Had a great day at the Big E. The weather was cold, blustery and damp with occasional light snow. But not bad for late January in central MA.
We got there before the doors opened. After purchasing our tickets we were ready when the doors opened.
MJ noticed a couple of things during the show:
First there were a tremendous amount of kids and families. Always good to see new blood to keep our hobby thriving. I got a good laugh when she also noticed some of the men could use a shower
Rich and Andy were at the MTH booth. Interesting that they had the S Gauge layout on display running trains and not the O Gauge layout that I have always seen in the past.
Atlas had their nice showing as well although I did not spend enough time in that booth for some reason.
The vendors looked like they were moving product. There was anything you needed for layout building and no less than 20 operating layouts throughout the four buildings - probably more. A very impressive 4 level G Gauge layout had me fascinated.
The abundance of layouts is one of my favorite things about this show. There were some modular layouts that had to be 60 feet long. I purchased only a couple of things: two bottles of Mega Steam (hot chocolate and coffee). I also bought something I never ever thought I'd purchase - I bought MJ a Boston Red Sox 2013 Championship boxcar. Thank you Bobby Salerno of RGS Trains. As a die hard Yankee fan I justified it by honoring the best rivalry in sports. Besides she doesn't know I have four or five Yankee cars to have it surrounded
A big thank you to Steve and RCS Custom Switches for letting us take over the front of his booth. I look forward to purchasing a few of the tinplate switches in the near future.
Of course the best part by far was getting together with friends, comparing purchases, telling stories, and sharing in our common bond.
Presented without further ado is evidence of our gathering. I present the usual suspects.
Paul
ps, sorry some got cut, I had to have someone else take the picture this year and while he did a good job his framing was off a bit. I'll bring back the tripod next year...
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