The San Diego Model RR Museum

My post Clovis-flyabout time in Arizona was uneventful: some time boondocking near a ghost town and a week and a half at Kartchner Caverns SP. I’ve driven by signs pointing the way to KCSP for years and never bothered to look into it – turned off by eastern tourist trap caves I guess. This time round, I was looking for a campground near the southern AZ grasslands and gave KCSP a whirl. The campground in nice, but OMG the caves! Discovered in 1974, kept secret for 14 years, and developed prioritizing the cave environment; just incredible. If you visit when the bats are elsewhere (they close part of the cave during bat season), the Big Room tour is my recco.

From S AZ, it was off to San Diego. I had 2 spots on my high priority list. The San Diego Model Railroad museum was the first. They have multiple layouts: O, HO and N – I was there for the La Mesa Model RR Club’s HO scale Tehachapi layout. So, early on a Tuesday morning, I hopped on my bike and pedaled to Balboa Park. My plan was to be there when they opened and get some more-or-less quiet time before it got crowded. Ha! By the time they opened, I was one of a couple dozen people at the front door. It got crowded quickly and I’m still crowd-averse so I only spent and hour and a half or so inside, but it was time well spent.

The Tehachapi Loop is a famous track spiral in south central California. By spiraling, the railroad gains horizontal distance so that it can keep the vertical grade manageable, but the v cool visual benefit is that any reasonably long train ends up passing over/under itself. The La Mesa folks have modeled it, and modeled it  well. I read somewhere that this layout is the largest model RR representation of a prototype in the world.

Headed west to the loop.

A westbound freight headed by 2 SP SD40T-2 tunnel snoots bracketing a UP U30C with an SP SD39 bringing up the rear.

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Through the loop!

The same train running downhill through the loop.

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CTC panel

And just for grins, a shot of one of the CTC panel displays.

Between the museum, Balboa Park and a very interesting waterfront bike ride, an A+ day.

 

A few remarks on “The Last of Us”

Fungus among us!

First, a general strong thumbs up. I’m currently in L.A. with the west coast branch of the family and they’ve been watching, so I caught up (eps 1 – 3) before the post Super Bowl group viewing brought me current last night. Good characters, good story-line(s), good monsters. Yay!

Second, I’m glad that I watched episode 3 alone. No spoilers, but it really moved me. There was uglycrying.

Third, and finally, y’all will want to get busy schmoozing me, because as soon as I figure out the connection between this blog post and the THoU video game and then win $$$$ in my intellectual property suit I’m gonna be rolling in dough. Fabulously wealthy, I tell you! The key passage:

Blog post went up July 14, 2008 & The Last of Us video game began development in 2009. My simple country lawyer will make mincemeat of them,

Significant explanatory power

I’ve been trying to understand why Clovis took off a week ago. This morning I found a dropped primary under her perch:

First dropped primary.

Things just got clearer! I don’t fly during the moult for a couple of reasons. First, managing the bird’s weight is tricky. If you go too low while the falcon is making new feathers, you risk fretmarks – lines of weakness on the feather that mark moments of stress, especially nutritional stress. Second, and germane to the question at hand, moulting is part of a bunch of hormonal changes kicked off by longer days. One of the other effects is readiness for bonding/mating/nesting. My current best guess is that Clovis took off because it’s time to fly around, establish a territory and find a mate. It hasn’t been any kind of season anyway, so packing up the telemetry and the vest is NBD but still, dang, I was hoping for some more flights!

Slight change of plans…

I had a post all laid out in my head; I was going to write it last Friday afternoon after I flew Clovis. Something about all the sammiches I ate while in Los Angeles for Xmas. She had other plans, though…

Friday started well enough. I didn’t forget anything and the folks at the site next to me, who came along, were ready early. We got to a spot on the west edge of the San Rafael Valley, I set up the drone, beeped up* Clovis, put the drone in the air close, but not too close, to us, and struck Clovis’s hood. She did what she normally does: look around, rouse, give the lure hanging under the drone a good hard stare, and launch herself off the fist. She took a couple tight circles gaining altitude, then flew off a bit and continued to mount. I didn’t think anything of it – she’ll often go a ways away to take advantage of wind and to give herself a more direct climb to the drone/lure combo. But this time, ah, this time. She spiraled up and then turned and headed south along the edge of the grasslands. I pulled my regular lure out, whistled and swung, but she was gone. We walked to the next ridge south, I called again, nada. Back to the trucks, load up and head south – luckily the Apache Rd. heads southwest from where we were. We drove until the telemetry said she was 90 degrees to our left (generally, SE), parked, and N and I started after her, while J stayed with the vehicles. We chased her for a little over an hour until I called it off: it seemed like we were bumping her. We’d get within a quarter mile, then the distance would jump up by a half mile or so, lather, rinse, repeat. I went back out later in the afternoon to make sure she was in the same general area – I wanted her to settle down for the night…

I was up well before dawn Saturday morning, with high hopes. The sun was just brightening the sky when I got to the Apache Rd.

Dawn patrol.

I turned on the telemetry receiver. Silence. I drove down every left-leading Forest Service road I could, until stopped by gates. Nothing. TL;DR – I spent Saturday driving around trying to get a signal with no luck at all. I was pretty crestfallen Saturday night  My plan was for more driving Sunday, then, if she was still out, look into buying a couple hour search via a light plane.

Sunday morning I needed to zip into Tucson to pick up a package – I decided to come home via Sierra Vista and the Coronado National Memorial/W Montezuma Canyon Road. Once I was though the pass, I was high above the San Raphael Valley moving southeast to northwest. I thought I’d have less interference from ridges, and be able to hear her if she’d moved south in the Valley. More driving, more silence, more worry. One of the best pieces of falconry advice I’ve ever gotten is, ‘when you are out of ideas, go back to where you turned the bird loose and reset’. I did. Back to the beginning – I parked the truck, got out and swung the lure & whistled for 10 minutes. Still no Clovis, but when I returned to the truck, the iPad told me it knew where she was!! At this point, the transmitter was in super-battery-saving mode and only pinging every ?5? minutes (note to self: look it up) so the stop helped but also meant that if she was moving she could be long gone by the time I got to her last known location, a mile and a half away. But I had a place to go to!!! Got as close as I could with the truck and walked towards the marker on the iPad – a pair of cottonwoods 1500 yards away. There was a fence between us. so I stood way back and called. No luck. You don’t want to call your bird anywhere near a fence – that’s how wings and necks get broken. So I *whispers* shimmied under the rancher’s fence, stood up, and SAW HER. Got well away from the fence, whistled, and swung:

Last seen Fri at approximately 10AM. Came back to the lure a half hour ago. Telemetry and persistence!

And that’s the story of my weekend. Clovis’s weight was down but not way down – she’d fed herself at least once. Currently we’re resetting – I’m making sure her weight is stable so I can cut her back to flying weight and then we’ll do a couple short flights!

Today’s task – after a morning visit to the Tumacácori Mission – is another drive to Tucson, this time to pick up a steel plate with high-tech tape on the bottom. The long distance telemetry antenna has a magnetic base, my truck has an aluminum body, the cap is fiberglass, and the pinched nerves in my neck won’t survive another session of holding the antenna onto the roof with my left arm 😉 .

*attaching the transmitter to Clovis’s tail mount

The initial (Friday) flight:

Friday’s flight.