BRHSLIST
[Top] [All Lists]

RE: [CBQ] RR Smells-was story posts

To: CB&Q Group <cbq@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: RE: [CBQ] RR Smells-was story posts
From: HOL WAGNER <holpennywagner@msn.com>
Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 08:18:34 -0700
Delivered-to: unknown
Delivered-to: archives@nauer.org
Delivered-to: mailing list CBQ@yahoogroups.com
Dkim-signature: v=1; a=rsa-sha256; c=relaxed/relaxed; d=yahoogroups.com; s=echoe; t=1359472724; bh=3xPn0s1Kp3eKyOWkh58llsnD57sv/K7Mv7JOMX9ZCoI=; h=Received:Received:X-Yahoo-Newman-Id:X-Sender:X-Apparently-To:X-Received:X-Received:X-Received:X-Received:X-EIP:X-Originating-Email:Message-ID:To:Importance:In-Reply-To:References:X-OriginalArrivalTime:X-Originating-IP:X-eGroups-Msg-Info:From:X-Yahoo-Profile:Sender:MIME-Version:Mailing-List:Delivered-To:List-Id:Precedence:List-Unsubscribe:Date:Subject:Reply-To:X-Yahoo-Newman-Property:Content-Type; b=SX2T/JYb0aD6uFXvhGGzjszisbeC1lgZqGr6KCYwHu/WnbVZiZwUSiIuOSTbOiAkhngwCZ4iH3a9GtMcCQN+nhn3YoUUIxFSKqa+EUQMQXlhHJ/8rtIlwSJEkeZNK1DWm6ouTq8wba9tFVbgKw40CCZ6emkCPs90L6x0fUFNOEE=
Domainkey-signature: a=rsa-sha1; q=dns; c=nofws; s=echoe; d=yahoogroups.com; b=CbzyNKDykpqQAWCumLyP3tv4eboUMYd3Z364kXNo8XGSczSf6uVWlNVfDBC8hsgUWv/TM8HblbAwfeag9A1+TQLIWyuTPl0GEkPIVwLmNiR1eCx0lQtp46Pt06lQNSoY2VNXKI+GbYcjeE16veHJGhf/kpWQpuxs+fowE5TPQMM=;
Importance: Normal
In-reply-to: <11976.360b7b08.3e393894@aol.com>
List-id: <CBQ.yahoogroups.com>
List-unsubscribe: <mailto:CBQ-unsubscribe@yahoogroups.com>
Mailing-list: list CBQ@yahoogroups.com; contact CBQ-owner@yahoogroups.com
References: <11976.360b7b08.3e393894@aol.com>
Reply-to: CBQ@yahoogroups.com
Sender: CBQ@yahoogroups.com


Leo:
 
Glad you brought up the smells of industries along the line, because my two favorite smells have long been coal smoke and sugar beets being processed.  The latter is an agricultural smell that most people seem to hate (but then I also like the somewhat similar smell of the Purina Puppy Chow mill along the elevated section of Interstate 70 in Denver), but it is literally a sweet smell to me.  Maybe it's because of the memories it evokes, and those memories include a combination of my two favorites, since the Great Western Sugar factories (which were actually refineries but were always called factories) were coal-powered, used 0-4-0T dinkies to switch and dump the loads of beets, and those beets were delivered by either the company railroad, which ran steam into the early 1960s, or the C&S, which used steam into early 1959 -- or by the Q or UP.  I still drive out in late fall or early winter to the only beet sugar factory still running in Colorado, alongside the Q mainline at Fort Morgan, just to take in the smell.  That factory was still using its dinky for switching into the BN era.
 
Hol
 
 

To: cbq@yahoogroups.com
From: qutlx1@aol.com
Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2013 09:37:08 -0500
Subject: [CBQ] RR Smells-was story posts

 
From many hours spent waiting for a westbound dinky home on the weekends I recall the Clyde depot had that same disgusting  odor that Louis mentioned. The depot and Clyde as a station stop are no more.
 
Here's some RR smells you guys haven't mentioned:
 
The unique and unmistakable smell from the back platform of a waycar when you have a hotbox up ahead. That smell of all those burning carbons put you in motion immediately. Or the associated smell of freshly plowed ground when you've come to a stop after an emergency application of the air brakes. You don't have to look,you already know what's happened up ahead.
 
Here's a more pleasant smell that probably still happens each morning. After loading eastbound in the morning at the larger stops of Naperville,Lisle,Belmont and Downers; walking into the coach you were met with the fragrant mixture of maybe a couple dozen different freshly applied perfumes. The scent was almost overpowering. Far more than a department store display or even a floral shop.
 
And by the time you got to the front or rear car collecting tickets the fog of 60-100 people smoking met you. The car would literally have a haze hanging in the air. One pass thru the car and your uniform stunk the rest of the day.
 
Or getting off the "party car" westbound at Aurora on Friday night and leaving the aroma of split beer,drinks and tobacco smoke.
 
And then there were all the industry smells.....switching a metal mfg plant like Cat,Barber Greene,Lyon Metal,etc you were met with all those VOCs from freshly applied paint, cutting oil and cut steel.
 
We didn't refer to Rochelle,IL as Rochsmell w/o reason, the blend of fragrances on a warm summer night are unforgettable.
 
 
Leo
 
 




__._,_.___


Your email settings: Individual Email|Traditional
Change settings via the Web (Yahoo! ID required)
Change settings via email: Switch delivery to Daily Digest | Switch to Fully Featured
Visit Your Group | Yahoo! Groups Terms of Use | Unsubscribe

__,_._,___
<Prev in Thread] Current Thread [Next in Thread>