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A quick wee digital recognition of the BEST hell raiser to ever grace the rails.

The DAR was kept captive at Whareroa as the yard donkey for many moons, and whiled away its hours puddling around the plant and ever really having to work hard.

As a result, the cylinder bores would glaze over with carbon, the rings would suffer, letting sump oil into the chambers and where ever the loco went, it would leave a fine rain of black muck behind it, covering workers, cars, buildings and coolstore floors.

In an effort to help keep her tubes clear, the DAR was allowed out on mainline trains once a week to "give her a blow out" and help keep the carbon down.

This is where the hell raiser was at its best.....

Not only did modifications to the air piping in the short hood cause untold confusion for uneducated road crews while setting up, but all that unburnt carbon sitting in her lungs waiting to be expelled was the most superb fire lighting material known to man, and almost every trip out would result in spot fires occurring along the way side, most of which attracted the attention of the various fire crews along the way.....

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One fine summers day we strapped the girl onto the afternoon shuttle 574 and ran her through to New Plymouth, but only got as far as Te Roti before Train Control called up saying that the Fire Service were dealing with various spot fires along the railway corridor behind the train and ordered that the DAR be shut down.

But her worst transgression occurred while she was in my care one fateful Saturday....

I had put the DAR into the empty milk train consist of 545, paired up with two DFT's. I took the middle one off line before departure leaving the front DFT and the DAR in power for the run south. 
Leaving Whareroa I headed down the first valley and up the other side to Mokoia without much drama, the DAR filling the valley with massive amounts of exhaust smoke.

Happy that she was sufficently warmed up, I took the front DFT offline for the climb out of the valley off the Manawapo Viaduct and up to Manutahi.
With only the DAR in power, and an empty milk train consist, the DAR was working VERY hard. Down to a crawl I was watching the exhaust slowly clear up the further we got up the valley. This was indeed an extreme blowout for the old chook, but she took it in her stride and did extremely well I thought, especially for a little loco that didnt get to stretch her legs very often.

Once up the top of the grade at Manutahi, I put the DFT back online and cruised down to Patea where I changed over with a Palmy crew who had come up in a car.

Driving back to Whareroa I noticed a large plume of smoke rising from the region of the railway line over the back of Manutahi, and noticed the councils Rural Fire Officer in his ute on the side of the road, busy talking on the phone...

"Hmmmm" I thought to myself.... "surely not....."

A bit further along the road I passed two fire engines in full combat mode screaming down the road the other way....

"Hmmmmmm"

From the elevated position of the Whareroa terminal building, one could look south towards Manuthi and see a big plume of smoke..... and helicopters...... and fire engines travelling along the main road.....

So a few days later I get an email from Management inviting me to comment and explain a rather large bill (tens of thousands) they had received from the South Taranaki District Council pertaining to a very large scrub fire they had spent all day fighting, which they claimed had been started by a train....

I explained what I had done, that I had taken the DAR for its weekly walkies and that I had actually made the thing work hard for once in its life and it was probably well "blown out" as I had climbed the valley.
The next day I went south with a milk train, and the fire damage to the valley was extensive to say the least.... the whole valley had been burnt from top to bottom

Needless to say that the poor old DAR was never allowed to leave the yard in power after that, and over time it eventually succumbed to its choked up lifestyle, the final nail in the coffin blowing a traction motor in the yard one day. It was sent away for repair, but never returned, eventually being summonsed to Hutt Shops for "evaluation".

Full of rust and worn out bits the DAR was shoved out the back on rotten row and forgotten about, where it still sits to this day.

It was replaced with DSJ 4045, which is a better machine for the intended task, but certainly has none of the flare and mischievousness that the DAR ever had....

:-)

Farewell old friend, gone but not forgotten...

AH

 

There has not been a lot to report in recent times. Milk trains are slowly finishing for the season as milk volumes drop. 546 and 542 have both officially finished running for the season,  but there were problems with the Fonterra plant yesterday and all milk trains were cancelled, so I ran 529 (5097) down to palmy instead of 541 last night. 
 I got to Marton the same time as 229 (30111 + 30042 )and we both waited for a big 210 (30203 + 30134) to go north, which also had loaded OM's on the head,
 presume off to Te Rapa. It was a good time to get out for a leg stretch and give the two trunk trains a "roll by", and I must admit to getting a bit of a thrill watching the big 30's working hard starting their trains in the half light of  the Marton yard lights, the pans arcing away on the contact wire...

 (foamer LOL!!)

 I followed 229 into Palmy and ended up sitting behind it on the arrival for a while while a massive 520 (7186 + 4634 + 4438) pulled out.
 228 had also just arrived and there were trains going everywhere.

 The electric locos off 229 went straight onto 210, while I got cut off in the yard and went to the south end and over the flyover.

 229 diesels were on the front of their train (5402 + 1267 + 1200) and they had  pushed back to catch the incomming 229 tonnage and then pulled into the CT
 siding.

 Lots of locos everywhere and train movements... if your around at midnight its  worth a watch IMHO...

 Not sure if the milkies are back running today. 


Some photos below taken over the last few days.

AH
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544 arriving on the main at Waitotara,
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7008 zooms up the main at Whareroa with 528.
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"sun on the nose!!.. sun on the nose!!..." not gonna happen here folks..
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Finest puddle jumper in the land...
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Through the looking fence...
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Your butts as big as a bus!!
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South Island interloper on 528.
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Something from the archives. 542 through Patea on the 7th of November 2008.
 
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Very cool big band sounds....
Well, what a week that was!! 

WOMAD was HUGE as ever, and I came away from a hundred hour week 5kg lighter and culturally enriched. 
I have a new favorite artist in the form of Ash Grinwald, an amazing blues / rock singer who had the whole site pumping during his set.... simply stunning! 
I must have walked a million miles around the Brooklands Park / Bowl site over the week and ended up installing over 100 light fittings and associated cables making the place look pretty. 
Once rigging was done, I was given one of the smaller stages to drive and had a ball lighting the various acts that took the stage during my shifts...

I am glad that I had an extra day following pack out to catch up on some sleep and get some R+R lol... a roadies life is a hard one, and certainly not something I wish to do full time !
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The masses enjoying a Black Seeds performance.
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Black Seeds in full swing.
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Brooklands Stage.
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Spaghetti anyone?? A distro and dimmer rack rig, with motor control and data pigs atop..
But back to the trains eh??
Went to Palmy on Saturday morning with 543 after first bringing a very late 530 into Whareroa. The locos off 530 then went back with 543. 
I crossed 540 at Whareroa (5108+7307) and found 542 at Wanganui (5074+7186), and also had to wait there for 560 (4438+4571).
I ended up in the hole at Rangitawa while I waited for a tamper/regulator combo to womble past, before being parked again at Feilding while I waited for 200 (4029) to do its thing, and frigging HUGE trunk train right behind the Overlander being pulled by 30's 30105 and a bumblebee (300071 I think).
Finally at Palmy I had a quick stroll about the depot and headed for home in a bright red corolla, stopping to Ev's brother Rhys for a quick chat and some dodgy back room dealing :-)

Late shift this week so will hopefully have something more substantial for my next post..

AH

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In the hole at Rangitawa.
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Traction Engines doing their thing at Maewa.
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4041 all blinged up at Palmy.
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Another grotty snot rocket on vacation in the north.
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A superb piccy of 235 passing through Drury taken by one of our Auckland readers :-)
 
For those of you new to the collective, one of my other pass times is being a roadie / lighting tech / floor sweeper, and have worked a great many shows in my time. This week its WOMAD week, which without doubt is probably the biggest event on the live music calender in the Naki. 

Once again my primary task for WOMAD is setting up all the background lighting around the park and helping rig. There are 6 stages to set up, plus all the sundry toilet blocks / food stalls / VIP area's etc etc etc.
Its a mad mad week but having an "All Areas Access" pass and being able to enjoy huge variety of live music at close quarters is payment enough :-)

I wont be back until next tuesday, so untill then....

AH
 
Got to see a bit of the countryside yesterday, taking a car down to Palmerston North and bringing 546 home. 
Not a lot to report really, other than it was a hot sunny day and nice as it was, I would rather have been fishing / swimming / drinking suds standing round a bbq etc etc :-)

Some snaps below from round the depot while I waited for my train.

AH
 
@ Scooter - no, but I didn't send them to Express, someone else forwarded them on. No drama though.

@ Steve, thanks as always for the kind comments. The photo on the front page was taken at Norton Road in Hamilton of my homeward bound train, during my tour of duty out of Westfeild, and so far to date is still the only time I have had three DFT's together on the same train.

@ Mike, I use a Canon 50D most of the time these days, which has sorta taken over from my trusty 20D, the latter having done "a million miles" and taken thousands of images. Its a bit bad as I really "baby" the 50D and swore I would never take it to work, using it solely for speedway and other "proper" shoots. 
(see my photo website www.westpeak.co.nz)
The poor old 20D has had a hard life, doing 4 or 5 seasons of speedway, being thrown around in my work bag, been out in all the elements on my wild adventures but bless its heart it still keeps on ticking. These days its basically in retirement, as the 50D is a much better machine all round and far less prone to dust getting on the sensor, which the 20D was shocking for!
All that said, I think the days of the big dslr cameras are numbered as technology and social media move forward and much smaller hand held devices evolve. There are already "bridge" camera's and pocket rockets that can capture the same quality image as mid range dslr's


 
The much feared "weather bomb" the Metservice had been threatening us with exploded apon South Taranaki in the wee hours of Saturday morning and caused untold chaos across the region! Poor old Patea ended up being the hardest hit, many houses loosing their roofs and one downtown shop even lost its frontage!

I was chalked up to run 543 to Palmerston North but have been struck down by the nastiest diarrhea bug known to man! Squirting through the eye of a needle is for amatures LOL. Ahem... anyways, I didnt make it to work Saturday, which didnt really matter as the storm was at its peak not long later, the resulting damage closing both the mainline and the main road!
Feeling somewhat more stable by midday, and with no power, we went for a drive around town to survey the damage...
Fortunately we were lucky and got away scot free, but the same couldnt be said for a lot of others.

Sunday I was feeling a lot better, and had been called into work to "turn locos". The line was closed, and all trains were cancelled. I catch wind of the plight of yesterdays 540, which was still sitting at Waitotara. Apparently a tree had fallen down onto 540 as it passed underneith, causing a lot of damage to a bunch of OM's!


Sunday dawns a blue dome day, cloudless and still. I roll up to work and find DXB 5137 and DCP 4611sitting in the yard together, both facing north. The pair had come into Whareroa on train 530 just before the storm took hold.
The shunter on duty was only there to collect appearance money, so I collar him to help me turn the locos. This meant running through to Stratford and spinning one of the locos on the turn table.
I fire the DX into life, followed by the DC. Joy, they both started! We gathered our things, headed out onto the loop and called control. Turns out that the line north of Whareroa had not yet been cleared and Ganger Tony was on his way to run the line. We backed up and went inside for another coffee while we waited. 
Not long later the phone rings and Train Control lets us know that the line is clear and we can go. A few moments later with Warrant in hand we are galloping north headed for Stratford.
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Fresh snow on Mt Egmont Sunday morning.
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4611 on the turn table at Stratford.
Once we got back from Stratford, the call comes in that we have to re-wash the milk tanks on hand at Whareroa (8 om ex 546 friday night) as they cant be loaded if they have sat for more than 24 hours. The line was expected to reopen soon and they want to run 547.
Using the main line locos we pull the consist for 547 out of the yard and push into the milk siding and wash the tanks..
Once that was finished we put the train together and prepared it for departure. 
While this was going on, rosters ring and I am told that as the line was reopening, they needed someone to go down to Waitotara and bring back the long lost 540. A taxi is organised and soon enough I am being escorted south. 
The further south we went the greater the surrounding damage became and before long my taxi driver and I are just mesmerized by all the broken and fallen trees, the damaged buildings, roofs missing, barns flattened, power lines dangling down everywhere. Truly a sight to behold, I have not experienced storm damage quite like it before.
Arriving at Waitotara I am greeted by the stereotypical "one inept security guard" who had been "keeping an eye on the train" from the comfort of his car. Indeed one could almost describe him as a "slack jawed yokle". I shouldnt be too mean, as he was doing his job, but I my efforts to explain how railways work and that we dont need steering wheels were getting lost on his repeated questions asking what we use to drive with.....

Moving on, I had some trouble getting the DXB's fired into life. 5120 we proving to be a stubborn cuss after spending 30+ hours shut down abandond in the boonies and took some pleading and cursing before she got going. 5114 was not so bad. Once I had enough air, I put the brakes on and went for a stroll down one side of the train and up the other giving it a good check over. Sure enough some of the OM's had taken a beating!!
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The offending tree... well, whats left of it.
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More of the tree... note the bridge handrails punched right through the trunk.
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540 in the loop at Waitotara.
Satisfied that my train is roadworthy, I call control, get a warrant, and after handwinding the points (no power) I head for home...

... and its soon apparent why the line was closed...
It turned out to be a pretty uneventful trip home, save for having to hand wind the points at Patea due to the lack of flowing electrons there too.
Once back at Whareroa I berthed 540 on the milk siding, cut the locos off and tied them down for their run out as 549. The shunt crew took over and wheeled the DSJ onto the tanks....

AH
 
Running 543 down to Palmerston North tomorrow morning, and bringing a car back......

Could be an interesting experience considering the approaching weather and its E.T.A.!

AH
 
Some more odds and sods from the last few days......
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Stratford, 01 March.
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528 at Stratford.
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4191 at Stratford.
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Speedo in 7186, with extra bits for working metro trains.
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wing mirror in action.
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An ode to the now closed GMDD.
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521 at Whareroa the other day.
 
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542 in the loop at Manutahi.
Today saw the very first train ever to use the new loop at Manutahi as part of a test run to see if operational proceedures are correct for crossing trains there. 
Still some work to do yet, and the loop remains closed for buisness for now.