Tag Archives: San Jose

WP668 Caboose Move Videos

2007 WP668 over trees

The 91-year-old WP668 caboose was lifted by crane on Friday into our San Jose, California, backyard. On Saturday and Sunday, we trimmed branches broken during the lift and started work to replace the back fence. Two videos of the big move have been posted on YouTube:

If you want to receive Katysblog posts by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! button (upper right on Katysblog home).
Images Copyright 2007 by Katy Dickinson, John Plocher, and Danek Duvall

Updated 3 April 2020

Leave a comment

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

Caboose Moved Today

2007 WP668 over trees - photo by Danek Duvall
WP668, our 91-year-old caboose, moved to our backyard today after over a year in storage. We all arrived at 7:30 a.m. to start the job. South Bay Crane & Rigging (408-244-0414, Los Gatos, CA) lifted the 1916 historic railroad car by crane and loaded her onto a truck. At 9 a.m., they drove WP668 three blocks to our house.

The first job was to get the crane into the driveway that runs along our back fence. One of the gateposts and some tree limbs came down but Julie, the crane operator, did make it fit. Then, the crane turned one of the caboose’s truck and wheel sets end for end (we had rolled it in backwards when we moved it out of storage last year). Finally, the crane lifted the 18-ton WP668 body off the lowboy flatbed, over the trees (some more limbs damaged but nothing unexpected), and onto the wheels. Lance, the rigger, went up and over the fence and back to keep the pulling rope stretched in the right direction so that Dennis could direct Julie in how to lower the caboose down with the least damage to surrounding trees. Our friend Chuck Cottam (who designs and installs koi ponds) and my husband John acted as backup riggers. Chuck also wielded the tree saw as needed.

Our neighbors, friends from Sun Microsystems, friends from the Silicon Valley Lines (SVL), and South Bay Historical Railroad Society (SBHRS) model train clubs, and photographers from the Willow Glen Resident newspaper joined our family for the big event. After WP668 was down and secured, we all had a BarBQ lunch, with caboose tours. Some of today’s photos follow. Tomorrow, we replace the fence!

More story and photos are on the WP668 website.

2007 WP668 on truck with crane

2007 WP668 caboose in air

2007 John Paul Katy Jessica in WP668 caboose

2007 WIllow Glen Resident 25 May WP668 story 2007 WIllow Glen Resident 25 May WP668 story 2007 WIllow Glen Resident 25 May WP668 story

If you want to receive Katysblog posts by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! button (upper right on Katysblog home).
Images Copyright 2007 by Katy Dickinson, John Plocher, and Danek Duvall
News images Used with Permission, Copyright 2007 Silicon Valley Community Newspapers
Updated 3 April 2020

1 Comment

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

Caboose in the News

2006 WP668 on 4 May in San Jose
“Willow Glen homeowner gets approval to add a caboose” is the title of the 2 March 2007 article by Mayra Flores De Marcotte in the Willow Glen Resident (our neighborhood paper) about the San Jose planning director approving our variance permit to move WP668 into our yard.

What fun to be in the news!

More story and photos are on the WP668 website.

If you want to receive Katysblog posts by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! button (upper right on Katysblog home).

Image Copyright 2006 by Katy Dickinson

Updated 3 April 2020

Leave a comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, News & Reviews

Caboose Approved!

John and Paul and I and one of our neighbors were in the San Jose City Council chambers this morning at 9 a.m. for the hearing on our Development Variance to move caboose WP668 into our yard as an “accessory structure”. It was approved on the Consent Agenda without discussion! Hooray!

The Permit will be signed this week. Some of the entertaining parts of the 7 page long document:

  • Finding: “4. This Variance, subject to such conditions as may be imposed thereon, will not impair the utility or value of adjacent property or the general welfare of the neighborhood, and will not impair the integrity and character of the zoning district in which the subject property is situate in that the reduced setback will facilitate development of an unusually shaped, small lot that might otherwise remain undeveloped into perpetuity and will be compatible with the adjacent residential neighborhood.”
    (I think this means this project does not mess up the current land use or access.)
  • Finding: “6a…the proposed use at the location requested will not:… Adversely
    affect the peace, health, safety, morals or welfare of persons residing or
    working in the surrounding area…”
    (Morals?)
  • Conditions:
    “11f…This is a habitable space….”
    “13…Accessory buildings… shall not contain conditioned space,
    living space, or sleeping quarters.”
    (That is, WP668 is a habitable space but not a living space.)
  • Next step: ask for a Building Permit from San Jose’s Chief Building Official.

After we have the Building Permit, we can move the caboose!

If you want to receive Katysblog posts by email, please sign up using the Sign Me Up! button (upper right on Katysblog home).

Updated 5 April 2020

1 Comment

Filed under Caboose Project and Other Trains, News & Reviews

Gardening and Karel Capek

I have been preparing my garden for me to be away in India for several weeks. We have arranged for a housesitter and our daughter will also check in on our plants and pets (2 dogs, 2 cats, and a bird) but other than “mow-and-blow” upkeep, no actual gardening will be done. I have put down weed cloth and mulch and trimmed and tidied and hope that all is in readiness.

We have about 1/4 acre of yard and garden (including 170 feet of the Guadalupe riverbank) and all the plants and trees have just woken up for Spring. My almond trees are in full bloom, the jessamine vine flowers are just opening, the orange, apricot, and peach are in bud and I have pots and beds of daffodils and narcissus cheerfully nodding in day’s warm breeze. The weeds and stray grass are working to colonize any bare ground; snails and slugs are always with us. My garden is still recovering from the long hard frost we had last month. There are sections of bougainvillea and trumpet vine and bird of paradise which are yellow brown. I am not sure yet whether these hardest-hit plants will sprout green soon or are as dead as they look. By the time we are back, I will know.

Karel Capek is most famous for having introduced and made popular the word robot, which first appeared in his play R.U.R. (Rossum’s Universal Robots) in 1921. However, my favorite Karel Capek work is The Gardener’s Year from 1929. Here is Capek’s description of a dedicated gardener leaving on vacation:

[The amateur gardener] departs, however, with a heavy heart, full of fears and cares for his garden; and he will not go until he has found a friend or relation to whom he entrusts his garden for that time.

“Look here,” he says “there is nothing to be done now in the garden in any case; if you come and look once in three days, that will be quite enough, and if something here and there is not in order, you must write me a card, and I will come. So, I am relying on you then? As I said, five minutes will be enough, just a glance round.”

Then he leaves, having laid his garden upon the heart of an obliging fellow-creature. Next day the fellow-creature receives a letter: “I forgot to tell you that the garden must be watered every day, the best times for doing it are five in the morning and towards seven in the evening. It is practically nothing, you only fasten the hose to the hydrant and water for a few moments. Will you please water the conifers all over as they stand, and thoroughly, and the lawn as well? If you see any weeds, pull them out. That’s all.”

A day after: “It’s frightfully dry, will you give every rhododendron about two buckets of tepid water, and each conifer five buckets, and other trees about two buckets? The perennials, which are now in flower, ought to have a good deal of water — write by post what is in flower. Withered stalks must be cut off! It would be a good thing if you loosened all the beds with a hoe; the soil breathes much better then. If there are plant-lice on the roses, buy tobacco extract, and syringe them with it while the dew is on, or after a rain. Nothing else need be done at present.”

The sixth day: “I am sending you by express post a box of plants from the country…. They must go into the ground at once…. At night you ought to go into the garden with a lamp and destroy snails. It would be good to weed the paths. I hope that looking after my garden doesn’t take up much of your time, and that you are enjoying it.”

In the meantime the obliging fellow-creature, conscious of his responsibilities, waters, mows, tills, weeds, and wanders round with the box of seedlings looking where the devil he can plant them; he sweats, and is muddied all over; he notices with horror that here some damned plant is fading, and there some stalks are broken, and that the lawn has become rusty, and that the whole garden is somehow looking blasted, and he curses the moment when he took upon himself this burden, and he prays to Heaven for autumn to come.

And in the meantime the owner of the garden thinks with uneasiness of his flowers and lawns, sleeps badly, curses because the obliging fellow-creature is not sending him reports every day on the state of the garden, and he counts the days to his return, posting every other day a box of plants from the country and a letter with a dozen urgent commands. Finally he returns; still with the baggage in his hands he rushes into his garden and looks round with damp eyes —
“That laggard, that dolt, that pig,” he thinks bitterly, “he has made a mess of my garden!”
“Thank you”, he says dryly to his fellow-creature, and like a living reproach he snatches the hose to water the neglected garden. (That idiot, he thinks in the bottom of his heart, to trust him with anything! Never in my life will I be such a fool and an ass to go away for the holidays!)

While I am in the Garden City of Bangalore, I know I will enjoy being where I am (and not behave like Capek’s gardener!). I will visit the Lal Bagh Botanical Gardens and maybe bring back new gardening ideas.

Leave a comment

Filed under Home & Family

Guadalupe River Cleanup

The back property line behind our house runs down the middle of the Guadalupe River here in San Jose, California. We noticed over the weekend that the homeless had started to build another camp on the river (in the same place that they burned down some trees and bushes last year). The new camp is upriver and on the other bank from our house, in the area managed by the water district. We talked with the San Jose Police Metro Unit today and they said they would look into it.

Our riverbank is very steep. It is mostly built up with chunks of concrete overgrown with blackberry vines, ivy, cottonwood trees, dracenas, and some prickly pear cactus. There are also two large oaks, a big pepper tree and several smaller peppers. Flood control downstream seems to be helping but the river has risen almost to the top of the banks each winter.

John and I climbed down the bank to check things out. Upstream at the waterline, we came upon this large pool of floating trash caught against some submerged logs. It was mostly made up of bottles, bags, pillows, and toys but there was also shredded styrofoam, building materials, and even syringes and pens. All artifacts from the houses, bridges, and roads upstream.

Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson and John Plocher Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson

After the rain last week, the river is at least three feet deep at that spot. That is, too deep for safe wading in murky water full of sharp things. So, John got some trash bags and a cultivator hoe and we hooked out three trash cans full from the bank. The pillows, stuffed animals, and shoes were the hardest to get out. A family of mallard ducks came to visit while we were there.

Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson Katy and Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson John and Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson
Duck and Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson Duck and Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson Duck and Guadalupe River Trash,<br />
photo: copyright 2006 Katy Dickinson

There was still lots of floating trash when we quit for the day. I hope to have time to get more out during this week’s holiday break.

Images by Katy Dickinson (Copyright 2006)

1 Comment

Filed under Home & Family

Immigration Reform March Today

Many of us from the San Francisco Bay Area Episcopal churches marched today to support immigration reform. I picked up my 17-year-old daughter Jessica after school and we joined the march here in San Jose.

It was hot but fun: the Mercury News said there were 100,000 people. It was hard to tell from the middle of things but it was very crowded along most of the five mile route. Everyone seemed energetic and cheerful. There were groups providing music along the way – some electronic, some live, some on the sides and some marching with us – even a group in Aztec-style full feather headdresses who danced the entire route. Lots of families with little kids marched (many of the kids were either in strollers or flopped over a parental shoulder asleep after the first few blocks).

The most common clothing was a white t-shirt with some slogan. Most people had flags – mostly American but some from Mexico, Central or South America – or signs. Jessica and I walked the whole way (from the corner of Story and King to Guadalupe Park downtown) and never saw anyone we knew but we had a good time anyway. We kept looking for the group of Episcopal clergy but we never found them. We were told
to look for their banner saying “Honor the Contributions” and we could only find one saying “Honor our Contributors” so we walked with that group for a while.

As the Convener of DIEM (the Department of Intercultural Evangelism and Mission) for our diocese of El Camino Real, I support ECR’s Peace and Justice Commission and the Standing Committee in formally promoting immigration reform (with a focus on legislation and policy changes).

The text that Peace and Justice drafted is such a wonderful mix of parliamentary procedure and deep belief, it is interesting to read. It starts off…

  • WHEREAS we have promised in our Baptismal covenant to seek and serve Christ in all persons, loving our neighbors as ourselves; to strive for justice and peace among all people; and to respect the dignity of every human being;
  • WHEREAS Christ calls us to feed the hungry, give drink to the thirsty, welcome the stranger, clothe the naked, tend to the sick, and visit the imprisoned;
  • WHEREAS our Scriptures reflect a profound empathy with the plight of exiles, teaching us that it is right to love foreigners, and to give them food and clothing ; that when strangers live with us in our land, we must not mistreat them or oppress them; and we must love them as we love ourselves; …

Jessica came home with some good basic lessons in the realities of free speech in the form of a public march:

  1. Stay with your group, no matter what
  2. Wear comfortable shoes and socks
  3. Bring water and small snacks
  4. Wear a hat

She also said that she had never seen so many Hispanic people she did not know. Jessica said that after 3 hours of walking, she feels a strong physical commitment to the Hispanic community and the immigration debate.

I hope that both the new diocesan immigration reform policy and today’s march will help bring about much-needed change in how our country treats its most recent immigrants.

My feet hurt.

1 Comment

Filed under Church, News & Reviews