December 2018 update and year end review
December was nearly a total loss when it came to trains. After hurting my knee at the end of November, I only went downstairs four times all month, and one of those trips was just to get insulin from the fridge. The knee Is still sore but getting better, and I can finally get some decent sleep, which wasn't happening most of the month. I also ended up spending two nights in the hospital unexpectedly. I went in for an outpatient procedure to repair my dialysis access, which I had done twice before, but this time everything went wrong. The whole experience was more annoying than dangerous.
What looks like white space below the line, is actually white text. If you'd like to read it, just highlight it to find out about my three day ordeal. I have no secrets. Nothing nasty in it. Your choice, my friends.
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Wednesday the twelfth got off to a bad start when my previous two dialysis sessions went poorly, when I got to the hospital, my potassium was too high. People with working kidneys don't usually pay attention to potassium, no reason to. I have to watch what I eat in order to not get too high. Dialysis removes some potassium, but eating too much of things like bananas, oranges, tomatoes and potatoes between sessions can be dangerous. Potassium controls your muscles, including your heart. Too low, and you get cramps, too high and it can kill you by messing with your heart rhythm. They did an EKG, and I wasn't having any symptoms, but mine was 6, and 5.5 is top normal. They gave me some drugs to try and lower it, and it jumped to 6.3. The problem was, my access had a clot in it. They couldn't bust it because it was a potassium "bomb", so they stuck a catheter in my neck for "emergency" dialysis. That took care of the potassium problem, but they had to keep me overnight so they could actually do the procedure the next day.
I had been fasting since the night before, not even water. By the time they got me up to dialysis, it was too late to get food. It was almost 10 PM when I got to my room. My wife, the trooper, ran home and grabbed some stuff for the stay, and some ham and cheese sandwiches. She got back around 11:30, and I wolfed down the sandwiches before midnight when the whole fasting process had to begin again.
Thursday was mostly spent sitting around waiting for the second procedure til mid afternoon when they finally got me in. They always offer sedation, but I never accept, and just tough it out because it's not that bad. After a couple hours, I finally said uncle, and took a little. Still awake, but no longer caring, the clock sped up. More dialysis, but via the newly cleared access, not the neck. They put me on heparin to prevent more clotting, the goal being to send me home home with an oral blood thinner after they determined the dosage. Actually got back to the room in time to get dinner. Hospital food has come a long way, and was good after dealing with all the dietary limitations they placed on me. Three page menu with a twelve hour kitchen, pick and choose, with some actual flavor.
Friday, more heparin and sitting around. Afternoon dialysis went well, but I was expecting to have to stay at least another night. I got back to my room, and was pleasantly surprised when the doctors showed up, removed the thing from my neck, gave me my prescription, and turned me loose. It was great to get home, but I was whipped. One of my dialysis buddies said, "It takes a week to recover for every night in the hospital." She wasn't kidding. She should know, she's spent far more time there than I have. My six nights in twelve years has been more than enough for me.
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There was one bright spot this month. My helper Scott (Miggy), brought his two grandsons (3 and 6 years old) over to see the layout. They were running all over chasing the train, and looking for the cameras. Good thing it made it around flawlessly, because my knee is in no condition to get down on the floor if anything happens in the hidden yard or helix.
I tried a couple times to work on my combine kitbash, which I had hoped to have done for the NMRA meeting back on the thirteenth. It wouldn't have mattered anyway, because I was stuck in the hospital that night. I drilled out one window last Saturday, but as I tried drilling the second one, the epoxy gave way and my old window plug fell out. I know what I did wrong, I'll cut a piece of wood to support the inside as I drill next time. Should have thought of that in the first place. Minor setback. For the first time in six years, there are no photos, cause nothing really happened. Understandably, I've been a little depressed, and not feeling like working on the layout, only makes it worse. I never realized how important good knees are, until I hurt one of mine.
It hasn't been an easy year to say the least. The convention that I had been looking forward to, and working toward for three and a half years, was a real let down when only thirteen people visited in sixteen hours over four days. Of course narrow gauge enthusiasts aren't really my best audience. Then there were all of my physical problems, like stepping on a nail back in May, and nearly losing my toe, or burning my finger badly on a frozen pizza in November or tripping over a pile of electrical cords and hurting my knee later that month. All of these injuries are nearly fully healed. I was finally able to get the toe wet in the shower today for the first time since May.
In spite of all that, it was still a pretty good year for he layout. Most of the work was done from January through August. Here's a look back at 2018.
January
Patrick finishes painting the last section of backdrop.
The start of scenery building the hump.
Plaster cloth covered.
The curve at the end of the first peninsula.
Continuing into Newport.
Paving at BNSF intermodal.
Patrick fills in holes in the benchwork with plywood.
More benchwork holes filled.
Scenic materials are brought out from under the layout.
February
Scenery at Hastings.
Time to build a bridge.
Scenery starts at Cottage Grove.
Patrick fills more benchwork holes at Chemolite.
Roadbed is carved at Northtown.
Time for ballast.
Plaster cloth continues at Newport.
Benchwork is filled in at Division Street.
Screwing down the pavement sections.
Ballasting at Hiawatha.
March
Building the bluff at Hoffman.
Ballasting at Division Street.
Ballasting at Hoffman.
Roadbed carving at East Minneapolis.
Chicken grit ballast at Western Avenue.
Back to the bluff, ceiling tile strips are stacked to form the lower rock face.
The foam upper section is complete.
The ceiling tiles are carved with a utility knife and a wire brush.
The ceiling tiles are carved with a utility knife and a wire brush.
A little paint brings it to life.
This shows the structure of bluff.
Working from photos, the foam is carved using a hot knife.
Time for some trees.
April
More greenery on the bluff.
Back to the bridge at Hastings.
I drilled down through the pier to hide the wires.
I added lettering to the fascia in aisle 2.
The girders are attached and weathered.
I did a little work on some signal bridges.
This was the picture that appeared in my listing for the convention.
May
A Plasticville signal bridge with my custom signals and weathered.
There was some thought given to trying to light some of the signals, so I built this panel. Of course, it never happened.
A brown base coat covers the plaster cloth at Newport.
My homemade static grass applicator made from an electric fly swatter. I still haven't tried it. Probably next week when I have to give a clinic.
My stash of scenic supplies. Some have said their LHS isn't as well stocked. I have a lot of ground to cover.
Gluing my grain elevators together.
My workshop is a total mess.
I tried a new technique, building my mill walls using a Masonite mosaic.
Here's the result.
While waiting for Menards to deliver some materials, I decided to burn some scraps I had laying around. I regretted that decision, when I nearly lost my toe after stepping on a nail.
I made a trip to the quarry and picked up 300 pounds of ballast.
June
Even with my bad toe, work didn't stop. I ballasted the upper deck in aisle 2 working both ends to the middle.
Many years ago, I saved this old Tide jug with the goal of using it to dispense ballast glue. My son painted it when he was about ten. He's 26 now.
More ballast.
I picked up some building flats on eBay, and with a little trimming was able to camouflage this opening in the backdrop.
July
Time to unpack some trains and add some color to the layout.
I kind of have a thing for intermodal equipment. Atlas containers!
The turntable is now connected to the rest of the layout.
August
Containers make good scenery.
I used them to hide another opening in the backdrop. When viewing from a natural angle you can't see it.
Another hole mostly hidden.
Paul2 turned me onto Menards well cars. Turns out they are the old Right of Way body. I put some Atlas containers in one. Not Bad.
More containers as scenery.
The smile on my face is because all track is officially done.
The Mississippi River scene is the first thing you see when you enter the train room.
Patrick and I filled in the rest of the plywood, so I could begin scenicking.
While I was working on that, Patrick finished painting the fascia.
I added labels to all the locations in aisle 1.
I gave Cottage grove a quick coat of white, since it's going to be a winter scene.
September
There are no photos from September. The convention was the 5th - 8th and I was burnt out, taking the rest of the month off.
October
Still suffering from burnout, I switched gears a bit and weathered this hopper. Won first place at the NMRA division meeting.
November
The NMRA contest for December was passenger cars. Long ago, I had decided to modify this K-line combine into an ex-GN dorm/baggage for my early Amtrak Empire Builder.
I had a book of Amtrak floor plans, and the car I wanted was actually in it.
This car has no skirts, so they were the first thing to go.
Then the old windows had to be filled in.
This car has no vestibule, so the plastic end piece had to be modified...
and the door openings filled in.
That's where the project stood, when I tripped over an electrical cord and hurt my knee at the end of November.
Review of goals set for 2018
Host layout tour as part of a national convention (done)
Complete basic scenery (20%)
Host an operating session (fail)
Clean up the final bits of track, fascia, switches and wiring (track, fascia and backdrop done)
Finish the uncouplers (fail)
Finish building and begin installing signals (fail)
Get C/MRI and JMRI up and running using Panel Pro (fail)
Start building structures (5%)
Work on backdrop images (3%)
Other things done in 2018
Roadbed carving
Rail painting
Ballasting
Unpacking trains
Goals for 2019
STOP HURTING MYSELF
Host an operating session
Finish the uncouplers
Finish the last few switches and make repairs to existing
Finish the last bit of wiring
Get turntables operational
Get hump yard operational
Complete upper deck scenery and backdrops
Hang valance
Add skirting
Activate C/MRI
Build control panel with JMRI Panel Pro
Happy New Year gang!