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.
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?
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.
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.
CN 5794 outside Prince George |
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.
5 comments:
Good series, Steve. Particularly liked the cement industry in Part 2, where everything is uniformly grey - characteristic for this industry.
Also, 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!
Steve,
I love how you captured the action in the shot of 5794 passing Miworth, very cool!
Thank you, Karl!
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