A visit to the CN yard in downtown Prince George on the evening of June 24 revealed a few engines. CN 2585 was sitting by itself at one end.
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CN 2585 in Prince George, BC |
At the other end, the set of CN 7276 (GP9), CN 262 (slug) and CN 1440 (GMD1) were working the yard. Everyone loves a GMD1, amiright?
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CN 1440 in Prince George, BC |
I spotted a beat-up old Chattahoochee Industrial Railroad car in the yard too. Note the old scanner tag on this car.
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Chattahoochee Industrial Railroad car in Prince George |
I followed it for several miles out of town. The line is signaled and I took note of a signal at a siding ("Miworth", I guess) that was green, indicating a train could be approaching. I stopped at the crossing hosting the sticker to the right and heard a faraway horn.
A few minutes of waiting produced an interesting train, a single engine CN 5794 leading a "unit" train of lumber loads.
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CN 5794 outside Prince George |
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CN 5794 passing Miworth siding outside Prince George |
There was an interesting industry near that crossing. I think it is Tilbury Cement, and it would make a good model railroad industry... very compact.
The same long spur hosted a little tank farm, clearly a former Shell facility.
That was it for June 24. The next day held a visit to the Prince George Railway and Forestry Museum as well as the two VIA Rail Skeena trains! See part 3.
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ReplyDeleteGood series, Steve. Particularly liked the cement industry in Part 2, where everything is uniformly grey - characteristic for this industry.
ReplyDeleteAlso, the CIRR woodchip gon which sadly reminds me of one I patched for CN, sold at a train show, and wish I had back now that my modelled locale is Vancouver!
Part 3 includes some cool equipment that we don't see much about, usually!
Thanks for sharing,
Eric
Thanks, Eric!
ReplyDeleteSteve,
ReplyDeleteI love how you captured the action in the shot of 5794 passing Miworth, very cool!
Thank you, Karl!
ReplyDelete