New York Times article

Johnny Trains May 1, 2003

  1. Johnny Trains

    Johnny Trains Passed away April 29, 2004 In Memoriam

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    Families Combine Railroading, Gardening

    April 30, 2003
    By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

    Filed at 1:27 p.m. ET

    NEW MARKET, Va. (AP) -- Want to work on the railroad? Then
    become a gardener. Many families are crossing gender and
    generational lines to make model railroading and gardening
    into one year-round landscaping project.

    It combines some varying interests,'' says Paul Busse, a
    landscape architect from Alexandria, Ky., who specializes
    in designing railroad gardens. ``Ninety percent of our
    clients approach it as a couple. The wife might be the
    gardener while the fellow might be into model railroading.

    The gender in my garden railroad club (Greater
    Cincinnati Garden Railway Society) is about three-quarter
    couples,'' Busse says. ``With the strictly model railroad
    clubs, it usually runs 95 percent men.''

    Railroad gardening isn't something new. The concept began
    in Britain more than a century ago and became popular here
    in the 1920s and 1930s. Interest fell during World War II
    but climbed again when LGB -- Lehman Gross Bahn, a German
    company -- began producing large-scale trains in 1968.

    Trains in today's typical garden layouts are larger than
    the indoor varieties we toyed with in our childhoods --
    something called ``G'' scale. Individual cars go about the
    size of a loaf of bread while locomotives can extend 3 feet
    to 4 feet long.

    There's a wide spectrum of themes,'' Busse says. ``The
    world of G scale encompasses everything from narrow gauge
    (tracks) and European trains to all steam or all diesel
    engines.''

    Busse even incorporates circus trains and streetcars into
    designs he makes for some of his commercial clients, like
    the Phipps Conservatory and Botanical Gardens at
    Pittsburgh.

    Many of the locomotives are built with sealed drives. That,
    combined with specially treated tracks, makes it practical
    to run them outdoors, rain or shine.

    It's OK to enjoy model railroading and the sun at the
    same time. Or for that matter, the snow,'' says Doug
    Blaine, vice president-marketing, for Philadelphia-based
    Bachmann Industries, a model train manufacturer.

    There are companies selling miniature snowplows for
    mounting on the front of engines so tracks can be cleared
    in winter. These trains are meant to be outdoors 365 days a
    year, although most people build a train shed as part of
    their railroad design. They pull them in at night, out of
    the weather.''

    Busse puts it another way: ``If you're hardy, the trains
    are, too.''

    Model trains are another way to add motion and color to a
    garden. By moving your railroad from a plywood table in the
    basement to an outdoor setting, you're getting a live
    layout that can grow and change with the seasons. Some
    pruning may be necessary, however, to avoid derailments.

    And then there's scale. Similarity in size doesn't matter
    much to some people when it comes to laying tracks in their
    gardens.

    Some are content to run their trains through rows of
    petunias and that does look great,'' Blaine says. ``Others
    think they should be mated with smaller plants. Scale is
    all to those people.''

    Many hobbyists suggest adding a water garden if you have a
    model railroad or adding a model railroad if you have a
    rock garden. They're natural companions.

    Trains can be an accessory, tucked in there like a
    surprise,'' Busse says.

    Miniature plants can be pruned to fit the landscape,
    perhaps replicating a particular region or locale where one
    lives or grew up. Dwarf conifers, thyme, heather, creeping
    sedum, coleus and alpine strawberries are recommended. Moss
    can front for grass.

    Railroad cars give you a good reason for bridges. I
    suggest getting as much dimension in it as possible --
    stuff like trestles and tunnels,'' Busse says.

    Stress the landscape dimensionally if you don't want to
    stress the trains too much.''

    He tries incorporating native materials as much as he can
    into his pint-sized structures. Twigs, bark, lichen and
    leaves can be made to resemble stone, cedar shakes or
    siding. The materials can be crafted into authentic-looking
    replicas of local buildings or landmarks -- say a covered
    bridge or water-wheel-driven gristmill.

    Longtime practitioners say it's fine for beginners to have
    one-track minds.

    Build an oval, then consider expansion,'' Blaine says.
    Don't think you have to do it all at once.''

    The average residential layout runs $300 to $500 and goes
    on from there.

    You can take it as seriously as you want and as far as
    you want,'' Busse says. ``There are literally no (price)
    limits.''

    Look to people already into the hobby for ideas and
    suggestions. Garden Railways magazine lists more than 150
    clubs at its corporate Web site.

    If there's any kind of common thread running through
    railroad gardening,'' Busse says, ``it's that everyone has
    a lot of fun doing it.''

    ------

    Recommended reading:

    Garden Railways magazine, Kalmbach Publishing Co., P.O. Box
    1612, Waukesha, Wis. 53187-1612; ``Garden Railroading:
    Getting Started in the Hobby,'' Kalmbach Books; ``How to
    Build Your Garden Railway,'' Sidestreet Publishing.

    ------

    On the Net:

    For a list of garden railroad clubs
    and hints about getting started:
    http://www.gardentrains.com
     
  2. Dave Winter

    Dave Winter TrainBoard Member

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    Great story. Thanks for sharing it.

    Some say LS is slowing down with fewer displays and sales at MR shows. Others, in my area, say it's growing quickly with new shops and older hobby stores stocking more items. Hard to say.

    Dave at www.wvrr.ca
     

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