A small respite from a serious snowstorm. Here, under breaking blue skies, a downhill UP consist has just cleared the Big Hole and meanders towards the Soda Springs crossing. The sun smiled down upon me and presented some wonderful lighting conditions.
This is a UP train running downhill on the #1 track, EMD SD-70M on point, in the midst of a rather serious 2004 snowstorm. At the time I still had a smaller, nimble 4WD vehicle. The train approaches "American." Flangers had just, about an hour prior, cleared the downhill track.
This was the head-end of a special consist purposely run up Donner for former UP CEO Dick Davidson's Christmas cards for 1998. Yes, that is the reason these units are inordinately pristine. This train stopped just past Shed 41 for the photographs. Please note the sequential engine numbers: 4526, 4527, 4528. The engineer is waving. It's good to be King.
A very unusual consist over Donner: two Norfolk Southern engines. NS is seldom if ever seen this far west for good reason. Here a mixed manifest train pulls uphill, eastbound, past a spot UP engineers know as "Rocky Point." In the mid-1800s Central Pacific named this area "American" and would stop their open-car trains here. Passengers would step down and gaze west towards Sacramento and down to the north fork of the American River.
GE, EMD, GE, EMD: An autorack with an elderly GE engine on point exits the Big Hole, Tunnel 41, 10,322-feet in length, having summited and now beginning to run down hill on the Number 1 track towards Norden and Soda Springs. This portal, now concrete, was once comprised of massive timbers, removed in the early 2000s.
MP154
GE, EMD, GE, EMD: An autorack with an elderly GE engine on point exits the Big Hole, Tunnel 41, 10,322-feet in length, having summited and now beginning to run down hill on the Number 1 track towards Norden and Soda Springs. This portal, now concrete, was once comprised of massive timbers, removed in the early 2000s.
The City of San Francisco, a Southern Pacific train, gets trapped in the Winter of 1952:
MP154