HASSO HERING

A perspective from Oregon’s mid-Willamette Valley

When the crossing gates come down …

Written August 16th, 2021 by Hasso Hering

 

A Union Pacific freight heads south through Albany on Monday evening.

If you like watching trains, Albany is a good place to be: Lots of crossings, and many trains coming through.

On Monday, on my usual evening bike ride, the flashing lights were coming on and the arms were coming down just as I was nearing the Main Street crossing on the UP’s main line. And this is what it looked like:

If you were expecting something to happen in this short video, sorry to disappoint you.

I just get a kick out of railroads in action, and I hope you do too. (hh)





2 responses to “When the crossing gates come down …”

  1. H. R. Richnerr says:

    The wonderful variety of freight cars makes watching a real pleasure. We may lose much of that picturesque experience when containers take over the bulk of the traffic here at Millersburg. Meanwhile keep showing trains, please.

  2. George Pugh says:

    When I am stopped at railroad crossing I find myself counting the number of cars, to include the engine(s) and usually come up within a counter’s error of 100. I turned the sound off and, using two 3X magnifiers, ran the video through again and called it at 102. I wouldn’t bet money or property on my number, maybe an ice cream cone.

    I hold our farm’s singles boxcar loading record at five hours and seventeen minutes.
    I know other, off farm, people who would make me blush for even mentioning it.
    A few caveats: It was after we had gone from 100 lb. bags to 50 pounders. The
    cars had stretched from 40 feet to 55 and I only had to put 2,200 bags in.
    A few years later they demanded capacity loads at about 156.000 pounds.
    And, finally, I’m the only one on the farm to load one by themselves.

    When I was a kid there was a section crew at the Fayetteville crossing of the Oregon Electric Rail Road. I always hoped I could get a ride on the crew’s motorized “speeder.” Never did. I would make plans to build a “hand-car” like I saw in the old-time movies. (This was in the early fifties.)

    My dad and the men would haul 100 lb. burlap sacks stacked hand-truck high (5) to the siding on a flatbed truck to 40 ft. cars, wheel them in and stack them up to put 80,000 lbs. in a car. They would make a “dump” and then two-man them up from there. They earned that $1.00 an hour wage.

    Trains are neat.

 

 
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