This summer and early this fall, I have been able to collect a fair number of random railway photos that don't quite fit in with any particular theme or topic of a post. As I have done in the past, I usually give myself some time to store up a few and explore them in detail in a random post.
I suppose if there's a theme or topic that unites these photos, it's as follows. When you blog about railways and live in Ottawa, you need to be ready to take a railway photo anywhere and everywhere you can. To go one step further, you also need to constantly think of new places and new vantages points to take photos, so you can present some shots that aren't constantly covering the same ground.
That's because Ottawa has very little to offer, obviously.
I see this often online where railfans will take a shot of the same train at the same location at the same time of day. For them, it's fulfilling and worthwhile. That's not my thing anymore. I need to mix up the landscape and the background, not to mention the points of view, to keep things interesting. I think that's why a fair bit of my photography is now taken with landscape in mind.
I'll start with a shot that was shared with me by my sister. She and her husband were celebrating their 20th wedding anniversary in late September. They found their way to Alaska, where they took a ride on the White Pass and Yukon Route passenger excursion from Skagway, Alaska.
Here's a shot of a few of the vintage 19th century vintage* coaches ready to welcome passengers for an excursion from Skagway to Carcross, Yukon, where the line currently ends. The railway, now owned by a company that includes Carnival Cruise Lines, operates in Alaska, northern British Columbia and Yukon. In recent years, there were talks about restoring service all the way to Whitehorse, Yukon's capital, but that has not materialized. Part of that discussion includes the line taking on freight service again, as mining interests still work along the route, although much of this traffic is handled via trucks.
* - I neglected to mention in my original text that these vintage coaches are mainly newer builds made to look like 19th century equipment, although some are indeed very old and there are even some originals still in the railway's possession. Read the comments below for more.
It would be interesting to see this 3-foot-gauge operation back in action all the way to Whitehorse again, complete with freight operations, but this would require a fair bit of investment on the part of governments. I'm not sure there's a business case to be made right now.
A few days ago, I was on my way home from an appointment in Orleans, in Ottawa's east end, when I decided to avoid the westbound construction on the Queensway by taking some other city arterial routes back home. That path brought me by Ottawa's main train station on Tremblay Road. It was quiet when I arrived, save for this P42 and HEP consist pointed eastward, although the train was a double-ender. I am guessing this was a Montreal-bound train, as I have boarded eastbound trains on this track before.
I didn't need to take another shot of a P42 and HEP consist, as I have hundreds of similar shots, but the thought occurred to me as I watched the train idle: How much longer will I see these trains? Even the engines with a face only a mother could love won't be around forever. The Venture sets are everywhere now and the legacy rolling stock is fasting becoming scarce. It's always worth a shot.
In the summer, my family visited Sarnia and found our way to the Bluewater Bridge, which connects to Port Huron, Michigan over the St. Clair River. Beneath the bridge in Port Huron, near the Thomas Edison Inn, you will find this baggage/passenger car that once belonged to the Chicago, Detroit & Canada Grand Trunk Junction Rail Road. The railway connected Port Huron to Detroit beginning in the mid-1800s and became part of the Grand Trunk Western in 1928.
Thomas Edison, a world-famous inventor born in Ohio, spent much of his earlier years in Port Huron, which is why the hotel is named in his honour. Edison also worked for the Grand Trunk, beginning as a young man when he told items, including newspapers and candy, to travellers bound for Detroit.
This last image isn't exactly random as it's an image of Via Rail Train 84 headed eastbound toward Stratford Station en route to Toronto. I was lucky enough to catch this train while in Stratford this July, but I wanted to share this image, taken amid a sea of visial distractions. I liked the curvature of the tracks and the trees as a brackdrop. I will share my other photos of this meet later on, but I thought I would put this one out there to see what people thought. It was a bit of an experiment. I'm not sure about the concrete and metal poles framing the train. I like that there's a stop sign in there as well as some crossing signals. It shows you how the Guelph Subdivison snakes its way through the city in and around the station. In this image the consist is crossing Downie Street and making its way to Niles Street, which is the last street eastbound before it hits the station.
A bit of bric à brac from the last few months.
Hi Michael,
ReplyDeleteBric-a-brac bracketing opportunistic Ottawa offerings by VIA living VIAcariously through the VIAriety VIAriously offered. Off the charts!
Or to put it another way, VIA has no idea what its long-term strategy is for the LRC, HEP or Venture fleets. That's the way it seems, anyway. First, the pronouncement that there would be no more HEP east of Toronto. Then one day a week. Then up to two sets operating. Who knows?
I do know that several HEP cars have been retired and several LRC cars were sidelined after frame crack inspections. So you are not out of line for photographing a line of HEP cars. VIA's cornucopic consists are coming to a conclusion one of these days. Then, Siemens sameness will set in, and we will be wallowing in nostalgia for heaps of HEP.
Thanks for sharing,
Eric
I rode the WP&Y in 2023. Highly recommended. The excursion is a motor coach ride outbound and the train ride inbound, or vice-versa. However, the passenger coaches in the photo are not vintage. All 300 series coaches, which form the consists for current excursions, are new builds constructed between 1998 and 2015. They’re designed to have a vintage look and feel, but they’re newer than most Via Rail equipment. ….. The Grand Trunk line from Port Huron to Detroit parallels Gratiot and Groesbeck Avenues through Macomb County NE of Detroit. It was about a mile from my old office in Center Line. Doesn’t see much traffic. Most CN traffic out of Port Huron heads west through Durand, Lansing, etc. A cookie cutter GT station like those throughout Ontario still stands in Mount Clemens. I always thought that line would make a great Detroit to Toronto connection.
ReplyDeleteKevin -- You are right that many of the "old" White Pass and Yukon coaches are newer builds made to look old. While I was reading about the line's equipment, I did read that some of these coaches are indeed quite old and have been kept in operating condition for many years. There are a few that are original. As for the old Detroit-Port Huron line, you're right that it would likely serve as a useful passenger line, if only there was a vision.
ReplyDeleteEric -- Via is a moving target these days, is it not? Just when you think you know what's ahead, they swerve. In this case, I'm glad that the old HEP streamliners are still around. I am thankful I had the opportunity to ride one to Toronto a few years ago, although it was not a comfortable ride!
ReplyDelete