The world of trains according to David Graham
Top photos from January 1st, 2020
January 1st, 2020
We started the year in Galveston, took the Bolivar Ferry, which is free and state-run in a place where socialism is anathema, and worked our way into Louisiana on the hunt more for crawfish than trains.
Galveston, Texas
Galveston is a significant industrial port, cruise port, and tourist town on the coast of the Gulf of Mexico. The island is home to several railways, an enormous single track bridge with its own authority shared by UP and BNSF, and a century-old tram.
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We went out to see the bridge and were immediately greeting with a lengthy BNSF coming onto the island as my first train for 2020. Not much in the way of publicly accessible views of the bridge on the island side, but we found a place at the end of a public road surrounded by no trespassing signs -- so clearly others have tried to go a little further.
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Immediately after the long southbound arrived at Galveston, a short BNSF took off to head back to the mainland. We went back out to the bridge to watch it sans video, but the bridge failed to lower properly and the train was stopped on the bridge for a while before we left to explore other parts of the island.
Orange, Texas
Orange is on the Texas-Louisiana border along the Union Pacific and I-10.
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After sitting just out of view for nearly an hour as an Amtrak cooled its heels just out of view in the other direction waiting, I told my daughter that the best way to make a train come was to give up and leave. I packed up my tripod, got in the car, and the train finally moved without warning, passing at excruciating slow speed with plenty of brake noise.
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After losing at least an hour to a UP parked on the main due to what appeared to be an outlawed crew, this slightly overpowered Amtrak finally got to move on.