![]() | ||
| What is Citynoise?..... Today's posts..... This month..... Recent Comments..... Contact..... RSS Feed.... Post your own Citynoise..... | ||
| http://www.citynoise.org | ||
browse by city
New York, NY (772) popular articles
Water Falls on the City recent articles
Heavy MTL 2008: Disturbed browse by author
Peter (784) hot topics
graffiti |
Train Derails on Bridge IV: The Aftermath (With Graf Train Passing By)
[previous] :: [next]On February 17, a train derailed on the CP Rail bridge between Kahnawake and the Montreal borough of Lasalle due to extremely high winds. Over the next couple of weeks, I took pictures of the recovery effort here and here. But the pictures I really wanted were these:
This article has been viewed 5200 times in the last 2 years David Boyle: 4th Apr 2006 - 01:33 GMTWell done! It is so good that I feel that I can say, "Been there; done that!" EvilGentleman: 4th Apr 2006 - 03:38 GMTThanks for all the compliments. After I shot these pictures, I showed them to some people I know, and I had a few of them suggest that I should try to sell them to a newspaper. I thought to myself, "As if!" But what the heck. So I contacted the Montreal Gazette, and was promptly brushed off, after being given a lecture about how it was old news, and how they already had plenty of pictures on file. I never had a chance to fully explain my vantage point, so I wonder if they really had shots like this. Then I tried La Presse, one of the French dailies, but they never returned my call. I can only imagine the difficulties faced by professional freelance photojournalists, and the impressive techniques they must use to sell their pictures to a customer. I tip my hat to them. chiamattt: 4th Apr 2006 - 03:56 GMTIt is pretty much all timing. You said this happened on Feb17th, but you took the pictures in April. Those dudes taking pictures in Iraq and overseas have systems where the pictures go from their camera to a laptop in their backpack and transmitted via satellite phone to their agency pretty much as soon as they take them. Thats how much timing matters these days. kc: 4th Apr 2006 - 13:34 GMTIt's very leisurely, has a cumulative power. Hard to imagine the papers giving space to something like that, walking, looking, and musing. Interesting to me in fact that this electronic medium has allowed such meditative moments....really enjoyed it, the shifting views, the trains...that one with the spikes being yanked out of the wood, for some reason, was the one that really spoke to me about the force involved, I started hearing the grinding and shrieking in my head... Tyfoid Kid: 4th Apr 2006 - 13:37 GMTVery much WOW! There was a lot of physics at play in an accident like this. GGP: 4th Apr 2006 - 13:44 GMTwe need a daily newspaper on walking, looking, musing--oh, wait! we already have one! it's called citynoise. evilg, thanks for this. it was a pleasureful & exciting excursion. Peter: 4th Apr 2006 - 15:21 GMThow quickly everything happens these days... is the essence of future-shock. GGP: 4th Apr 2006 - 16:18 GMThappens, is forgotten. jack: 6th Apr 2006 - 15:09 GMTvery interesting pic's. you went out on a limb for us, literally. we thank you but it was a little dangerous for you to do that. i've never seen the st. lawrence river or ice flows that big. and the damage, just because of high winds. Micah: 14th Apr 2006 - 03:21 GMTWow! I never knew how much damage could be inflicted by a derailment. I just thought the train sort of flipped over and fell off. Whoopsy-daisy! I didn't realise it took half the track with it! Graham Schurman: 18th Jul 2006 - 11:40 GMTDid you have permission from CPR to take these pictures? You could have gotten into big trouble with the the CPR Police if they had known you were on their bridge, especially since it was in severely damaged condition. Railway police take trespassing very seriously. I wouldn't want you to end up with a large fine because you were unaware of this. Having said that, I like the pictures very much. EvilGentleman: 18th Jul 2006 - 14:32 GMTSince the original bridge's ironwork was built 120 years ago, in 1886, the C.P.R. Saint Lawrence Bridge has been used as a pedestrian walkway by the Mohawks of Kahnawake. It became somewhat easier to cross in 1910, when the track was twinned. The train bridge remained our sole means of crossing to Montreal until 1934, when the Honore-Mercier automobile bridge was built. In 1959, additional extensions to the Mercier Bridge to raise the road above the St Lawrence Seaway resulted in the trip across the river on foot from Kahnawake being doubled, to two miles. The result was that a lot of the Mohawk pedestrian traffic reverted to using the train tracks, as the walk is exactly one mile from where the tracks leave the ground on the south side of the Seaway in Kahnawake to where they touch ground again in Lasalle. CPR has always preserved the right to press trespass charges, but has traditionally declined to exercise that right in regards to Kahnawake pedestrian traffic, so long as the conduct of the pedestrians is not a danger to anyone other than themselves. This is not to say that we have actual permission to be there, but it is more of a traditional de facto "turning a blind eye" situation. It is generally simpler for all involved to just let things remain status quo, rather than alienating Kahanawake with the CPR. I found some really good data on the bridge at article.pubs.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/ppv/RPViewDoc?_handler_=HandleInitialGet&journal=cjce&volume=24&calyLang=eng&articleFile=l96-131.pdf And hey, at least I waited until the train was removed from the bridge, and I chose a day when there were no workers on the bridge. I was not so much worried about fines as I was concerned that my presence might spook a few of the rail workers, who tend to be less used to the bridge than people from Kahnawake. I would not want to distract some poor schmoe from his job, and thus put him in danger. I am glad you like the pictures. EvilGentleman: 17th Aug 2006 - 00:24 GMTI'm glad you like them, I wish I had a way to better share the experience, it was truly awesome to see the destruction up close. Bob Hughes: 16th Oct 2006 - 20:50 GMTIn depth photography, very well done too. I sympathise with your fears walking over the broken ties with a long drop to the icy river below. Thanks for sharing the articles. joey: 9th Feb 2007 - 05:36 GMTto this day, still one of the best posts of all citynoise.org times. thanks for the map, too. EvilGentleman: 9th Feb 2007 - 18:09 GMTAt the moment, I'm in class, the only place I have internet access for now. Never opt for consolidating phone and internet bills, if you are not 100% financially stable. I cannot regain my net service until I pay my old land-line bill, and I can barely afford to pay my cell bills, never mind catching up on the bill for the disconnected land-line. Darn, I was meaning to do a one-year anniversary post, but I'm now two days too late. EvilGentleman: 7th Mar 2007 - 17:21 GMTBienvenue. Editor, before you mis-read and delete the above anon comment from march 7th, I believe it actually translates into a quite nice compliment. According to my french-english dictionary, "terrible" in French translates into either "terrific" of "dreadful". I suspect he means the former, and I am flattered.
anon (): 19th Jul 2008 - 17:40 GMTthat brake shoe is called a WHEEL ADAPTER... UNION PACIFIC RAIL CAR REPAIRER EvilGentleman: 21st Jul 2008 - 01:10 GMTanon, I thank you for educating us on the train parts. I think of trains as big noisy metal things that carry stuff, and sometimes have graf on the outside. I am a total moron when it comes to the names of the components. luna park, thank you. I have found your articles to be quite good as well. I am particularly jealous of your finding an actual Toynbee tile remnant. Comment on this article..[previous] :: [next] |
search citynoise.orgrecent discussions
Scenes from a Little Town Called Jacksonville
from the archivesrecently viewed
Train Derails on Bridge IV: The Aftermath (With Graf Train Passing By) |
concept and content © citynoise.org 2002 - 2008 : designed and maintained by
jamie (jamazon.co.uk) and
peter (rhodamine.org)
caveat: entries and comments on citynoise.org represent
the views of their respective authors; this is an open forum, open to
all relevant ideas,
and as such, sees minimal editorial interference. as such, all content
on this site remains property of its creator/author, and is therefore
protected by all applicable copyright laws.
| ||