Eagle valley residents would just as soon it never run again. Yet Minturn was a railroad town from the start, and that's where we start today. Tomorrow, we'll visit Eagle.
EMD SD45 #5319 pulls into Minturn, a crew change point, on 11/12/76. Rebuilt to SD40M-2 by MK Rail, she now works for the UP as 4704. Photo: John Carr, CarrTracks Data: UtahRails.Net |
Friday, August 19, 2011
Colorado Railroad Museum To Lay 300 Feet of Track August 27th
This next Saturday, August 27th, Colorado Railroad Museum will be laying 300 feet of track in one day, with some help. Here's the news straight from the Telegrapher,
FasTracks West Rail Line Contractors and Denver Transit Construction Group are donating all the materials, including track, ties, and ballast, equipment, and labor to build 300 feet of standard gauge track in a single day.
Tags:
Colorado Railroad Museum,
Events,
Light Rail,
RTD
Wednesday, August 17, 2011
POTD - 737 Fuselages Rolling On Steel Wheels Make a Sight
There's something about loading a main battle tank on a plane, or a train crossing a bay by ferry, or more commonly, containers shifting from ship to train to tractor-trailer. It's a mixing of modes, showing that one mode just isn't going to make it all the way there. A hatch of 737-8 fuselages, still fetal but leaving no guess as to what they are, traveling by train is perhaps the oddest pairing. Rails are extremely efficient, yet confined to the path laid down. Jet flight is very inefficient but offers freedom in all 3 dimensions, yaw, pitch and roll. Juxtaposing the two is our Picture of the Day.
Boeing's latest iteration of the venerable 737 makes it's journey from Kansas City to Denver strapped securely aboard the spacious and quiet flatbed cars of BNSF Photo: Joe Blackwell |
Tuesday, August 16, 2011
I'm Still Gathering Steam
Well, guys and gals, I'm still catching up from this weekend. Sorry there is no POTD yesterday or today. I don't travel well like I used to, so what looked like a simple trip on Sunday afternoon became something I needed all of yesterday to recover from. It's very frustrating, but it can't be helped, I guess. Thanks for your patience while I gather some steam to tackle the rest of the week.
Friday, August 12, 2011
POTD - Silent Testimony in Buena Vista
Editors note: POTD continues, but after today, most will have a photo and a brief caption without the essay. Essays need to be fact-checked for accuracy, each of which can require significant blocks of time.
Life in Buena Vista since 1997 has been considerably quieter than the previous century, thanks to the Union Pacific's decision to mothball the Tennessee Pass route in favor of the Moffat Tunnel route. It's been considerably cleaner, as well. In the 40s and 50s, the Rio Grande's monster steam engines caused a smoky haze to hang over the entire Arkansas River valley, causing respiratory issues for soldiers training at nearby Camp Hale.
Such days seem foreign to the summer scene below captured by Adam Lutt. The Rio Grande bridge has eluded the paint cans of Southern Pacific and--thus far--Union Pacific. The former main line has sat dormant for so long that nearly all the kids in this scene have never seen a coal or TOFC unit train come through this valley. The thrum of diesel engines, the rumble of a rail grinder, and the chuffing of iron horses are all as foreign as can be from this simple day playing in the creek, their echo fading from human memory as the paint slowly fades from the bridge above. It's only a matter of time before the railroad vanishes completely from Tennessee Pass, a matter of time, and money, unless a client develops on these once-heavily traveled rails or Union Pacific gets serious about preserving and maintaining their future options. Yet if they do, they could just as easily paint over the bridge's Rio Grande lettering altogether, disturbing the nostalgic reverie of Grande Fans like me.
I think I'll go skip a rock.
Life in Buena Vista since 1997 has been considerably quieter than the previous century, thanks to the Union Pacific's decision to mothball the Tennessee Pass route in favor of the Moffat Tunnel route. It's been considerably cleaner, as well. In the 40s and 50s, the Rio Grande's monster steam engines caused a smoky haze to hang over the entire Arkansas River valley, causing respiratory issues for soldiers training at nearby Camp Hale.
Such days seem foreign to the summer scene below captured by Adam Lutt. The Rio Grande bridge has eluded the paint cans of Southern Pacific and--thus far--Union Pacific. The former main line has sat dormant for so long that nearly all the kids in this scene have never seen a coal or TOFC unit train come through this valley. The thrum of diesel engines, the rumble of a rail grinder, and the chuffing of iron horses are all as foreign as can be from this simple day playing in the creek, their echo fading from human memory as the paint slowly fades from the bridge above. It's only a matter of time before the railroad vanishes completely from Tennessee Pass, a matter of time, and money, unless a client develops on these once-heavily traveled rails or Union Pacific gets serious about preserving and maintaining their future options. Yet if they do, they could just as easily paint over the bridge's Rio Grande lettering altogether, disturbing the nostalgic reverie of Grande Fans like me.
I think I'll go skip a rock.
Locals and their guests play beneath a railroad bridge of the Rio Grande in a tame and cool Arkansas River in Buena Vista, strictly a summer activity in Chaffee County Photo: Adam Lutt |
Thursday, August 11, 2011
POTD - Big Ten 16 Years Ago
Denver's altitude is 5,280 feet above sea level, earning it the obvious moniker, the Mile High City. The railroad route directly west was built as Denver, Northwestern & Pacific Railroad and came to be owned by its successors, Denver & Salt Lake Railroad and Denver & Salt Lake Railway, as well as Denver & Rio Grande Western, Southern Pacific, and lately, Union Pacific through a series of mergers. It's apex was first at Rollins (Corona) Pass at 11,680 feet ASL and then inside Moffat Tunnel at 9,239 feet. Making up the difference (6400 and 3959 feet respectively) while at the same time keeping the gradient manageable and cost efficient was a balancing act that meant gaining altitude as evenly as possible. If there was a ramp of earth, much like Sherman Hill in Wyoming, the construction engineers would have had little trouble. As it was, construction from Denver into the foothills was the most difficult part. They had to claw and scrape for elevation to reach Boulder Canyon and the Flatirons. A tongue of land jutting out from the foothills became the stepping stone between the western high plains and the east face of the Rocky Mountains. The long, winding turns climbing onto and upon the butte are both ten degrees curvature, thus named the little ten and big ten curves.
On April 8, 1995, a Southern Pacific coal train descends through Big Ten and approaches Little Ten curves west of Denver, 18 months before the UP merger Photo: Rolf Stumpf |
Tags:
coal,
Denver and Rio Grande Western,
freight,
history,
Moffat Route,
POTD,
Southern Pacific,
Union Pacific
Location:
Arvada, CO, USA
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