Our Tain Ride

I’ve had people asking questions about our train ride, so I thought I would answer this way.

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The train was a promotional train for Operation LifesaverOperation Lifesaver is an educational program taught on the train to eliminate collisions, deaths, and injuries at highway-rail intersections and on railroad rights-of-way.

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The ride is scheduled to take one hour to a destination and one hour back to the load-out zone.  Tickets were free, but you had to hurry to get your name on the list, all four cars were packed with people.  The train loaded and started up the track at 8:00 a.m., 10:30 a.m., 1:00 p.m., 3:30 p.m. (the one we rode), and 6:00 p.m. (this one went to Grand Junction.

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All but the 6:00 train was scheduled to go to Paonia, Colorado, which took one hour, all trains made it to Paonia, but the afternoon train.  Because we have three large (huge, very big) coal mines just above Paonia in the Somerset area, the afternoon train had to make way for the coal trains.  The coal trains have/had priority.  So the afternoon trains just went to Hotchkiss and sat on the track until the coal train went by.

The passenger cars were all 1940 plush cars, one with a dome.  Everyone wanted to sit in the dome, but no one got to.  All four cars were completely full, 2 to a seat.  On the evening train to Grand Junction, only people enough to fill the dome car rode.  These people had ‘special tickets’.   Next year I want a special ticket!

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I, personally, enjoyed the ride.  The train’s top speed was 45 miles an hour, because of the huge grades they had to pull, sometimes slowing to 25 miles an hour.  To get to Hotchkiss from Delta, by car is only 25 minutes.

I travel that road many times a week.  But to be on the train, going through a different area than the highway was really special!

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I have always wanted to take a train ride and now I got too.

At Least it isn’t Denver

Shannon’s truck broke just as she got to work in Grand Junction yesterday.  Since she would get off around 6:30 that evening we left around 4:00 p.m. to go get her. 

Thank Heavens! it was in the Target parking lot.  Shannon works at Cost Cutters in the busiest mall in Grand Junction. 

Why Thank Heavens! she was able to park the truck close to her work — where she pushed the truck into place wasn’t hard for Terry and I to pull her out of — AND the parking lot had lights!  Lots and Lots of Lights!

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Terry had to winch by hand, because we do not have an electric winch and I had to steer not hard but scary for me the truck onto the trailer.  By the time Shannon got off work the only thing left was to do was chain the truck down and come home. 

We ate supper at 8:00 that evening.  Long day, but not as long as if she still lived in Denver.

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Wild Life

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Where we are going to pick up the combine, the canal still has enough water for the ducks to swim and play.  But it won’t be long now that the canals in all of Grand Junction, Clifton, Fruita, and Loma will stand dry, waiting for the dams to open next spring.

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And when I go to work and when I come home from work I always meet AT LEAST one of these!

 

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On the Way to the City

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We travel through a really neat prairie, full of interesting dunes and canyons.  I love the play of shadows across the land.

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As a child I was always fascinated by this huge plateau called Wild Horse Mesa.  Even today I love driving by it.  There are NO wild horses!  Besides it doesn’t look like it could support life. 

 

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Then after all of that lonesome beauty we enter…..TRAFFIC!