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Why did you get Started in Garden Trains?
Dara Legere: My interests lie in building my layout and watching the Garden Trains do the 200 foot loop through the garden. I also enjoy the gardening aspect of large scale but didn't notice that as a choice in the poll. On the GreenCrow line the garden came first and it seemed like the logical place to build a railroad for running my Garden Trains.
Tom Calvert: Operation was and still is my passion. Just watching garden trains going round and round does nothing for me at all. They must do something. Deliver goods, pick up products, switch and generally be a railroad. Tim Blagg: Somewhere down the road (for me) I think that running garden trains is going to be secondary to building the structures. I do like watching garden trains run but there needs to be a mix of capabilities with a railroad so that it lends itself to whatever you want to do with it at any given time. Dave Gill: I like building more than running garden trains. I make all types of structures from photos or magazines etc., also like to modify engines and rolling stock. I really like to have something different than any one else. I have a knack for making things from sketchy ideas. Brad Bennett: I'm a builder. As an artist I found the construction of a garden trains layout in the garden to be an extension of my interest and ability to be creative. Although I work professionally in 2-D, I found the challenge of the 3-D of the railroad enormously entertaining. The side benefits thus far received are the joyful looks of appreciation on the faces of all who come to our home. The railroad seems to draw everyone in, regardless of age or gender, and then perhaps to a defined time in their childhoods when life was simpler. Rick Henderson: Myself, I prefer branch line operations and switching. My garden train designs include a lot of industrial sidings where engineers have to pickup and deliver cars. I also like to put my structures clustered together around sidings and yards and not spread out over the entire railroad. This draws the focus of attention to the areas with the most operation. |
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Future of Large Scale: Youth?
Larry Mosher: My son and I started in garden trains 17 years ago when he was 7 with a starter set and added to it each year. We finally got to the point where we moved it outdoors. And for a few years he'd be out there with "He Man" and "Skelator" making them jump off of the bridges and trains. He finally lost interest when he got into High School so I was "forced" to take over. His first child should "arrive" in 2 weeks and it might just start all over again.
Tom Smith: We see thousands of kids and young families get excited over the garden trains and many take home a club membership form never to be heard from again. We need to do some follow up with the ones excited enough to want to take an application with them. The cost and size of the gaden trains hobby can be prohibitive to many. It is my thinking that a personal call and invitation to a meeting or our own layout might give the opportunity to get a better look and feel of what we do. It would also give a better chance to really talk over what is involved in getting started with Garden Trains. Rick Henderson: I think many a child that is exposed to garden trains at a young age has a great chance to return to his roots after he has experienced other pursuits in life. I started with my dad at the age of seven on weekends. For about 10 years I was deeply interested in the trains but as a military family we moved often and I was starting over often. This background interest in trains kept me returning to the hobby in various scales through the years when I may have been sidetracked by necessities like women and work. But I always came back to trains because of the exposure I had as a child. Now after fifty years in the hobby of model railroading, I can’t think of another hobby I would have enjoyed more. My hope now is that my daughters give me grandsons that I may encourage to take the right track, not to mention inherited my garden trains. John Damkier: I agree that children should be exposed and encouraged to play with trains. I do not think that large-scale is required. In fact, HO or N is better as the kid can start out with a smaller layout that the parent can afford in cost and space. This stuff is just too big for most people and parents are not going to turn their yard over to their child. Start them small, they will migrate to G when they are older. |
Garden Railroad Builder's Logs
There is no better way to share your railroad than with a GRBLOGS. Garden Railroad Builder's Logs is a new blog service of LSOL.com. You can post information in an easy-to-use blog format as often as you like to keep people updated on the developments of your Garden Railroad. Keep your projects organized online in individual projects and show your photos, videos and more online for the whole world to see. Plus you can read other blogs and comment on all the exciting GRBLOGS that others have posted at the site.Come see the first, the original and the best web blog dedicated to Garden Railroads. Remember: Some people talk about what they are going to do, and others actually do it. Come show people what you have done.
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