A Quiet Sunday
- -steves-
- Administrator
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- Joined: Thu Jul 28, 2011 1:50 pm
- Location: Cambridge & Peterborough
Seriously, thats all scale? You would easily fool me that it was real, absolutely fantastic!
The buck stops here .......
Ditton Meadow Light Railway (DMLR)
Member of Peterborough and District Association
http://peterborough.16mm.org.uk/
Ditton Meadow Light Railway (DMLR)
Member of Peterborough and District Association
http://peterborough.16mm.org.uk/
Yes all scale. I confess to having a bit of a thing about Nayook. On my way to opening up my workshop every morning, first thing I do is put Chas. Hawkins car by the door to his garage, after opening at least the front door and maybe the side door as well, then Alan Corrigan's bakers cart is put out front of Rodwells Store, plus a few cars parked in the street to show the town is awake, sad I know!
Saturdays, all the cars and trucks are in town, just as I remember the town where we farmed for a while.
You don't have to be mad, but it helps.
Saturdays, all the cars and trucks are in town, just as I remember the town where we farmed for a while.
You don't have to be mad, but it helps.
It's that sort of detail which I think makes the hobby more interesting. I've been scouring the census records for the area in which my railway is supposedly set. I've got to wait another fifteen years before the records for 1931 are released, but in the meantime I'm using the ones for 1911 to work out who might still have been around (WWI permitting). Given rural communities in those days would have had fairly static populations, I've started giving the passengers and staff names based on the census records.LNR:116583 wrote:Yes all scale. I confess to having a bit of a thing about Nayook. On my way to opening up my workshop every morning, first thing I do is put Chas. Hawkins car by the door to his garage, after opening at least the front door and maybe the side door as well, then Alan Corrigan's bakers cart is put out front of Rodwells Store, plus a few cars parked in the street to show the town is awake, sad I know!
Saturdays, all the cars and trucks are in town, just as I remember the town where we farmed for a while.
You don't have to be mad, but it helps.
As you say, you don't have to be mad......
Rik
Rik,ge_rik:116600 wrote: I've got to wait another fifteen years before the records for 1931 are released,
There is good news and bad news on this subject.
The next census to be released will be the 1921 one, which should be available in 2022, so only 6 years to wait for that one, not 16!
However if you are wanting the 30's specifically, the bad news is that the 1931 census records were destroyed in a fire, so that will never be available, unfortunately. However the 1939 Register which lists everyone in the country at the outbreak of WW2 is now available, but it costs an arm and a leg to look at individual households.
Guess what my other hobby is??
Philip
- Peter Butler
- Driver
- Posts: 5266
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:33 pm
- Location: West Wales
Hah! Peter, your pic. is the reason I chose mine. I wanted to get into an in depth discussion on the colour of cow pats. Please, I'm not criticising, but noticed the colour of yours and wondered are cattle brought into barns during winter in England, and fed on hay.
Jim, the tractor a Fordson F, is the ERTL diecast one unfortunately in 1/16th. scale so it's really a bit big. Bought as in the first pic. then got at. Milled many molded items off, and made up separate ones, manifold, steering arms, rods, and scale steering wheel, added wiring etc. and a weathered paint and chip job.
Pity I left the large screw uncovered (dam!)
Jim, the tractor a Fordson F, is the ERTL diecast one unfortunately in 1/16th. scale so it's really a bit big. Bought as in the first pic. then got at. Milled many molded items off, and made up separate ones, manifold, steering arms, rods, and scale steering wheel, added wiring etc. and a weathered paint and chip job.
Pity I left the large screw uncovered (dam!)
- Peter Butler
- Driver
- Posts: 5266
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:33 pm
- Location: West Wales
Here in Wales (slightly left of England!) cows are fed on hay throughout the winter so their pats do take on a different colour. I haven't made a study but just painted what I thought was about right. Perhaps they are a lighter colour when there is less moisture?LNR:116829 wrote: I'm not criticising, but noticed the colour of yours and wondered are cattle brought into barns during winter in England, and fed on hay.
Any farmers out there will be able to resolve this I'm sure.
The best things in life are free.... so why am I doing this?
I guess that explains it Peter, of course our cattle are out all year round.
I have memories as a youngster, sitting in the milking shed yarning with old Pat, blue smoke haze from the Villiers portable milking machine roaring away beside us, all of a sudden he would leap up grab a square mouth shovel run to the back of the cow and have a shovel full before it hit the floor, then out through a large gap in the wall, sit back down and carry on the conversation. Guess he knew a certain cow twitch, he was a big man too, you wouldn't believe he could move that fast.
I have memories as a youngster, sitting in the milking shed yarning with old Pat, blue smoke haze from the Villiers portable milking machine roaring away beside us, all of a sudden he would leap up grab a square mouth shovel run to the back of the cow and have a shovel full before it hit the floor, then out through a large gap in the wall, sit back down and carry on the conversation. Guess he knew a certain cow twitch, he was a big man too, you wouldn't believe he could move that fast.
- Peter Butler
- Driver
- Posts: 5266
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2012 10:33 pm
- Location: West Wales
I'm no farmer but as a lad, I was brought up in the country, down in Kent. I consider myself something of an expert on cow pats since one of our favourite occupations in the couple of weeks leading up to Nov 5th was to insert a 'penny banger' in a nice wet cowpat, light it and run...!Peter Butler:116840 wrote:Here in Wales (slightly left of England!) cows are fed on hay throughout the winter so their pats do take on a different colour. I haven't made a study but just painted what I thought was about right. Perhaps they are a lighter colour when there is less moisture?LNR:116829 wrote: I'm not criticising, but noticed the colour of yours and wondered are cattle brought into barns during winter in England, and fed on hay.
Any farmers out there will be able to resolve this I'm sure.
Based on that, I'd say the colour of the ones on the ground by the gate are about right.
Philip
Time, rot and blackbirds, have conspired to slowly remove a large amount of soil at the rear of the farm home paddock. The ground is terraced in two steps down of about 18" and the Heathcote timber has been there for close to 30years. So we got in the heavy equipment (borrowed from the loggers, with young Jack supplying transport.) and cut back enough dirt to be able to put in some new 200x50mm treated pine.
They unloaded the Cat using a large rock at the creek as a ramp.
Once the wall was in, the dozer was able to push back the dirt (to find the track to the house again!) and have a general tidy up.
Then loaded back on and return to the workshop for a hose down before returning it to the Loggers camp. (probably with a slab or two under the seat )
They unloaded the Cat using a large rock at the creek as a ramp.
Once the wall was in, the dozer was able to push back the dirt (to find the track to the house again!) and have a general tidy up.
Then loaded back on and return to the workshop for a hose down before returning it to the Loggers camp. (probably with a slab or two under the seat )
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