Monthly Archive for October, 2008

I’m Working On A Model Railroad Layout

This just in from the Ain’t It Cool Department. I’ve been doing this for days but I thought it would be cool to talk about it on here a bit and get some photos of what I am doing on here.

I’m making a N-scale model railroad layout. No kidding! See photo evidence below.

I designed the track with some help from the good people at Trainland Hobbies and a pre-made layout in an Atlas N-Scale guidebook. I modified it to create an inner and outer loop complete with yards and switches and such, and there will even be a few homages to my family in there. The layout measures a good 4×6′ and will sit against the wall in my kitchen.

The line will be called the Brewer & Stephens Railroad as a nod to my dad’s last name and my mother’s maiden name. It will run around a small town known as Friendship that will comprise a mainly industrial population as most of them work in the local lumber mill. Friendship will have a gas station, high school, blinking light at an intersection, train depot, mom and pop stores, you name it. It’ll have a rural Oregonian feel to it as a nod to my growing up in northwestern Oregon.

The homages to my family include:

- Sybil Park, a shady grove of trees of vibrant fall colors. I’ll include a big hill and also a small sports complex in it, hopefully. The park will hug the inner loop and comprise 1/4 of the town’s space. Autumn is my mom’s favorite season so the park is fitting for that reason.

- Jason Bridge, which will carry the railroad over the inner loop on its way to the local train depot. My brother always wanted to build bridges as a kid and I figured this would be the perfect way to include him in the layout.

- Jerry Wood Products, the local lumber mill that sustains the town. It will be situated on the far east corner of the layout, and two lines terminate at the mill exclusively for lumber and plywood delivery. My dad worked at a mill and sustained our family for twenty-four years until leaving in 2004, and the lumber mill here will be a perfect nod to that fact. Oh, and I’ll include miniature barkdust too.

- As for me, well I’m the architect, so enough said there. I’m not going to John Q. Hammons-ize the place and put my name all over it though.

As the photo above shows, I have been marking angles and length of track using Atlas N-scale track templates, and this took me three days (to the tune of four hours each day). I would mark the lines with pencil, measure the angles, and if the angle was correct, fill it in with a permanent marker to show the plan being finalized. I messed up on angles more than once so I had to trust my tape measure and the templates.

Working on a layout like this is extremely time-consuming, if not for just the planning stage. You have to take into account the angles, eliminate S-curves as much as possible (I had to re-draw the entire inner loop today because I had a nasty one) and visualize what it will look like once finished. It’s not for the faint of heart because so much foresight and patience is required. Not that I’m the most patient person but I really wanted to try this out so I’m going at it with a full head of steam.

Tools of the trade include Sharpie markers in different colors, a mechanical pencil, the track templates, the Atlas guide, and of course, my trusty iPhone.

This whole thing is gonna be fun, and I’ll take more photos and blog more later as I get started on this project in the coming weeks.

Flag Football: Sunday, 1:30 PM @ Gillenwaters

This is your friendly reminder that Week 5 of Flag Football will be held this upcoming Sunday at 1:30 PM at the Gillenwaters Tennis Complex, across from Kickapoo High School. It’s on the corner of Jefferson and Powell, behind LaMar’s Donuts, the Electric Cowboy and all that good stuff.

We have a few people down for the count this week with injuries and on vacation, so I am making a special plea for anyone who reads this and wishes to join, come on out. We’re gonna need ya!

KADI FM: Teens In Buffalo Hit By Lightning

My mother called to tell me that KADI, 99 Hit FM here in Springfield, is reporting that an unspecified number of teens were hit by lightning in Buffalo, a town 30 miles north of Springfield. Details are sketchy and I will post more as they become available.

12:03 PM CST UPDATE – Don Louzader of KTTS is reporting that as many as fourteen students were affected by a lightning strike at Buffalo High School. Lightning hit a tree as students were walking near it, according to the local school superintendent. No major injuries reported at this point.

Parents have been notified, and the Buffalo School District urges parents not to call the school.

Developing…

Obama Rally To Be Held At JFK Stadium

This just in…new details about the Obama visit to Springfield on Saturday.

Barack Obama will be speaking at JFK Stadium on the campus of Parkview High School on Saturday evening. The event is free to the public and doors open at 6 PM. The rally begins at 9 PM.

That is all.

Rumor has it that McCain could possibly be paying Springfield a visit as well prior to election day…developing…

Layoffs Forthcoming At KPTV/KPDX In Portland

Oregon Media Insiders is reporting today that KPTV/KPDX in Portland, Oregon will be laying off an unspecified number of employees. Meredith Corporation, the owner of multiple television properties including the 12/49 duopoly in Portland, saw its revenue fall $3 million over the last year alone.

Fiscal 2009 first quarter Broadcasting operating profit was $11 million,
compared to $14 million in the year-ago period. Revenues were $70 million,
versus $75 million in the prior-year quarter. Earnings before interest,
taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) were $17 million, compared to
$20 million in the prior-year quarter.

Fiscal 2009 first quarter net political revenues were $6 million, as
expected, compared to net political revenues of $1 million in the prior-year
quarter. The Olympics were not a major factor for Meredith, as its sole NBC
station in Nashville generated approximately $1 million in Olympic-related
revenues during the quarter.

Ongoing industry-wide weakness in core television advertising categories
such as automotive, professional services, restaurants, retail and furnishings
impacted Broadcasting performance in the quarter. Combined advertising
revenues in these categories declined nearly 20 percent.

I’ll be praying for my friends back at KPTV and hope everyone comes through this okay. Advertising revenue is way down for both print and broadcast at this point in time, and the ripple effect continues.

Fires Burning East of Town Are Controlled

The Strafford fire department is conducting two controlled burns east of Springfield. Curious Springfield residents need not worry. One is by Farm Road 205 and the other by Farm Road 199.

Gannett Is Cutting 10% Of Its Workforce

Yep, Gannett is laying off a ton of people again. This from MarketWatch:

Gannett Co Inc (GCI.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz), the largest U.S. newspaper publisher, is planning to cut about 10 percent of jobs at its local papers as it fights advertising declines made worse by the global financial crisis.

It is the second round of layoffs that Gannett has planned in the past two months. In August, Gannett said it would eliminate 1,000 newspaper jobs, with 600 being laid off.

The latest round will be all layoffs, according to a memo sent to staff by Newspaper Division President Robert Dickey on Tuesday.

This includes my place of employment as well, the Springfield News-Leader. Don’t ask me who’s being laid off because I don’t know and I don’t think it would be very Christian or becoming of me to provide “insider” info on this blog.

All I ask is that you please pray for us. All of us. Thanks.

Heater FAIL, And It’s 30 Degrees Outside

I am typing this while lying in bed, under a comforter and THREE other blankets.

It’s cold outside, and some of it is creeping in here.

Unfortunately, earlier when I tried to turn on my heater to a toasty 75 degrees, my apartment started screaming at me intermittently. The smoke/carbon monoxide detectors must have found something really unhealthy — or maybe God was just trying to save me money this winter — but there will be no heater in the foreseeable future for me.

I did notice that it smelled a lot like burnt toast after I shut the heater off. I gotta let the apartment people know about this on Wednesday so they can repair it as soon as possible (read: within the next month, please).

I am COLD and I have to wake up at 4:45, because we’re on our way to St. Louis for work tomorrow. YIPPEE

Friday Trip to Tulsa (With Photos!)

Mom and I headed to Tulsa yesterday to pick up one of her friends from the airport. To use a horrible cliche, a good time was had by all.

Just past Joplin, we stopped at the Tri-State Marker, the officially designated point where Oklahoma, Kansas and Missouri meet. Mom stood on it whereas I felt to simply put my finger on it and ruminate.

From there, it was onto a unique local dive in Vinita, Oklahoma. We had heard about Clanton’s Cafe from the Food Network show “Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives” and decided yesterday would be a perfect day to try it out. It’s a neat place right on the main drag through town…you can’t miss it.

Clanton’s is famous across Oklahoma for its chicken fried steak, and there are photos lining the walls of local and state dignitaries who have happened on in for some of Clanton’s good food. One of the more interesting things on the menu are these little critters:

They’re called calf fries. If they were any bigger they would be called Rocky Mountain Oysters. :)

Seriously, they’re little chopped up bits of bull testicles and they’re not bad. Dad apparently didn’t think I would be able to stomach them, but they were pretty good dipped in either horseradish sauce or a special hot bleu cheese sauce (which we also used to dip our catfish in, and it was AWESOME).

This one’s just for Dad:

After leaving Vinita, we headed further west — but before getting to Tulsa, I was able to snap some photos of the rolling clouds. The way the light was cast on them was pretty neat.

That last photo there kinda reminds me of the Jerry Bruckheimer Films vignette at the beginning of his movies.

We picked up Mom’s friend Susie from the airport and left Tulsa at 5:15, and arrived back in Republic at 7:45. One final photo, however, summed up what a neat day it was.

Living in the Ozarks ain’t so bad after all, ain’t it now?

Flag Football – Week 4 Information

Here is the rundown for Week 4 in Flag Football this coming Sunday. I have received emails asking for weekly information, as to the setup and such, so here it is.

WHERE AND WHEN: 1:30 PM at the field adjoining the Gillenwaters Tennis Complex, on Jefferson Avenue across from Kickapoo HS.

TEAMS: Yellow this weekend will be Jason, Ian, Pete and myself. Red will be Jody, Rich, Michael and Jim. Jessica will be a designated full-time offensive player. Any additional players wishing to join will be distributed onto teams, with the first arrival playing for Red, second for Yellow and so on.

Jessica will bring bottled water this week. Next up is Jason.

BASIC RULES:

Games are played with 30-minute halves, with the clock running continuously for 28 minutes per half. The final two minutes of each half differ in that the clock stops on incompletions, plays resulting in a loss of yardage, plays ending in which the runner steps out of bounds, after each first down, and timeouts. Each team is awarded three timeouts per half.

- Standard scoring of six points for a touchdown, with one and two point conversions following. If a female scores, it is nine points for a touchdown, and conversions remain the same.

- Penalties must be agreed on by both team captains and must be obvious. Normal penalty for an offensive penalty is loss of down, for a defensive penalty, the down is replayed. No yardage gains or losses on penalties.

- No flag guarding or stiff-arming. The opponent must be given a fair chance to pull the flag.

- The defender may not wrap arms around the runner, or impede forward progress in an attempt to grab the flag.

- One defensive player may be designated to guard the quarterback, and may only penetrate the backfield after five seconds have been counted out loud. Once the defender rushes the quarterback, the quarterback is free to run past the line of scrimmage for a gain. However, if the ball is handed off from the quarterback to a running back, multiple defenders may penetrate the backfield to stop the runner.

- Fumbles lost in the backfield are down at the spot where the ball touches the ground. Fumbles lost beyond the line of scrimmage are live and may be recovered by either team.

- Play stops when the runner’s flag is pulled, their knee or the ball touches the ground.

- On kickoffs and punts, if the ball is touched by the kicking team before a member of the receiving team touches it, the ball is marked down at the spot of the touch. If a member of the receiving team touches the ball yet the ball is still live on the ground, it is ruled a fumble and may be recovered by either team.

FOR MORE INFO: Email me at chris -at- chris-brewer.com. Hope to see you Sunday!