Othello Revisited.

Way back about 6 years ago when I first started modelling, I chose to begin at what is known as Othello.  Othello was one of the ‘stations’ along the Kettle Valley Railway’s Coquihalla Subdivision.  And the word ‘station’ really doesn’t apply well – there was no actual train station – just a tiny passenger shelter at one end and the section foreman’s house at the other, along with a crew bunkhouse.  

Being new to the hobby and new to the KVR at the same time, I had to make do with the best info available.  Using Joe Smuin’s excellent Mileboards book, I figured out the general lay of the land for Othello and set about to plotting where it was using Google Earth.  At that time I hadn’t ‘invented’ my strategy of printing out aerials in N scale for overlays, so I relied on measurements and guesswork to lay it out on my foam base and get carving.

But there was one flaw.

As I’ve mentioned before, a lot changes over the course of 50 years.  Especially with rivers.  Rivers seem so permanent, don’t they?  But they’re not.  They are dynamic.  Especially mountain rivers.  They are always working like busy beavers, eating away at embankments and rock, cutting a path, ultimately, to the sea.  And as they do their work, they change.  They create and remove landforms at will.  They change course a little.  Or a lot.

In the case of Othello, it was the latter.  When I first visited Othello in person in 2009, I was *lost*.  The old photos showed an idyllic, wide, lazy emerald river lumbering alongside the tracks before making a bend south.  The passenger shelter appeared to sit right on its banks.  But when I went to Othello, I saw no river.  Instead I saw forest.  TONS of forest.  The roadbed was still there of course (it is now Othello/Tunnels Rd. and leads to the provincial Quintette Tunnels parking lot).  But the river?  Couldn’t see it.  And in fact, I came to doubt Mileboards and wondered if maybe the site was further east, because there was a site back there that looked pretty much identical in many respects to the one in the old photos.

In emails with Joe however, he patiently explained how much could change over a few decades.  And now, 6 years later, I finally have my hands on a late 1940s aerial of the area via the National Air Photo Library offered by Natural Resources Canada.  If you’re a modeller and haven’t used a resource like this, I highly recommend it.  I would assume most countries have something similar.  Since the invention of the airplane, governments have been surveying their territories from the air, and Othello was no different.  Only from the air are we able to appreciate how dramatically Othello has changed.

The first thing that jumps out is the islands.  What appears in the Google Earth photo (and on the ground) as a mostly solid mass of land and trees was once active riverbed, with a series of islands along the north side.  In the older aerial, there’s even some bridges to a couple of them!  Wow!  That area is *unrecognizeable* now.  The islands are now just part of the landscape.  And the river is long gone to the south.  And it appears to have taken that chunk of mountain jutting into it in the middle of the old photo completely out!  I don’t know if maybe later highway building crews dug it out for fill or if the river was purposely rerouted for flood control, but the whole main body of the watercourse has shifted significantly south.  Any wonder I couldn’t get my bearings!  It’s clear the section house is, as Joe said, where it always was.. just a few feet further back on the property post-abandonment.  And in fact, the shelter survives also, albeit as a funky bed and breakfast type deal at the Kwakwehala Resort.  There’s some pics of it here, now billed as the ‘Othello Cottage’: http://www.eco-retreat.com/sleep.htm

The thing that I am confronted with now though is whether I’m prepared to live with my Othello scene as it is today, or take the benefit of this new information and bring it that much closer to its historical appearance.  It is tempting.  Although I’m proud of the scene as it is and loath to get into a redo, there is some appeal to the idea of taking everything I’ve learned in the 6 years since I first did it and reapplying it to today.  I’d love to capture a few bits of those islands too if I can.  Wow.  But yes, Tip #1 to modellers: invest in the aerials.  The aerials will tell all.

Just a few more pics of the pin-connected deck truss at MP 49.7 of the former Coquihalla sub.  As posted below, this is the bridge standing between me and being able to complete the first level of my Coquihalla scene and run some trains.  And of course, it is a serious piece of engineering.  For bridge lovers, it’s a visual feast: box girders, laced box girders, stringers, eyebars, pins, you name it it has it.  

Above I did a drawing on computer, trying to rationalize it and understand how its components went together before attempting a model.  I wanted to figure out precisely what supported what, how things interconnected, partly for my own interest but also of course to dictate how assembly would work.

Unfortunately this is one of those situations where HO scale is king and the limitations of N scale become painfully apparent.  First, they do not sell any laced box girders of the type seen on this bridge in N -scale.  They do in HO, of course, but not N.  Initially I was going to fabricate something myself, and had been, using a styrene ‘box girder’ (minus the lace) as my model, I had been casting the legs one at a time using Alumilite.  The plan was to affix lace to them afterwards.  Unfortunately, that plan fell victim to the reality of trying to manipulate lace that is so tiny and fragile it’s almost impossible to manoeuvre.  I tried some etched brass lacing (X shaped rather than W, the plan being to cut the Xs in half to arrive at a W shape) from Gold Medal Models, but even it was the wrong angle, too big, and too unwieldy.  Cutting it to make the W wasted half the lace and warped the other half.   So that died.   I even tried making lace myself using the contraption pictured above.  I pictured sliding up my bridge legs in a measured way and then affixing a dab of glue, sliding in some thin styrene strip, cutting it, then on to next, creating a series of / / / / / down the bridge leg one way, before flipping it and going the other way.  Nope.. nothing doing.  N-scale Fail again – it is impossible to glue with sufficient strength and accuracy when you’re dealing with pieces that small.  Too often glue went where it shouldn’t, and the lace got stuck to the jig.  Scratch that.

So now it looks like we’re going for the ‘best we can do for now’.  N-scale is unlikely to ever have the array of options HO does, but there is a truss bridge kit made by Central Valley with some laced girders I can cut to the right size.  The lace pattern and style is not correct, but, what other option is there?

Hope in 1961.  Am getting some great help in FB forums on identifying buildings.  Apparently the building perched right against the tracks in the first photo had sliding doors and coal on the floor.  Not sure what it was for, but in the second photo there is another building way up at the top left, just in the shadow of the highway embankment that looks similar in size and dimensions.  Wondering if they’re both the same thing and what they were actually for?

Morning arrives and the Realistic Water has cured to a point that now if I touch it, it holds its form.  I grabbed an old, small paintbrush that had dried solid with something or other on it, and began ‘stippling’ the top of the water to create tiny mini waves.  Hard to see in photos, but noticeable up close.  I’m very pleased with how this has turned out.  By layering paint and RW, I was able to achieve depth and a little bit of the mottled look rivers have up close. I’m very pleased with it and am going to call it essentially done. 

Union Bar Rd. will be the project tonight.  I have on decent authority it was paved.  My ‘paving’ technique involves using very wetted down spackling, applied very gently with any flat bladed tool of the right width.  My choice this time was a paint mixing tool.  After it’s dry, a light sanding, wipe down and application of top coat should seal the deal.  The trick will be figuring out the crossing at that spot.  Was it wood?  Pavement?  Can’t tell and nobody seems to know for sure.  Guess it’ll be more guessing. 🙂

A few beauty shots with the scene up on the shelf.  The bridge is off-kilter because the base is being tilted to keep the water from pooling at one end of the river.  Looking east, we see the abbreviated run to the tunnels.  West, towards the long-demolished signal tower at CNR crossing.  The green is looking a bit too green for me but I’ll get that with some adjustments when the water dries.

More modelling, more learning.  I’m quite pleased with how my Coquihalla river crossing scene is taking shape.  It’s always kind of neat recreating things that no longer exist – not just the railroad itself and its associated hardware, but also the land and water.  Seeing the river come to life in a form and following a course it hasn’t been in for decades is really neat.  And disorienting:  I’ve been to the site a few times and the changes are significant enough that in my mind’s eye the model at times just can’t look right.  

My first run at the river, as usual, ended in stalemate.  I tried the usual green paint, but it looked wrong here.  Photos gave the water a more brownish colour.  So I tried filling the bed with brown talus, and then pouring Realistic Water over it.  As it set, I’d dip a fine paintbrush with white paint on the tip in and create water ripples/foam.   This produced something closer, but a bit too clear.  I made a mistake too – using modelling clay to try to seal off both ends of the river so the realistic water wouldn’t pour right off the edges.  The Realistic Water very realistically find every nook and cranny and pretty much emptied itself all over the table.  On the plus side, the talus that began to float when I first poured it settled and the whole river bed became hard and fixed in place.  I then began applying lighter dashes of green, and then when that dried, another dollop of Realistic Water, this time with the ends of the river sealed off by DAP white silicone caulk.  I also worked on Union Bar Rd., which I was pleased to see existed in the 1950s and provided one more crossing to do on a subdivision that only had a few of them.  Have to figure out how to handle the crossing: there are many questions.  Was the road gravel?  Or dirt?  Or pavement?  Was the crossing wood?  Pavement?  Black and white aerial photos unfortunately have their limitations.

While the water set, I worked on laying down the roadbed, carefully aligning it with the bridge, and doing some scenicking all around, including the dry, rocky floodplain area.  From the older aerial I could see it had vegetation in a wide swath in the middle, so it probably wasn’t flooded often.  It’s pretty amazing to see that that whole area is wiped out now, the river having broadened and shifted to cover it.  Had the KV stuck around, I guess CP would have needed to figure out another option to the pile trestle at the west end.

Speaking of pile trestle, that’s the next project on this scene.  I’m gathering details (and materials), but it looks like I need it to be about 15’ high, about 180’ long (shortened because I went with a 150’ truss bridge rather than the 130 that was there originally).  Onwards and upwards!