Hey Bill,

You never came back!  If you are still in town, give us a call.  (253) 927-3591.

Roger and Jami

From: Bill Rigsby 
Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2012 11:20 PM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Drovers caboose

  
        Master Roger, and Bob,
         Roger's photo only goes to show you what happens when guys from PA & 
NY mess around with Drover Cabooses. I would buy the film rights of Ed, and 
Jamie driving cattle from the "vast plains" of  NY & PA to stock pens, then 
schlepping their saddles into a CSX drover caboose for the "ride east", with 
their Hot Sauce from New york city.
        Bought an On3 caboose, just to make into a drover caboose. If there 
ever was such a thing west of the Mississippi River.
        Bill

      --- On Thu, 9/13/12, Roger Nulton <[email protected]> wrote:


        From: Roger Nulton <[email protected]>
        Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Drovers caboose [1 Attachment]
        To: [email protected]
        Date: Thursday, September 13, 2012, 5:51 PM


          
        Here’s an early Monon work caboose in an unfortunate position.
        Roger Nulton

        From: Bob Werre 
        Sent: Thursday, September 13, 2012 7:04 AM
        To: [email protected] 
        Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: Drovers caboose

          
        I agree Bill,  we don't like our hot sauce coming from New York City 
either!  

        One of the cars that Frank built which used left over parts from the 
Kinsman passenger cars was more of a work caboose, I believe.  Seems somebody 
did something similar with the old time AF car also.

        At the Wisconsin NASG, I purchased a box from the late Russ Mobley 
estate labeled 'drovers caboose'.  Russ had called me sometime before his death 
and we discussed such a project.  What I purchased ended up being just a bunch 
of weird parts, no plans and nowhere near a caboose.  

        I would like one eventually, but I think most prototypes were 
individualized by each railroad if not one of the kind.  I think I have a copy 
of the Beebe & Clegg book (don't recall which one) that featured many odd-ball 
cabooses used on mixed trains--many of them in the Southeastern states.  I have 
many books on the upper Mid-western railroads that I model, but have found 
almost no references to drover's cabooses--although I confess I really haven't 
looked that hard either.

        Bob Werre
        PhotoTraxx


     


Reply via email to