This is really great and to see it just about match the photo is awesome as well the cow pasture is including the cow chips. and this is a cool shot
Thank you very much! The funny part is that as I was building the benchwork, I was asking questions to my parents (who were kids in the time and place my layout takes place) about all the detail stuff I’d never find in any history book. What kinds of mailboxes, fences, what colors the houses were painted, and little stuff like that. Both described these gates with the slots for poles to go across. I was so lucky to not only find a shot of the ET&WNC like that with such a gate, but to have it in the foreground like that (I’ve never found another photo of a gate like that). My folks confirmed that’s exactly the type of gates they remembered.
They saved me a lot of money on detail parts I never could have correctly used. For example, I wanted to use a small tractor but they confirmed NOBODY up there had the money for one until well after WW2 was over. Also, only the main road had electrical wires (most houses didn’t get electricity up in those hollows until the rural electrification act, also well after the war).
As for the cow chips, I’d had brown modeling clay and I needed to know how big to make them. I’d been in plenty of cow pastures in my youth, but it’d been years since the last time I was in one. Last night before the sun went down, I drove over to a cow pasture near my house. I’d forgotten hot big cow pies can get. I think some might see the ones on my layout and say they’re too big. Nope, but they still don’t look right to my eye. Maybe when the cows are in the pasture, it’ll look more correct. I need to ‘weather’ a few to look older, too…
As for the photo of the memorial, that was all done with my cell phone, even the 'film' conversion!