Last weekend, the Bay Area enjoyed a visit from Bob Hanmer, well-known layout owner and operator from Chicago. He joined the monthly operating session at Paul Weiss’s Central Vermont layout on Saturday, and on Sunday he operated on my layout, along with Seth Neumann, Jason Schoenmann, and Jim Radkey. This was session no. 108 on my present layout.
In some ways, this was an entirely ordinary session, in other ways much less so. For one thing, the long-running “trackwork wars” on the segment of my track between the towns of Ballard and Santa Rosalia (see: https://modelingthesp.blogspot.com/2025/12/trackwork-wars-part-17.html ) was again tested, and though certainly not problem-free, largely performed well with locomotives at slow speeds.
The problem was confined to the area between the switches to Jupiter, and to Track 7 in Ballard. More there yet to do, but a considerable improvement over certain past sessions. Here is that area, right above the valley between the two roofs of the MOW sheds. Rail right there seems to have freed itself from the ties, allowing locomotive wheels to shift it out of gauge. This will be fixed.
Another aspect of the session was the renewal of something Bob Hanmer and I have been doing back and forth. I had discovered that a source of printing paper from my online printing plant could be a mill on Bob’s layout (see the description at: https://modelingthesp.blogspot.com/2025/10/another-visit-to-bob-hanmers-layout.html ) For this session, a new waybill in this story was included, which of course Bob discovered, as was intended. The routing even obeys Car Service Rules.
The crews started out with Jim Radkey (left) and Seth Neumann at Ballard, with Seth conducting. What Seth is reaching for in the photo, I don’t know.
Meanwhile, Bob Hanmer and Jason Schoenmann were working at Shumala, In the photo below, Bob (left) is discussing a couple of moves with Jason; Bob was the conductor. After these shifts were completed, the two crews switched sides and assignments.
The session as a whole went well, with crews finishing in less than the average time span. More importantly, it seemed that a good time was had by everyone. That’s what all this is for, after all.
Tony Thompson




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