July 28th, 2009

Tracks Of The Present

A little background on my train fetish can be found at Tracks Of The Past.

The other day I stepped back into my childhood in the physical sense, albeit for just awhile. Mentally, I spend a lot of time there, savoring some memories, seething over others, thinking of writing about them, good or bad, but rarely do I replay a part of the past outside of my head and again enjoy childish acts. But, on Sunday, I did so. I revisited the train tracks alongside Alexandria’s Ben Brenman Park with a plan. While I usually loiter about the tracks, trying to catch a photo of a good sky or listen for approaching trains, all the while keeping Lucy from continuing on with her walk, this Sunday I came ready with a pocketful of pennies, each destined for the rails.

Veering off of the wide, paved path that runs parallel to the tracks, I crossed a short piece of field, then followed the worn path through a few yards of thicket that leads to the crushed-stone ballast cradling the tracks. Not to be left out of the task at hand, Lucy agreed to stand guard and look out for oncoming trains. A very important job for obvious reasons.

lucyontracks

To help find the coins, once transformed, I carefully placed them, 14 in all, atop four rails, 10 ties apart. I spaced them along the shiniest part of the rail, the part that looked to bear the brunt of the tons of weight. Only a few hours longer would have brought results, as the Cardinal, on its way from Chicago to New York, would be the next passenger train to come through, but that was a little too long as we had already been out for awhile in the heat and humidity. So, home we went.

penniesontracks3

Come Monday morning, too impatient to wait for an evening walk at the tracks, we took Lucy there for her morning walk and excitedly started the hunt for pennies. Some traveled far, a few feet or so, while others laid by the rails…

foundpenny

The fruits of my labor. Of 14 coins, 10 were retrieved. Not bad.

pennies2

Only a few were recognizable, and while some were bright and shiny, others looked charred, possibly something picked up from the track or the wheels.

pennies

So, the past was revisited and although I wasn’t crouched in front of the train station being shooed by the conductor as happened years ago, all in all, it was a cool experience, just as happened years ago…

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June 30th, 2009

Tracks Of The Past

traintracks

I have a small interest in trains…not in the sense that I participate in clubs or keep track of schedules or even delve into their history…nothing that engaging or earnest. No, I just find very comfortable the feel of being around train stuff like railroad yards, stations and even tracks with their creosote-stained ties and rusty spikes. I know. Ick.

Having grown up in the Rosemont section of Alexandria, just yards from the tracks and a block from the Alexandria station, train songs—those warning whistles and rattling cars—were continually sung. At night, I would lie awake and listen to them as they passed by, their musical rumble accompanied every quarter-hour by chimes from the George Washington Masonic Memorial (or simply, masonic temple, as the locals call it), which towers over Alexandria city from atop Shuter’s Hill. A favorite neighbor who spent the better part of her summer days in the mid-60’s caring for me while my parents worked, was married to a man who worked at the station. Dressed in his dark blue conductor’s uniform, he would either walk up winding Sunset Drive or follow Commonwealth Avenue and pass underneath the trestle—either route would have him at work in minutes. Although a nice man, he did have a job to do and would shoo me and my friends away from the tracks where we crouched, carefully arranging our pennies dead center on the rails. If we were lucky, our hard work would pay off with perfectly flattened souvenirs, each one-of-a-kind.

Maybe there’s a “train gene” in my family. My mother once told me that right after a train passes by, the tracks are cold, not hot like you might expect from steel spinning against steel. I don’t remember asking what prompted her to frisk the tracks, but I do understand the curiosity. And come to think of it, her father—my grandfather—used to work for the railroad in Ohio, I think, back in the 40’s. And he did sing Workin’ on the Railroad and She’ll Be Coming ‘Round the Mountain to me when I was little. Hmmm…

The tracks you see here are only about a mile from the Alexandria station and run parallel to the dog park in Ben Brenman Park. When Lucy grows tired of playing with the other dogs and is ready for a walk, we’ll amble alongside the tracks, and I’ll lag behind, taking pictures and yep, searching deep in my pockets for pennies.

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