I love trains,nice to see these,especially the one that said 1920’s on
it.Hopefully,most of them can be restored.The stills are beautiful,almost
otherworldly with the clouds in the background.Great video,really enjoyed
it!
great video. I would give anything to be the first person that finds
something interesting abandoned, before all the graffiti and crap that is.
sadly I actually like graffiti as an art form but it really ruins some
interesting places imo. anyway the graffiti comment was not meant for this
video persay but I felt like parking my rant here do to laziness I suppose.
keep up the great work, I can’t get enough of your videos.
Very interesting. Last year, my son told me of an old early 1900s snow
plow in a CP Rail yard that they had sitting off on an overgrown siding
that was accessible but had some vandalism. By the time I got there, it
was gone. I think they finally moved it for scrap. Too bad. I was
desperate to get inside and film it for some variety even though I’m not a
big train person. Great job on the video as always, Steve.
When I was very young my grandparents lived in Gary, Indiana, with freight
yard or switching yard (?) behind the house. I didn’t know we were in an
undesirable location: I thought it was great! Little boys and trains:
now there’s a combination! I recall riding, though not well, Monon trains
from Bloomington, Indiana, to Gary and back; also riding the South Shore
interurban trains between Gary and Chicago and the Burlington commuter
trains to and from Naperville, Illinois, and Chicago. My grandfather “rode
the rails” during the Depression looking for work and even years later when
things were better he said that when he heard a train whistle he wanted to
get aboard.
You would have thought they would at least take the locomotives inside.
Wish I was a billionaire, but then that is probably why I’m not… 🙂 The
mic was fine. Got my first test in the first shot with the firing up of the
engine, whamo on the head sets… 🙂 Nice work…
Hi Steve once again a stunning vid, with amazing clarity. The work of a
pro. I must admit that I am biased to trains and trams. Also how is your
German Shepard dog going?
wow.. what a day to go hunting..this was my first time on a abandoned
train.. wow.. that was crazy.. specaill the train @3:40.. what kind of
train was that? anyway awesome old trains.. i bet the old ghosts are still
seated on those old seats and waiting go somewhere.. (too much imagination)
great video.. thanks for getting soaked and getting the video to us..
I would love to see all of these old trails preserved but it would cost
millions. It just doesn’t seem right to leave them out in the weather to
rust up.
Is that Steamtown???
I love trains,nice to see these,especially the one that said 1920’s on
it.Hopefully,most of them can be restored.The stills are beautiful,almost
otherworldly with the clouds in the background.Great video,really enjoyed
it!
They should restore them and use them again. the engines that is they can i
think the cars are to far gone good vid steve
great video. I would give anything to be the first person that finds
something interesting abandoned, before all the graffiti and crap that is.
sadly I actually like graffiti as an art form but it really ruins some
interesting places imo. anyway the graffiti comment was not meant for this
video persay but I felt like parking my rant here do to laziness I suppose.
keep up the great work, I can’t get enough of your videos.
Very interesting. Last year, my son told me of an old early 1900s snow
plow in a CP Rail yard that they had sitting off on an overgrown siding
that was accessible but had some vandalism. By the time I got there, it
was gone. I think they finally moved it for scrap. Too bad. I was
desperate to get inside and film it for some variety even though I’m not a
big train person. Great job on the video as always, Steve.
Great footage in the conditions.
Was that an electric driver coach + car set at 4:20 ?
When I was very young my grandparents lived in Gary, Indiana, with freight
yard or switching yard (?) behind the house. I didn’t know we were in an
undesirable location: I thought it was great! Little boys and trains:
now there’s a combination! I recall riding, though not well, Monon trains
from Bloomington, Indiana, to Gary and back; also riding the South Shore
interurban trains between Gary and Chicago and the Burlington commuter
trains to and from Naperville, Illinois, and Chicago. My grandfather “rode
the rails” during the Depression looking for work and even years later when
things were better he said that when he heard a train whistle he wanted to
get aboard.
That was Great, beautiful old trains!!
You would have thought they would at least take the locomotives inside.
Wish I was a billionaire, but then that is probably why I’m not… 🙂 The
mic was fine. Got my first test in the first shot with the firing up of the
engine, whamo on the head sets… 🙂 Nice work…
Hi Steve once again a stunning vid, with amazing clarity. The work of a
pro. I must admit that I am biased to trains and trams. Also how is your
German Shepard dog going?
Wow not your abandoned houses but wow some cool train man well done Hunni
xx
wow.. what a day to go hunting..this was my first time on a abandoned
train.. wow.. that was crazy.. specaill the train @3:40.. what kind of
train was that? anyway awesome old trains.. i bet the old ghosts are still
seated on those old seats and waiting go somewhere.. (too much imagination)
great video.. thanks for getting soaked and getting the video to us..
I would love to see all of these old trails preserved but it would cost
millions. It just doesn’t seem right to leave them out in the weather to
rust up.
Location must have been near a busy hospital with all the sirens.
Have you ever visited the plane graveyard? Would love to see that.