Blog

Mar 2011 4

Day 19: Billings, MT to Livingston, MT

Went down and had a look at the Billings yard, and in the process spied my first Montana Rail Link (MRL) locos. Yay! They have a very striking blue/black/white paint scheme that is simple, but distinctive and bold. And also very hard to photograph I'm discovering!

Seems to be grain train season at the moment, as every day I'm seeing the BNSF earthworms. They're not quite as impressive here as in Arizona, where they run them as 3x2x1 consists, that is 3 locos on front, 2 in the middle, and one on the rear… and they run at 60mph. But that said, the sight of a near uniform train of easily 100+ wagons is quite a sight!

All the yards over here have lots of aerials sticking up. I'm not quite sure the reason for this; presumably each point is monitored and signalled, but why not run underground cables instead?

While waiting for something to happen I went to Walmart and spied an amazing factory. No idea wh...

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Mar 2011 1

Day 18: Jamestown ND to Billings, MT

Lot of distance to cover today, but I was keen to get out of North Dakota and into what I hoped would be the most amazing state yet, Montana. However thanks to a tip off from a friend I first went looking for the World's Largest Buffalo Statue. I found it alright, right next to the National Buffalo Museum. Yup. A buffalo museum. They also have a fully functional live bison herd, however they were all hiding when I went and all I saw was a cat.

Yup, ok. It's big a concrete and a dubious claim to fame. I drove down to the other end of town to checkout the railway yards and found, surprisingly enough, a grain elevator!

While staring at it a truck arrived and unloaded, and then a train went past, complete with Warbonnet loco on the front (still with Santa Fe markings too). Further down the road at the "yards" (glorified siding) I spotted three geeps, two still in Burlington Northern green &a...

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Feb 2011 28

Day 16: Hartland, MN to Jamestown, ND

Woke up at some ungodly hour of the morning. Anna's classes had been cancelled the previous day so we didn't have to rush back that night, however in Minnesota it would take a blizzard of biblical proportions to shut them down for any more than a day. So we had to return the girl in time for her 10am class, which meant on the road by 7:30 at the latest.

First thing I did though was check for the latest news on the Christchurch earthquake, and by now pictures were starting to emerge and boy was it bad. Anna had come to the same conclusion; we knew it was bad the previous night, but had we had no idea just how bad it really was. A few more "I'm ok" messages had come in overnight so I was feeling a bit better about that at least.

We were soon on the road and heading out to the windfarm that had popped up down the road. Apparently when Anna returned from NZ she found that 250 wind turbines had sprouted up down the road!

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Feb 2011 28

Day 15: Stuck in a Minnesota blizzard

Mrs Payne had warned me that I might hear a bit of a stampede in the morning, and sure enough at some ungodly hour of the morning I heard many small feet sprinting down the stairs. I woke up a very leisurely hour and looked out the window to see a completely white world; was pretty amazing! Went down stairs and found Anna in her PJs lounging on a radiator, keeping an eye on the fridge. Emma was nowhere to be seen, but apparently that's normal teenager behaviour :-)

Had some breakfast and Lori, Anna's mum, started baking like mad. She asked with a little glint in her eye if I'd ever tried rhubarb pie, thinking that she was about to unleash a whole new world of culinary delights on me; unfortunately for her I'm already a rhubarb addict!

Anna tried unsuccessfully for a while to "passively" wake her sister, but her sister wasn't too keen on playing outside with us (despite Anna's "worst sister ever " comments!). So just the two of us rugged up in all sorts of super dupe...

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Feb 2011 27

Day 14: Morris, MN to Hartland, MN

Woke up and was very sad to see only the tiniest little dusting of snow on the car. I packed up and shipped out; it was a relief to get out into fresh air again! I hit the road and soon passed this, in I believe Cyrus, a town of 303 people.

Which reminds me. Even though Morris is only a town of 5000, there were signs everywhere for churches of every denomination. That's something I've noticed out here on the plains: religion is far more common. In Utah you pretty much just have the one religion, though Helper is a little unusual in that the Catholic church is the main church in town. In California… well, I don't don't to say anything. Nevada I noticed the odd church, but over here on the great plains I've noticed signs for Lutheran, Methodist, etc etc etc.

The other thing that is BIG over here is the anti-abortion campaign. It was big news on the radio news every day (who cares about the deficit, or the recession, or cr...

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