One-Tank Trip for
Nov. 8/14
By Jim Fox
Clear the track,
here comes the St. Jacobs & Aberfoyle Model Railway.
The railway has
left Aberfoyle station, pulling up stakes (spikes) and chugged off to the
tourist-friendly town of St. Jacobs, north of Kitchener-Waterloo.
And, just in time
for the holiday season, the “Christmas Train” returned this week, said Mike
Craig, executive director and grandson of the railway founder.
Mike Craig, executive director, stands by the expansive train layout. (Jim Fox photo) |
It includes a gondola
carrying Santa with his sleigh, reindeer including Rudolf with his lighted
nose and stacks of presents.
The train is pulled
by a steam engine and consists of five cars, all of which are lighted.
There’s a boxcar
covered in multi-coloured lights, a gondola car filled with lighted Christmas
trees and another “pulling heaps of snow with a Merry Christmas sign stuck in
them,” he said.
Santa, with his sleigh, reindeer and stacks of presents, rides the St. Jacobs & Aberfoyle Model Railway. |
The last two cars are filled with presents and illuminated with candy cane lights while Santa and his entourage bring up the rear.
Visitors are
encouraged to come out and see the train set they’ve created in a true labour
of love.
The seasonal train
display continues weekends through the end of the year.
All aboard
Since losing its
home due to development around the Aberfoyle Flea Market, it took the help of thousands
of volunteer hours to move and restore the massive rail display.
A Canadian Pacific Railway passenger train steams through the 1950’s Ontario countryside. (Jim Fox photo) |
To get out of
Aberfoyle, Craig said the display was cut into 51 sections and moved the 40
kilometres to its new home.
Then, reassembling,
rewiring and setting everything up took 14 months.
The O-scale model
layout depicting Southern Ontario in the late 1950s is now owned and operated
by the Waterloo County Heritage Preservation Inc. registered charity.
The elaborate
layout covers 279-square metres and is one of Canada’s most detailed displays.
It features
intricate replicas of city and rural scenes with hand-built models of the
Canadian National and Canadian Pacific railways.
Working on the railroad
Visitors will see
both of Canada’s major railways running on separate rights-of-way.
Freight trains are
made up in terminal yards and then switched along their routes.
There are lighted
passenger cars, with full interior detailing to recreate the great rail era,
departing major urban terminals and passing suburban stations and small rural
depots.
Models of late
steam locomotives and first-generation diesels, authentically detailed for
specific prototypes, provide the power.
The trains run
through scenic countryside, passing fields, rivers, towns, a large city and part
of the Niagara Escarpment.
A busy depot along the St. Jacobs & Aberfoyle Model Railway. (Jim Fox photo) |
New is a barn
raising and Mennonite meeting hall joining many recognizable industries and
structures from that era.
Depicted are the
CPR West Toronto station, Hamilton’s Royal Connaught Hotel, the old Galt post
office and Guelph’s historic city hall.
A crowd pleaser is
the night scene when the room lighting dims and hundreds of tiny lights come on
inside the buildings.
As night deepens,
many of the house lights go out and you can hear the lonely whistles of the
trains through the night before day break.
There’s also the
Canadian, an eight-car version of CPR's transcontinental train in its original
1955 colours. Passenger cars are fully detailed with lighted interiors and
riders.
The control tower above the viewing floor. (Jim Fox photo) |
There are more than
250 freight cars depicting the variety of equipment with original-style wooden
cabooses.
It takes six
operators in a control tower above the viewing floor to run everything.
Craig’s grandfather,
the late Frank Dubery, with help from grandma Gay originally got up a head of
steam and opened the original Aberfoyle Junction in 1972.
The display was a
single track branch line crossing a double track main and the junction was the
centrepiece, and it grew from there.
Along with the Duberys,
the railway’s “original six” creators were Chuck and Gwen Bard,Wayne Pfieffer
and Craig Webb.
Need to know
St. Jacobs &
Aberfoyle Model Railway is at 1440-3 King St. N. in downtown St. Jacobs.
It’s open Saturdays
and Sundays through Dec. 28 from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Admission is $8,
adults; $7, seniors; $5, children. stjacobsmodelrailway.com;
(519) 664-3737
-30-
Jim Fox can be reached at onetanktrips@hotmail.com
For more One-Tank Trips: http://1tanktrips.blogspot.ca
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