Category Archives: Caboose Project and Other Trains

Very Busy Christmas

Christmas has been particularly busy this year because my daughter Jessica and son-in-law-to-be Matt are home from college and there is much to do to get ready for their marriage next summer. She will be returning to CMU in ten days and not back until May. Matt will be returning to Willam and Mary. They are both in their Senior year.

Jessica and Matt visited Mount Madonna Park where they want to be married. We bought her wedding shoes and had the first fitting for her wedding gown – the second fitting is next week. (She will be wearing my gown.) Jessica and Matt are shopping for rings and scheduling tastings at the various candidates for wedding caterers. This is in addition to our usual holiday activities and John going to rehearsals for his role as the Magus Melchior in the Epiphany church pageant next Sunday.  Some of what we have been doing:

  • Shopping in San Francisco’s Chinatown with Sally and Lorene for our 28th year – including our annual visit to the Golden Gate Fortune Cookie Factory in Ross Alley
  • Going to craft fairs, seeing holiday lights, and going to parties hosted by other people
  • Silicon Valley Lines model train club holiday party at our house. The highlight of the party is the guests creating a model layout on our living room floor with my G-scale track and trains.
  • Christmas caroling on the cable car in San Francisco
  • Huawei’s holiday party
  • Visiting the Dickens Christmas Fair
  • Christmas eve service at St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church (Saratoga)
  • Christmas dinner at our house
  • Ladies’ Christmas tea at our house

Paul enjoyed his first quarter at Foothill College. He made us large ceramic Christmas presents, including a large and charming Hedwig the owl which Paul made for Jessica and Matt.  Some pictures:

Chinatown

IMG_7482 IMG_7479

Silicon Valley Lines holiday party

IMG_7613 IMG_7625

Dickens Christmas Fair

IMG_7980 IMG_7990

Singing on the San Francisco Cable Car

IMG_8158 IMG_8192

Wedding Dress Fitting

IMG_8254 IMG_8261 IMG_8257

Christmas Eve at St. Andrew’s

IMG_8283 IMG_8294

Christmas Day

IMG_8344 IMG_8338

Ladies’ Christmas Tea

IMG_8364 IMG_8373

Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

1 Comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, Church, Home & Family, News & Reviews

“Unstoppable” Improbable

IMG_6238

John and Paul and I went to the movies tonight with San Jose’s Silicon Valley Lines Model Railroad Club to the opening showing of “Unstoppable” with Denzel Washington and Chris Pine as a Railroad Engineer and Conductor trying to stop a runaway train. This movie is fun and very pretty – especially if you love fast trains and handsome men. However, the large number of unreasonable behaviors and professional errors in the story is highly improbable.

Here is the original story: “Pennsylvania man lived the drama that inspired ‘Unstoppable'”. Somewhat incensed by the reckless and bumbling behavior of the train handling personnel who caused the runaway in the movie, John came home and read to me from the “General Code of Operating Rules” of West Coast US railways:

1.0 General Responsibilities

1.1 Safety
Safety is the most important element in performing duties. Obeying the rules is essential to job safety and continued employment.

1.1.1 Maintaining a Safe Course
In case of doubt or uncertainty, take the safe course.

I think the club was rooting for the train to win.

Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, News & Reviews

Our Own Personal Flood

IMG_5272 IMG_5273

After my several blogs about not wanting flood insurance, it would be ironic if my home were flooded now that I finally don’t have to buy it. Our “flood” was only in the back yard, fortunately, and resulted from a cracked garden pipe. This was not the flood of Gilgamesh

Like pieces of a broken pot lay the pieces of land among the spreading water.
So high did the water go that even the gods scrambled for mountain so high
And cringed like rain whipped dogs in the storm.

This was not the flood of Noah

The waters prevailed and increased greatly upon the earth; and the ark floated on the face of the waters.
And the waters prevailed so mightily upon the earth that all the high mountains under the whole heaven were covered;
the waters prevailed above the mountains, covering them fifteen cubits deep.

But it did make a big mess and cost us $500 to fix. What you see in the photo at the left above are the roots and pipe that caused the problem. We think a root from one of our big ash trees cracked the PVC pipe which connects to the hose bib or water spigot. I noticed that there was mud for several days in the walkway near WP 668, our backyard caboose where I have my office. My husband looked at it, dug a hole from which shot up a spout of water, found he could not turn it off, then called Polo’s Landscaping (408-597-5214) to come help.

It turns out that a previous owner of our Willow Glen house had put in a garden water line upstream of the house and garden water shut off valves. So, the only way we could turn off that particular pipe was to turn off the water service to the whole property. We ended up with two large muddy holes – one near the caboose, and the other near the valves in the front yard. After much digging around in my (former) iris bed, Polo found the pipe that should have had the shut off valve on it, buried two feet down. He and his team did a good job. By the end of the day, we had a new shut off valve and a fixed water pipe. The brick walkway sank a little but once the ground dries out some, I will lift the bricks and add some more sand.

Images by Katy Dickinson, Copyright 2010

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, Home & Family, News & Reviews

Trains in Egypt

We were in Egypt from 14-25 April (much longer than planned because Iceland’s volcano canceled our flight home).  Because we are railfans (“train nuts”), we kept our eyes open for trains during our visit.  Cairo’s main rail station is below an underpass on the way to and from the airport so we saw it several times in passing but the building is covered in green tarps so not much is visible.

On our Aswan-Luxor boat trip, we saw several trains loading or carrying sugar cane, and while we were on our way to visit temples and tombs we passed over the narrow guage tracks several times. Egypt has a national railway system but we never saw a passenger train in our travels.  The guards who sit by the tracks at the road crossing were curious why we asked our driver to stop for pictures.  Once I took a photo of the camel next to the tracks, they relaxed.

IMG_3371 IMG_3370 IMG_3374
IMG_3231 IMG_3229 IMG_3233
IMG_1934 IMG_1935 IMG_1938
IMG_2037 IMG_2038 IMG_2039
IMG_2866 IMG_2867
IMG_3794 IMG_3790 IMG_3787

Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson and John Plocher

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains

San Jose Metblog

I just posted my first blog entry as the newest writer for San Jose Metblog.  I was introduced to Metroblogging when Joann Landers wrote the article “Auction – Whirling Dervish – Middle Eastern Feast” featuring a photograph of WP 668, our 1916 historic backyard caboose. Here is what San Jose Metblog says about itself:

Metroblogging started off as a more locally focused alternative news source in Los Angeles and has turned into the largest and fastest growing network of city-specific blogs on the Web. We got sick of reading local news that was syndicated from the other side of the country, or was just repurposed national chit chat that had nothing to do with our city. We created our first blog as a throw back to the days when a local news paper focused on local issues, and you could walk down to the corner coffee shop and chat up the reporters whose column you read earlier that day. This idea didn’t stay in one city for long and before we knew it there were Metblogs in Chicago, Portland, Karachi, and Vienna. Today there are over 50 Metblogs in countries all over the world. Local politics, event reviews, lunch recommendations and ways to avoid that big traffic jam downtown. If it’s happening in our cities, we’re on it.

We are bloggers first and foremost, and we love our cities. Even the parts we hate.

My first San Jose Metblog article is “SMUM Thanks Volunteers”.  I am looking forward to writing more.

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, News & Reviews

SAMA Auction, Whirling Dervish, Middle Eastern Feast

Our committee at St.Andrew’s Episcopal Church is working hard to prepare for the annual SAMA (St. Andrew’s Medical Assistance) Dinner and Auction, to be held Sunday, 28 February 2010:

  • Starts at 5 pm
  • The event includes Entertainment by Gregangelo Whirling Dervish who has been dazzling audiences worldwide with his uniquely secular adaptation of the whirling dervish for over two decades, plus a Middle Eastern Feast, Live Auction, and Silent Auction
  • Tickets are $35/person or $100/family
  • Location: St. Andrew’s Hall, 13601 Saratoga Ave., Saratoga, California
  • Childcare or transportation provided on request.
  • Call: 408-867-3493 or 408-252-5211
  • All are Welcome!

SAMA exists to provide hope and healing to a hurting world.
In 2010, SAMA sent funds for medical relief in Haiti.  
SAMA also supports health programs in Africa.
Medical Programs SAMA has supported long-term in the Holy Land include:

For more information, see the SAMA web page.

SAMA Auction Items (partial list)

    Robert Lewis New Vinyard, Old Manor New Vineyard, Old Manor 

    – Plein Air Oil Painting on Canvas by well known Pacific Grove artist Robert Lewis, 20″ x 24″, Catalog# 597, Gilroy, California. Signed and Framed.

    WP668 with new Western Pacific herald photo: copyright 2008 Katy Dickinson Caboose Brunch 

    – by John Plocher – Brunch for six in a private 1916 historic railroad caboose (Western Pacific Feather River Railway WP668) in
    Willow Glen, San Jose.

    DSCN9710 Wine – 1994 Treasure from Louis M. Martini 

    – Martini Family wine collection – Vineyard Selection Sonoma Valley Cabernet Sauvignon, Monte Rosso Vineyard Heritage Collection.

    DSCN9712 Wine – 1994 Treasure from Louis M. Martini 

    – Martini Family wine collection – Russian River Valley Reserve Merlot.

    DSCN9713 Rabbit Etching by Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson
    – Original delicate and realistic red and white etching of rabbits by famous San Francisco artist Eleanor Creekmore Dickinson. 1983. 7-3/4″ x 5-3/4″. Etching 12 of 20. Signed and Framed.

Images Copyright 2008-2010 by Katy Dickinson, and John Plocher

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, Church, News & Reviews

Model Train Layouts, Berlin Wall, Koi

Last night, my husband John and our son Paul and I visited three HO-scale model train layouts which are part of this weekend’s National Model Railroad Association (NMRA) Pacific Coast Region (PCR) Layout Tours.  One of the layouts was in an office in the Bayshore Business Park, very close to the original Sun Microsystems campus in Mountain View.  Before Sun was big enough to have a cafeteria, we used to walk into the Bayshore Business Park to buy sandwiches.  In addition to a good Deli, the Bayshore Business Park has a delightful koi pond, and two big pieces of the Berlin Wall in a tiny monument to freedom next to a parking area. The signs say:

A Tribute to American Resolve
Sections of the Berlin Wall

The period after the second World War divided Western Democratic and Eastern Communist ideologies by what was known as the Iron Curtain, which stretched from the Baltic to the Black Seas. Within East Germany, part of the communist sphere of influence, West Berlin was an island of freedom surrounded by a sea of oppression. In August, 1961, the East German government, to prevent the flight of its citizens from West Berlin, built a wall dividing the City. For 28 years the Berlin was the Rubicon for East and West until “Glasnost” became the new thinking in the Communist World. Between November 9 and 12, 1989 the Wall was breached; not from without with bombs or bullets, but from within by the sound of freedom and the vision of a better life that had drifted over the Wall.

The World must not forget that it was America’s resolve and its political and economic ideals that made this bloodless revolution and most significant historical event possible.

I enjoyed showing 17-year-old, 6-foot-tall Paul the Berlin Wall monument and nearby fish pond and telling him how he and I used to feed the koi bread from our sandwiches when he was tiny. We chased the fish around with our flashlight. My fish pictures turned out surprisingly clear, considering how very dark it was.

DSCN9363 DSCN9366 DSCN9367
DSCN9370 DSCN9376 DSCN9372

DSCN9384

Images Copyright 2010 by Katy Dickinson

1 Comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, Home & Family, News & Reviews