For today, I figured I'd share a few photos from my Flickr, reflecting my railfanning last Friday.
This first one is probably the only photo I've taken that's actually worthy of Flickr. After starting the day at midnight and chasing a train from 4 AM to noon (more on that below), I was too tired to drive, but the light was still great, so I spent the afternoon at the Amtrak station in Alexandria. An afternoon storm rolled through the District, bringing with it some dark clouds and a partial rainbow visible from the opposite shore.
The train I was after that morning was the Delmarva Central's SE-1, which currently starts its day in Delmar, MD, and works it way south into Virginia. The 4 AM departure was a result of temporary schedule adjustments to accommodate track work nearby. Funnily enough, while the railroad did not have a signpost at the Virginia border (as I've seen on other roads), a gas station nearby had a model of the Merrimack/CSS Virginia displayed within a hundred feet of the tracks, which served just as well.
In the second photo, MP15AC 1561, which led southbound, idles while the crew switches Coastline Chemical with their trailing unit, another ex-SP MP15AC. Carload bought 17 of these units around 2015, both for the recently purchased Delmarva Central and to handle traffic on the SEDA-COG lines operated by North Shore Line. Carload still have not taken over, for reasons that are unclear but probably are because of some form of litigation.
The sun disappeared periodically during the northbound run, but there was enough light to photograph the 1561 trailing as the train headed north across the PRR-era swing bridge over the Pocomoke River. Most of the line today is unsignaled, but both of the line's swing bridges are still protected by approach-lit signals installed by Norfolk Southern. Based on the radio conversations I've heard, the signals only ever display a stop aspect, so the crews have to call the dispatcher and get talked past them.