Jerryl:
I’m sorry to hear of the bad experience had by the garden model railroaders in your NMRA division.
I’m not an NMRA “top brass”. Just a member who also happens to be Director of MY local division. I assure you: the attitude you have experienced within your division is NOT the general rule throughout the NMRA. Far from it!
I have “eclectic” tastes in model railroading. I model, or have modeled, in N, HO, HOn3, O-tinplate, On30, and large scale (in it’s several variants). I and most of my compatriots . . . including many who are feromodelistas in Mexico . . . consider “garden railroading” as much part of the “model railroading” community as any other niches of specialty, gauge, scale, prototype, or era.
Allow me to wax philosophic for a moment . . . its a genetic handicap that I have learned to live with! Any kind of “modeling”, in both the professional and leisure worlds, represents some sort of a compromise with 1:1-scale reality. In a model, the important aspects of what’s being modeled are retained, while the unimportant aspects are minimized or ignored all together. The “devil is in the details”, so to speak: what’s “important”, what’s not.
In the professional world, whether you’re modeling aircraft performance, weather patterns, economic variations, war gaming, mathematical interactions, etc. etc., it is critical to identify the “important” details and get them right if you model is going to be of any use.
But in the world of leisure, the objective of a “hobby” is pleasure and relaxation. The choice of what’s “important” to one, and what is “not”, is a very personal choice. But in the hobby of “model railroading”, the choices and combinations available are almost infini