Category Archives: Trains

Train Hunting Again

About six weeks ago I finally followed one of the primary north-south streets near us to where it ended at the edge of The Mesa, the area where the Victor Valley floor drops off into Cajon Pass and down toward the Inland Empire (Riverside, San Bernardino, Rancho Cucamonga) and the LA Basin, Pasadena, and the San Fernando Valley. Today, on a whim, I finally did it again, this time on another primary street that’s just around the corner from us.

As previously mentioned here and there, one of the things I truly love about this are and our Forever Home is that I can hear the trains all day and night. We’re about a mile from the primary BNSF tracks coming up through the Cajon Pass connecting the major ports in  Los Angeles and Long Beach and San Pedro to points east, including Barstow, Flagstaff, Kansas City, Fort Madison, and Chicago. It’s not a constant stream of trains 24/7/365, but it’s at least 50-60 trains a day.

From our house we can’t actually see the trains, but the tracks run just over the edge of The Mesa, where the land starts to drop off. Having looked at the maps I was pretty sure that I could get closer here than I did on my first adventure in April.

While driving home, on the spur of the moment I decided to go train hunting.

I was successful. From where the road ended the drop off into the canyon was more hilly and less direct than I had hoped for, so I had to go hiking for a quarter mile or so down these dirt trails that cover the hills (for hiking, ATV and motorcycle riding, horses, etc), but I finally got a good view.

Heavy clouds were moving up the Cajon Pass, while the Sun was setting and bright behind me, so the contrast was stark.

This site is probably less than a mile from our house, so at some point I want to try simply walking there and back instead of driving. I need the exercise and I need to start rebuilding my stamina.

Dramatic skies!

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography, Trains, Weather

Trains & Tracks

Edge of the Mesa – Part Three

Following the dirt road a quarter mile after the pavement ends (a mile or two from our house) looking for the edge of “the Mesa” (where the valley floor drops away into the canyons of the Cajon Pass) I was primarily looking for the BNSF train tracks that I know are there. It’s the two lines of the BNSF main transcontinental line, and I’ve been watching it for several years ons some of the railfan webcams. There used to be a Virtual Railfan camera that I watched all the time, but apparently that house next to the tracks got sold and the new owner didn’t want to maintain the camera and let it die. (Interestingly, I actually looked at that house on Zillow without realizing that it was THE house where the VR webcam was. I knew that it was near that site, and the house ticked off several green flags and boxes to match what we were looking for, but it sold before we could come up and look at it. What could have been…) Anyway, there’s now a very good camera there from RRPhotographer. The location near my house where I could get to the edge is about four miles from the RRPhotographer camera location, but only about a third of a mile from the tracks climbing up the hill. I was hoping to see them and find a good viewing spot.

There they are! Not a ton of viewing, and it really helped that there was a train going by when I was trying to spot it. There are also a couple of at-grade crossings of fire roads and access roads out in the boonies, and the trains blow their whistles at these crossings, so just from listening at our house, where we can hear them off and on 24/7/365 (I love it!) I knew where to look.

Heading both uphill and down, we see (and hear) dozens of freight trains a day, plus two Amtrak passenger trains every day, one from Chicago to LA and one from LA to Chicago. I’ll keep looking for great spots to railfan and trainspot from.

Speaking of tracks, in the soft dirt of the road there were plenty that looked like this. Lots of homes out here that aren’t in tracts, with an acre to ten or twenty acres. Many of those folks have horses, and there are parts of town and plenty of dirt roads to find folks out riding.

My Boy Scout days are way, WAAAAAY behind me, so I can’t positively identify these tracks. But the smart betting money is on “dog,” although other critters such as deer or coyotes can’t be ruled out. But just as lots of folks ride their horses out on these dirt service roads, so do lots of folks go hiking and walking their dogs. Usually on a lead I would think, not running loose, since I would worry about rattlesnakes and other less-than-friendly critters off in the brush and tumbleweeds.

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Filed under Forever Home, Photography, Trains