With Issy in Wales, Mum staying with my brother, and not a grandchild to be seen, Paul and I took the chance to visit Amerton for their gala event.
And what an event it was!
For a small railway, they know how to entertain the crowds. Unfortunately, the Ffestiniog festivities and the weather led to an admittedly small crowd.
As I've mentioned in the past, it's a remarkably friendly line as well. It's nice to be able to have relaxed chats with the footplate crews, locomotive owners, and everyone else involved.
I've gone overboard with the photos. Partly because some are for my own reference.
Apa Valley
Moving from an OO gauge micro-layout to an EM gauge compromise, via a rather major diversion into both 7 1/4" gauge and minimal space OO9
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Friday, 27 June 2025
A Return to Amerton
Friday, 20 June 2025
Farewell, My Lovely
I've got half a dozen simple projects to finish off. All quite simple, and looking quite good at the moment. Once they are out of the way I can move on to the next phase of my plans and , hopefully, finish off Dark Hall.
In three weeks, all I've managed to do is replace a tree on a Kato Circus module.
I need to replace the foliage at some point, since it started off as 4mm scale shrub.
I can't remember if I mentioned that my 7 1/4" gauge track has found a new lease of life as a portable line for use by the Foxfield Miniature Railway, but Teddy has now gone there as well, whilst awaiting collection to go to his new home in The Netherlands.
Saturday, 14 June 2025
The Itch
Many years ago, as a young manager, I was put in charge of an office full of misfits. Think Slow Horses, but without the espionage. One of them was Ron, an ex-Chief Petty Officer and the living embodiment of an old-school CPO, who was seeing out the end of his working life.
I kept in touch after he retired, something he struggled to cope with.
It was Ron who introduced me to the area around Kings Cross, or at least a different aspect of it from the one I knew in my CIB days, investigating miscreant police officers.
Ron introduced me to the little cafes in the area, especially the Italian ones. There I learned to love liver, bacon and onions and discovered the secret of how to cook it.
He also took me into Victor's.
For those too young to remember, Victor's was THE place for US modelling in the UK.
In that little shop I bought the Walther's catalogue that still sits on my shelf, my first MDC kits, and books on lines like the Kennebec Central and various short lines. It was where I first opened the pages of Narrow Gauge and Shortline Gazette.
At the time, I was short on cash and living in a house share in Hendon. All I managed to build was one small diorama.I had vague ideas of a model based on the fictional Lake Woebegon
Time rolls on. Ron died after a very short retirement, Victor's closed, and the last time I was in what was once the Italian, the bill ran well into three figures.
Life got interesting over the next decade, but all my modelling was in OO9, and then came the really busy years. I might not have got much modelling done, but I did get to travel for work.
So, from time to time, I've come face to face with American railways, and those of Canada and Cuba.
The excursion vessel in Chicago creeps into this because I've been planning to model something like that for years, but a lot of American lake steamboats have very subtle lines. Cap Streeter is much simpler.
Where am I going with this? I'm not sure!
On the exhibition circuit, I've been coming across some quite nice North American N gauge layouts. I'm also in some modelling and prototype groups on FB which have been providing occasional inspiration. I've always been tempted by a micro using a car float as a sector plate.
A few items of stock are slowly finding their way onto a shelf. I find it hard to plan without something concrete in front of me. It might come to nothing. who knows?