OK, there’s a few diseasels thrown in, but it won’t kill 'ya!
Twenty-five minutes of some good running, so get yourselves some snacks and a drink, settle in, and “remember when.”
OK, there’s a few diseasels thrown in, but it won’t kill 'ya!
Twenty-five minutes of some good running, so get yourselves some snacks and a drink, settle in, and “remember when.”
Thanks! Grest!
Hello Fire-uhm-flint (ooops - sorry)
“but it won’t kill 'ya!” you said so - well I hope not! Or else nothing will happen to you anyhow.
No, I reckognized it from 00:01 - I have that one on my computer !
D-e-i-s-e-l-l-s … but nearly killing me - if you look at them the way I did: each one of them a steam locomotive less!
The passing of the Pacemaker from 00:10 always takes me in. That whistle! Oh-my!
Heart-rending, unkempt wildness and powerful fury! On the other hand : that track condition at the switches - very much the way we saw it on the Reichsbahn tracks in East-Berlin. But they never ran over it at 80 - 85 mph but no faster than at 60 - 65 mph (100 km/h) .
Once we stood at the eastern end of the train hall at Eastern station (Ostbahnhof, East-Berlin, formerly the Silesian train station) and saw a Berlin - Hamburg train being pushed in by some smaller shunting diesel, consist composed of DR and DB coaches. In front of us was a rupture in the rail at one end of the switch, causing one then the other rail end to bent down under the wheels passing, making a classic, yet slightly loud “bang-dang” in case
So glad you’re back! Her majesty Juniatha, the “Steam Queen,” a title well deserved!
You know, I’m not surprised that 01-5 sneaked up on you like that. I was in Roanoke VA for a 611 excursion back in the 90’s and when 611 rolled past in the yard I was surprised how quiet it was, just a quiet “woosh-woosh” from the stack. Mind you, it was rolling toward the head-end to couple to the train so it didn’t have a load on it, but still it was quite surprising.
I’m also a bit surprised the East German railways were still called the “Reichsbahn,” I would have though the negative connotations of the word “reich” would have kept it from being used, but obviously the Communists didn’t care.
(I know the word “reich” means “empire,” but you know what I mean.)
I’m also surprised you could get that close to DDR rail operations without getting in trouble, but it looks like they didn’t care about that either. Those steam operations must have been quite a show!
And how about the all-too-brief shots of the cool old cars? Just as interesting as the locomotives!