Morning Jon,
Can you explain the correlation between the two pictures you’ve posted immediately above this. Is the first picture coming from the side of the house up toward the front yard and then the second crossing the front yard?
Sure Ric The tree line in both pictures is the same. Camera in picture #1 is located in the neighbor’s yard looking toward the street. That’s Deep Cut between the 3rd & 4th pine tree. For picture #2 the camera is located next to the 4th pine tree looking back down the main from Deep Cut. My neighbor’s house on the left, mine on the right. Here’s a picture taken yesterday after half the border was installed from about the same place as picture #2 above… [url=lsc.cvsry.com/Border1-1024.JPG]
(http://lsc.cvsry.com/Border1-640.JPG)
[/url][color=blue]FF: Click to Enlarge - IE: Right Click Photo and select Open Link in New Window to Enlarge[/color] And here’s a preliminary track plan in the same orientation as picture #1…
(http://lsc.cvsry.com/OutdoorLoop.JPG)
Outbound trains approach from the bottom of the plan. The loop could function operationally as two industries with facing point switches. Trains would need to turn on the Wye in order to switch them. Depending on the length of the train, things could get interesting BTW - There is a tail to the Wye at the left, it was omitted on this drawing to keep the size manageable. Hope that helps. Jon
04/03/08 - Carlyle - Snow Plow & chains came off and backyard was cut for the first time yesterday afternoon.
Cut back, divided and transplanted some tall grasses. Put two big clumps in compost pile for the marina once the water goes down. All grasses and yuka plants at teh marina are currently underwater. Will be interested in what survives.
Yukkas are tough, they will probably survive. So, too, will the grasses (I think). Of more immediate concern are the Brown Trout that wash ashore in the Marina.
NOnonononono - we gots no brown trout. This is clean vater, give you no bad problems.
Interviewed on local TV standing in front of the water today, trying to convince them that floods may be bad, but droughts are a lot worse.
Ric Golding said:Saw some grass today -- along the road home. Ours is still two feet under the slush piles ...
04/03/08 - Carlyle - Snow Plow & chains came off and backyard was cut for the first time yesterday afternoon.
rats
Ric Golding said:
NOnonononono - we gots no brown trout. This is clean vater, give you no bad problems.Interviewed on local TV standing in front of the water today, trying to convince them that floods may be bad, but droughts are a lot worse.
Uh huh.
Floods bring topsoil. Droughts bring… what?
Rain again. I’m thinking a ark would be a nice thing to add to the lay out.