Our host is Canadian born Charlie Millar, and NMRA Master Model Railroader and one of the best hosts I've ever met. His whole railroad is about making you comfortable and his wife ALWAYS has freshly baked cookies waiting on us. I'm suprised anyone ever leaves...
When you walk into the railroad room you are greeted by a stacked set of bridges over a dam. Spectacular and all built to high levels of detail.
You can almost smell the dirt at the rock loading facility.
Bright red-orange CP Rail deisels storm the mountain while pull a train about thirty cars long or more.
The tunnel portals are forged into the hand carved rock face. Amazing work!
There are quite a few warehouses and grain storage silos along the way...
My favorite model is this road bridge, which is board by board built from scratch. It's delicate appearance makes you wonder if it is still strong enough to hold up the combine harvestor.
Charlie is a very skilled scratchbuilder and a NMRA national award winner. The guys are always pounding him with questions. I do too! Neil, Ken and David discuss the finer points of lichen preservation.
I almost didn't see this fine model as it is off behind the huge farm.
No, that's not a tunnel into the next room. Its a mirror! Behind this wall is the back yard. I had to do a double take the first time I saw it. Brilliant!
The layout is large, but you can see from one section to the other. All of the finished sections are highly detailed. Charlie was glad to have my daughter Taylor visit and showed her his daughter's trains.
While about to fall out the window, I tried to get the whole layout in a shot. The lighting is not designed for the photo, but the room is comfortable, well lit and fun to be in.
The main things I learned from Charlie's layout:
- Comfort and room appeal mean alot!
- Painting the benchwork is a very nice touch and adds to the pleasant appearance.
- Painting rocks individually on a rock structure makes it look amazingly real.
- Tricks with mirrors CAN and DO make the layout look larger.
- Scratchbuilt structures give place and feel to the layout.
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