TrainBuff here!
I cut and pasted what I wrote yesterday from the summertime picture thread where Ralph first started this thread. Thank you Ralph, for moving this to a separate thread!
But firstly, Dham Ken ... I've been crazy about trains for as long as I can remember, too. I used to bug my parents (and I mean bug!) to take me to the trackside of the line that ran from Boston to Providence ... we used to stay for hours. My dad was interested as well, but mummy ... tolerated.
Now you're talkin'. Total train buff here. When I have the time, I do take the train to conferences, etc. I'd taken Amcrash once to Miami for an American Library Association conference -- 1st class. The service was great. Had taken the train several times to DC, New York, Philadelphia and Chicago. On the Chicago runs, I had a roomette ... now their fun and cozy.
I miss smoking on the trains as it was great fun to get naked, smoke cigarettes and enjoy a scotch or three before venturing out for din-din complete with china and cloth napkins.
Anyone with experience knows the perils of having to get to your toilet when the bed if fully extended over the toilet ... that's why there is a solid door and a zipper cloth door
Unfortunately, most of the time it is air transportation, which I might add, I do love to fly as well.
My interest in trains, when not riding them are various aspects of signal control; both autoblock and interlocking, and I can wet myself instantaneously standing in an interlocking station with ca. 30 levers! FASCINATING STUFF.
Wish I had the time to set-up a model. I would be most interested in O-on-2 scale. Of course wouldn't everyone want an outside train similar to amuzement parks -- from 7 1/2 to 12 in. gauge!
Any other train buffs out there?
I also had a grandfather who worked on the New York, New Haven and Hartford Railroad. Then for the Upton Grafton Railroad. Although he retired by the time I was born, I heard stories about him when he was a kid having to sleep in a caboose because of a bad storm and having to shovel the tracks for the roundhouse and at switch frogs.
... a different kind of life, from an era gone by.
If you can get your hands on a 1960 atlas of railroads (Rand McNally, I believe) there are tons and tons of lines still listed that have been turned into bike paths, and things of that sort.
R.