Tuesday, May 13, 2008

The Pacific Coast Railroad Roundup

WOW!!! What a week it was down at the PCRR in Santa Margarita. I took a week of vacation to help out again with the 4th annual roundup which benefits the San Luis Obispo Railroad Museum and the largest yearly event that takes place at the Ranch. Phil and I started out cleaning up the property of old scrap metal parts and junk vehicles. What a difference that made. Karl Hovanitz from the Bitter Creek & Western showed up later with the first load of 2' gauge track panels for Peter Nott's visiting equipment, which I unloaded using the John Deere.


Here is Karl and Mike bolting the splice bars to the rails.


Later that evening, Bill Rust showed up with his trusty Fairmont S-2 speeder which prompted a run with the MOW crew to grease the inside of the rails to reduce flange wear on the locomotives. However, one of the crew members failed to hear the "INSIDE" part of the statement, and greased the top of the rails. That became a problem when we began to run on Friday.


The next day, I drove down to Jack Bodenmann's shop to help Karl with the rest of the 2' gauge track panels and see the progress on restorations going on there. Peter Nott has quite a collection of locomotives which are going to be restored. Here are just a few of them.


After assembly of the panels back at the ranch, I began grading and laying out a track plan for the 7.5" gauge railroad through the vineyard.


On Thursday, Phil and I took the red-eye to Reedly to check out and sign off on the newly restored Disney Coach #105 the Painted Desert. All I can say is this coach is awesome! The Hillcrest Shops have outdone themselves this time. Truly a museum quality restoration.


Friday was a day for training and certifying the crews. I took my test the night before so I got up early to put a fire in both locomotives so we could make some test runs and have them all warmed up for the weekend. I began my day at 5:00 am. Here is the Harpur #1 at dawn.


By 8:00 am most everyone had shown up for the training class. We had about 25 attendees in the tractor shop.


Earlier in the week we had learned that Judy McEntire, our Chief Operating Officer Jim McEntire's wife, died of cancer. In the true railroad tradition, we had a wreath placed upon our locomotive #1 in honor of her.


Around 10:00 I was looking out towards Highway 101 and saw a bright yellow passenger car on a flatbed truck headed south. 10 minutes later, the Disney coach arrived.


The training class stopped and everyone went out to watch the unloading.


Also arriving that morning was the rest of Peter Nott's 2' gauge equipment which I helped unload. Here is a picture of his locomotive and two riding cars.


Finally we got to running some equipment in the afternoon. We soon found there were some problems with the #1 & #3. Also we had a slippery situation on the railroad where the aforementioned grease job really messed up our ability to pull anything on the tracks. Phil and others went out to degrease the rails, while I did repairs on the #1 which included cleaning out the rust in the water lines, and draining over 50 gallons of bad fuel from the tank.

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