Texas Fall/Winter thread!

/ Texas Fall/Winter thread!
  • Thread Starter
#4,751  
FG, Not sure I heard you correctly, you say you will be "wing walking", or just wing rocking:D? Yes! I want to see that:D

When my daughter was born, we lived I kid you not, 200' from a RR track. Total nightmare the 1st couple of weeks,but after a month or so, didn't even notice. If I found land at a good price with a RR going through it, I wouldn't think twice and collect on the savings. My biggest fear in farm country would be possible fires generated from the track.
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,752  
kyle; Kind of you to allow me a t-shirt and socks! I'm afraid headlights might be prominent in the temps predicted for next week though! :confused2:

I got to thinking that ear muffs wouldn't hinder a rain dance either. If anyone else is near, put your sunglasses on for those headlights!
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,753  
My last 2 years of high school, we lived immediately adjoining the railroad tracks, and the only time we even noticed the sounds of the trains was if we were watching the TV and train drowned out the sound.:laughing:

Then in August, 1994, I was doing gas leakage surveys and went on a job in Duncan, AZ. The only RV facilities were adjoining the railroad tracks. The very first night I went to bed early (2 hour time difference from the job I'd come from in Pampa, TX) and when the train went by, I thought I was back in Alaska during an earthquake. There was a long train, 5 engines, that went north, empty, mid-morning every day to the copper mines, then back south, loaded, about 9 to 9:30 p.m. and it literally shook our motorhome when it went south.
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread!
  • Thread Starter
#4,754  
Nothing wrong with "headlights" as long as you can change from High beam to low beam:D Actually it is good to know that they still function!!:eek:


So, Bird, did you find any gas leaks?:laughing: Have to time your sleep to the train schedule:laughing:
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,755  
So, Bird, did you find any gas leaks? Have to time your sleep to the train schedule.

If you've never been to Duncan, AZ, you don't know what you've missed.:laughing: There was one restaurant in town, and we ate there the first night. I think we were the only customers; don't know how they stayed in business. There was also one grocery store, and what little produce they had would be thrown away in the stores we're accustomed to. So we drove 40 miles, one way, on Saturdays to get groceries.

There were very few homes in that town that I would even consider living in. However, the people were nice folks, and yes, I did write up several leaks; only a couple of really dangerous ones.

The worst part of the job was that I'd been working alone in Texas, on daylight savings time, so I started each morning as soon as it was light enough for me to read the serial numbers on a gas meter. But in Duncan, they needed to have one of their employees go with me to try to train him (they told me themselves that the reason they hired my company to do the survey was that the state inspector had come down hard on them for not knowing what they were doing). Now normally, I'd have enjoyed having a gas company employee along with me, but since Arizona was an hours difference, and not using daylight savings time made it 2 hours, and they started to work at 8 a.m., so for me it felt like sitting around waiting to go to work until 10 a.m. every day.
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,756  
My last 2 years of high school, we lived immediately adjoining the railroad tracks, and the only time we even noticed the sounds of the trains was if we were watching the TV and train drowned out the sound.:laughing:

Then in August, 1994, I was doing gas leakage surveys and went on a job in Duncan, AZ. The only RV facilities were adjoining the railroad tracks. The very first night I went to bed early (2 hour time difference from the job I'd come from in Pampa, TX) and when the train went by, I thought I was back in Alaska during an earthquake. There was a long train, 5 engines, that went north, empty, mid-morning every day to the copper mines, then back south, loaded, about 9 to 9:30 p.m. and it literally shook our motorhome when it went south.

I was born and raised in a house 1/2 block from the tracks. You couldn't see them as they were in a valley parallel to a cross street at the end of
the block. In my early years they were steam engines. There was a big Y merge of double tracks up a little ways in the valley with big old hand thrown switches. The trains spent a lot of time there switching and reversing but ran on a pretty good schedule. Most were freight and coal but there was an interurban passenger train as well that people rode in from the country to work so timing was essential.
I loved going down to the edge of the valley and watching them work, puff, and screech. In those days they had an engineer, a fireman, and a caboose with a brakeman/switchman or two that walked the car tops to work brakes and get down to throw the switches.
Once in a while, certain crews would let a couple of the neighborhood kids in the engine cab while it was sitting still or being fired with coal.
What a thrill. They were not supposed to do it, but in those times a lot of things went on that can't today because of all the potential law suits folks dream up or copy in this modern world.
My mother had it all figured out, and knew just when it was safe to hang laundry on the line and when to run out and get it before the soot
fell all over the white sheets, my dad's white shirts and other laundry. Sometimes a wash had to be hung and taken in 3 times before it was dry.
My dad always told my mom not to feed the bums that rode the trains and would come up the street and nearby streets as they would spread the word and there would be guys knocking on the door for a sandwich all day long. Well, he was right, but my mother had a big heart.
The bums were always respectful though and most offered to do chores. My dad finally told them we just could not afford to be feeding them
so they quit coming.
When diesel electric locomotives replaced steam it was not near as thrilling for us kids but the moms sure liked it.
I still love trains and have quite a collection of HO models. No track set up right now, but it is on the "honey do list."
My wife likes making the scenery and is good at it. I like the wiring and having multiple engines and switches under control.

Oh, and we used to make snow ice cream but had to watch that it wasn't full of soot.

My mentioning that I haven't had to plow snow this year will come to an end after lunch. The engine pan skid guard on the Grand Cherokee
is just about touching the snow. So I turned the block heater on on the 4020 at 8 AM and will try to start it soon. I need to haul a couple hay rolls to the horse barn too so we will see how quick I can do that, plow 1600 feet of main driveway, and get back to the Lazy Boy for some football/naps.
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,757  
Where I lived until I got married, joined the Navy, and moved away was really within a stone's throw of railroad tracks. As the old MKT (Katy) Lines tracks left Denton to the South, the trains had to go uphill until they passed the Acme Brick Company yard. A valley was cut for the tracks, but the train still had to go uphill as it pulled a load out of Denton. Because trains had to slow down when going through town, they couldn't keep up their speed. Many times, the engines would stall on the tracks just directly in front of our house. When that happened in the old days, they would give a blast on the horns to signal for an additional pusher engine to come and boost them up the hill. I can remember many nights being waked up from horns blasting just outside our house. You just got used to it and lived with it.

The one thing I could never get used to is the sound of a train starting up. When a train starts, slack is taken up between cars with a bang. In the middle of the night, that sound would start almost a mile away and come roaring by our house. Many nights, I'd sit up straight in bed thinking a truck was coming through the house as the cars started moving and the sound, BAM! BAM! BAM!, of hundreds of cars along with the vibration shook our house. When I was in the US Navy, sleeping just aft of the anchor chain locker was no problem. Nothing made noise like the trains I grew up with.:D
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,758  
Come on Summer! Chloe being Chloe.jpeg
hugs, Brandi
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,759  
Come on Summer!<img src="http://www.tractorbynet.com/forums/attachment.php?attachmentid=357102"/> hugs, Brandi

This Tuesday will NOT be summer like in Texas!

Staying at the ranch with F-350 safely parked. Had the Corvette in Houston last week and left early Thursday headed to the ranch. Plastic cars and idiots on ice don't mix well.
 
/ Texas Fall/Winter thread! #4,760  
Nothing wrong with "headlights" as long as you can change from High beam to low beam:D Actually it is good to know that they still function!!:eek:

Yes, they still function as normal! Nothing on me that is fake, yet! :D We'll see if I can say that in 10-15 years! ;)
 

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