By David M
I’ve always wanted to get a picture of a
train on the Renfrew Spur going over the Mississippi River. Recently, I had a Wednesday morning off and
decided that I would chase CN 589 to get that picture.
Early on Wednesday morning, I started
scanning these frequencies [Stand By: 160.545, RTC Call-In: 160.860, RTC
Call-In: 160.290] on my radio scanner. Around
8:30am, I overheard the clearances. I
then hopped in the car and drove to Carling Ave. and March Rd., in Kanata, to meet 589 at 9:00am (where
I’ve seen it there many times at 9:00). When
I arrived there, it was nowhere to be seen.
I thought that perhaps it was earlier than usual, so I then proceeded to the
crossing at Terry Fox Drive and then the crossing at Huntmar and Old Carp Road where I didn’t see
it. By now, it was 9:30 and I still
hadn’t made contact with it. I then
proceeded to Carp to see if it was there, which it wasn’t. I decided to park on the side of the road near the
Diefenbunker (picture below) and decided to wait for it.
Since 9:00, the scanner had been
quiet. At 10:00, the scanner became
active again with additional notifications for the crew. Two minutes later, I heard a distant whistle coming
from Carp. Finally at 10:11, first
contact was made. Once you have found
589, it is very easy to chase since it only travels 5 mph. I was then able to catch it easily at five other
locations.
I decided to leave the close chase and get
ahead of it to ensure I had sufficient time to set up for the shot of it crossing
over the Mississippi River bridge. I chose to set up on the
bridge on Mohrs Road. The shoot
turned out to be difficult since, in my rush out the door, I only took an
11-16mm wide-angle lens and a 55-200mm zoom lens. When shooting from the bridge, a 35mm would
have perfect as the 55 was challenging to get it properly framed, and the wide
angle gave a bit too much.
Rail fanning on this line is challenging
because there are no signals that you can sneak a peak of, or any hotbox detectors
that give you a heads up when a train crosses over it. The main advantage of rail fanning on this
line is that once you’ve found the train, you have many opportunities to see it
because it travels so slowly.
All in all, it was a good chase. The next time, I will try to chase it in the
other direction. If anyone has a
favorite place to shot along the line, or any pictures of the train on the
Renfrew Sub, please post a comment with a link to the pictures, because I’m
interested in seeing them. (So am I! - Michael)
Many thanks to David for his story and photos. Stay tuned for more from David in the next little while. - Michael
13 comments:
Nice guest post, David!
Nice catch and great pics! I missed this yesterday on it's way back through Bells Corners. Went to gas up thinking I had a few minutes still to get out to the Moodie crossing or atleast Cedarview. Ended up hearing the whistle around 25 to 4 in the middle of pumping gas at Cdn Tire. Argh!
Hi AJ,
Thank you for the approximate time in the afternoon, I've often wondered what time it went through Bells Corners on the return trip.
DaveM
Great post Dave! Some great pictures here. I've caught it many times on the return trip.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DIsQpAhvaPg&list=UUDrcItGvi5hppf-NLCYe89g
Here's an example of a 589 heading east over the Greenbank overpass at around 3:30 PM
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q-EWoEIS0qA&index=2&list=UUDrcItGvi5hppf-NLCYe89g
Here's another instance of the 589 passing over the 416 bridge at approximately 5:00 PM.
The times on the return trip vary from 3:00 - 4:00 PM or 5:00 - 6:00 PM
Hi Michael,
Great videos. I've not seen many videos of 589 in the past few years.
Looks like you've got much better luck catching it on the return trip than me. Between the two of us, we've caught it in both directions. :)
DaveM
Very true! I've never caught it heading west in the morning but I'd really like to in the near future!
This is all that's left to catch west of federal. Too bad the Beachburg sub is being torn up. Seems like a wasted opportunity.
Yeah, it's a shame what's happening, Keith. But in fairness, west of Federal, you can see the Arnprior local on the Renfrew Spur on Wednesday and the Twin Elm train (589) on Sunday and Tuesday on the Smiths Falls Sub. It's not much, but it's something.
My doctor is in Carp, and I've watched this local trundle through at least once when it was still under the Ottawa Central banner, fronted by an RS18. It sure does come through slow.
A few other occasions I've been in the doctor's office either waiting or mid-exam (annual exam) and after hearing the horn, wanted to slip out to see it.
Is this line going to survive the "Ottawa Rail Exodus" or is it going to be abandoned as well? It is not anywhere on CN's three year plan so that's why I was wondering.
Jim -- The reason it hasn't appeared on CN's plans is because the Renfrew Spur, as it is now known, is not owned by the railway. The right-of-way to Arnprior is owned by the city and maintained by Nylene Canada. As long as that plant needs its good shipped by rail, that line appears to be safe.
Does anyone know what's in those tank cars? I get to Kanata a few times a year for business, and our office is right by the March Road crossing. I'm always happy to hear the horn on Wednesday mornings!
Hi Joe. Thanks for stopping by. One of the blog's readers explained what's in the tank cars in the following post.
http://beachburg.blogspot.ca/2015/05/the-inside-scoop-on-arnprior-local.html
Michael
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