This morning just after I woke up, and without my knowing it, our young cat, Mr. Greyford, must have been right behind me when I entered my model room to get something. He was silent and I didn't see him. I left and closed the door. Five minutes later I heard a horrible loud crash and, when I opened the door, the only layout I've ever completed, a 1x6 foot On30 switchback at a mine, was upside down at a 45-degree angle, half on my workbench and half on the floor. It is completely obliterated and impossible to repair or reconstruct. The devastation includes the rolling stock, structures, and everything else--all scratchbuilt. It represented years of planning and six square feet of as close to modeling perfection as I could create between 1998 and 2000. Sic transit gloria. -- Russ
I seriously doubt Greyford intended to knock down the layout or anything on it. I'm pretty sure he found himself in the room, noticed he could jump onto the workbench, and from there discovered the shelf layout above where he could get a better view of the room. When he jumped the shelf flipped over, Greyford would have gone flying, and the layout, structures, and rolling stock experienced armageddon. The thing that hurts is the loss of hundreds of hours of my most intense work on a six foot long "model" whose near perfection I studied several times a week and truly enjoyed. On the other hand, only safely backed up digital stuff stands a chance of survival; I long ago realized only the modeler fully appreciates his delicate creations and he's lucky if they last as long as he does. -- Russ
I remember seeing that in some magazine once upon a time. Seemed quite civilised to me.
Russ, A cat-astrophe. I don't mean to make light of it as I can imagine how you felt when you saw what happened. I too sometimes just enjoy looking at parts of the scenery that I've created.
So far my tiny layout has escaped any serious damage from any of our cats over the years other than a few chewed tips of some conifers.
I hope you may find, in a day or two, that some of the devisation may be less than it first appeared. Glad that you have photos.
Sorry to see that happen Unc.
I've seen pictures of it before a work of art!
Maybe you can salvage some of it and give it a go again.
Jerry
Maybe I'll remodel the layout as a parking lot .... -- Russ
Never mind we are all still alive - but I bet the Cats got a headache and he won't do that again !! - its the first time I have seen that incredible little bit of workmanship are they the only photos you have if not lets have more for the gallery
Barney
Looks adequate !!
That is indeed a shame, however, I am confident that you can turn the accident into something positive with a little creative thinking and imagination. Perhaps an abandoned and derelict version of its former self that has suffered the ravages of time, weather, forest fires, earthquakes, giant cats...
How awful! It was a magnificent model!
Thanks, everyone. And, for Barney, a few photos. -- Russ
This is where the mainline enters the scene, at the rear of the ore tipple. -- Russ
Another view of the same spot with more dramatic lighting. -- Russ
Yet another shot of the same area but this one shows the whole tipple. -- Russ
Adios. And I presume everyone knows that clicking on each image opens a much larger version. -- Russ
Thanks for posting those photos, a wonderful model. Russ, I'm concerned about you using the word "Adios". I hope you're not going to jump of a mountain or something!!
p.s. I always find it's the building of the model I enjoy most. When it's completed I never know what to do with it. One or two have ended up down at the local tip so giving room for the next project. (Nick that offer still stands if you want to pick up a diorama or two from the island).
Les
Russ don't jump - just sit and dream ! - my models never seem to get finished normally enthusiastic thoughts or lack of interest kills them or I forgot to say I modify a kit and totally trash it
Now and again one sort of gets finished and gets sold at low price or in the bin due to me getting fed up with it - so now its strictly small projects . and of course my "scale hopping" syndrome does not help
So Russ Think ahead - and thanks for keeping this Forum together Its still the best
Thanks for the photos - just keep them coming
Barney
Les, I captioned the last photo "adios" because the train was leaving the tipple and terminal, not because I am planning to leave either the planet or the hobby.
On the other hand, I now will think twice about building any diorama larger than about one square foot because the more models and detail in a scene, the more work you lose to a catastrophe. In the case of the Dinkey Creek terminal, had each scene been completely separate from the others, I'd have lost the entire tipple (the layout's obvious focal point) but not all rolling stock and other structures.
On the other (undamaged) side of the workshop/model-room, the "little house on the prairie" structure I built at the end of last year and the horse drawn wagon I built early this year were supposed to be part of a single diorama. Should Mr. Greyford pay us another cataclysmic visit, by separating the two I'd lose only one model rather than both.
Something else all of us might think about is how likely we might be to build a copy of the same model. Once I finish something, I may take great pleasure in looking at it but little pleasure in recreating it. I prefer to move forward to something different. Were I a cabinet maker or stonemason, that first "something" probably should be some kind of catastrophe-proof storage!
Russ
Such a beautiful model, and great photography. At least you still have the pics.