I grew up in the Spokane area and spent a lot of time
between there and Cheney, so I’m very familiar with the “CW” as it exits Cheney
and heads west. However, I always had
rotten luck finding trains running that route during the BN era. Plus, because my familiarity with the line
did not extend west of Medical Lake, I never dared take much time seeking out rail
activity there.
It wasn’t until I returned to the Northwest as an adult that
I learned more. By this time, the
Palouse River & Coulee City RR had acquired the CW from BNSF, and I had
become acquainted with some of the PCC staff.
They were willing to clue me in on when and where I could best see a
train on the CW, and I tracked down (intended pun? You be the judge) a couple trains heading out
from Cheney. I even wrote an article
about the PCC that ran in the April, 2000 issue of Railfan & Railroad and included coverage of the CW.
More recently, a large number of Spokane-area rail
enthusiasts have really latched onto the EWG and have posted their exploits,
almost on a daily basis, to the Pacific Northwest Railfans Facebook
group. It also helps that two or more of
the EWG crew members are self-avowed “foamers” and are willing to share
information with fans on when and where trains will be running on a particular
day.
As with many shortlines, a key attraction to the EWG is the
“rag-tag fleet” of locomotives they use (see, I managed to fit in a Battlestar
Galactica reference!). When the EWG
started up, their roster included a few SD-45 and SD-45-2 models, which was
pretty exciting. As these reached their
end of usefulness, the EWG gradually replaced them with other oddball castoffs.
These “oddballs” have included GE B23-7, B40-8, C40-8, and
EMD GP-7 and SD-40T-2 models in a variety of paint schemes. The most interesting engine so far was a
former C&O EMD SD-18 with a low nose (and trade-in trucks from old six-motor
Alcos) still painted in Chessie System colors.
Unfortunately, this one only made one or two trips on the EWG before
mechanical problems sidelined it for good.
The EWG does not appear to directly own any of the
locomotives they use, as nearly all have carried reporting marks for lessors Northern
Illinois & Wisconsin (NIWX) or Western Rail (WRIX). Conveniently, Western Rail is located right
on the EWG’s Geiger Spur and also performs nearly all maintenance on the EWG’s
leased power.
I live in the Tri-Cities area now, and travel to Spokane
frequently to visit family up there. But,
the usual family oriented one or two-day trips up there have not left much time
for serious pursuit of EWG trains. A
couple weeks ago, however, the stars aligned and I found a likely opportunity
to chase an EWG train.
I planned on driving up to Spokane on a Saturday morning to
help my son with some car repairs he couldn’t complete on his own. I only expected the work to take an hour or
two, and I had commitments to be home in the TC by the evening. This would leave a 3 to 4-hour period of potential
“me” time. If there happened to be an
EWG train running anywhere on the line, I might be able to follow and
photograph it.
A week before my chase of the EWG train, I had been through Cheney and had found MRL 290 idling with the other EWG power. This encounter whetted my appetite for catching the engine in action. |
An added level of anticipation came from the possible presence
of a “celebrity guest” locomotive at the head end of EWG trains. With most of its long-term leased locomotives
down for a variety of reasons, the EWG had recently signed a short-term lease
for a rare SDP-40, Montana Rail Link number 290. The 290 had originally been built for the
Great Northern Railway, in 1967, for use at the head end of the GN’s premier
cross-country passenger trains.
Back then, passenger cars required a source of steam to run
their heating and cooling equipment.
Steam locomotives provided a ready supply, but diesels for passenger
trains needed a separate steam generator.
When the 290 was built, ridership had dropped drastically and very few
railroads dared purchase brand new locomotives for passenger service. EMD’s 3000 horsepower SD-40 model represented
state-of-the-art when introduced the year before, and it certainly did not
include room for a steam generator inside its narrow hood.
So, when the GN surprisingly sought a passenger version of
the SD-40, EMD designers quickly stretched the SD-40 frame slightly, and
extended the rear hood to make room for the steam generator. They designed the hood extension with a flat
end, instead of a tapered one, which made the SDP-40 unique among its
freight-only sisters.
Only six SDP-40s were built for use in the US, all for the
Great Northern. Only two of these remain
in revenue service today, although I can’t immediately confirm the status of
the other, so the 290 may truly be the last of the breed. At some point, probably during BN ownership,
the 290 had its steam generator removed, and the related intakes and vents
capped. Also, Livingston Rebuild Center
took a cut at rebuilding the 290 to more modern electrical standards after its
transfer to MRL. So, effectively the 290
is just like any other upgraded SD on many other railroads.
But the 290 still stands out in a crowd, thanks as well to
its spiffy new coat of MRL blue paint.
So, hoping the 290 would be out on the line running
with an EWG train during my available timeslot, I posted a question to the
Facebook group the day before, hoping to hear exactly that. Instead, I heard the opposite. An EWG crewman replied that a string of loads
had just come into Cheney Friday evening, and they did not expect BNSF to
deliver more empties until late on Saturday.
The earliest possible EWG train wouldn’t run until Sunday or Monday.
But, within minutes, another group member injected some new
info; they had just spotted BNSF dropping that cut of empties at
Cheney. So, my hopes were still alive,
but I would have to wait until sometime Saturday to know for sure.
Perhaps it was a good omen that on my drive to Spokane that
morning I caught up with BNSF’s eastbound Lind Turn following hot on the FRED
of an eastbound stack train. The power
for the Lind Turn was a two unit set of early 2nd generation GP-models,
resplendent in nearly new versions of BNSF’s latest “swoosh” scheme. I was kind of hoping the leading GP-30 would
be of GN heritage, but it turned out to be a former CB&Q unit. Still no room for complaint.
A few hours later, with my son’s brakes functioning properly
again, I was ready to head back. I
looked to the Facebook group again and found good news: a report that the EWG
crew was currently assembling their train at Cheney, using the 290 as hoped,
preparing to head west within the hour!
Plus, the weather was extremely cooperative with blue skies and lots of
sunlight coming from the southwest. I
made my way to Cheney directly.
Arriving at the yard, there was the 290 shuffling the last
couple grain cars onto its train. My
timing couldn’t have been better. Within
minutes of my arrival, the train began rolling out of the yard and onto the CW
line. I photographed one run-by of the
train as it passed through the commercial area north and east of Cheney, and
then headed north (the tracks run almost due north between Cheney and Four Lakes,
before bending toward the west) to get ahead of the train for another run-by.
At my next selected photo spot, I noticed I wasn’t the only “foamer”
out to catch the action. I saw at least
two guys with cameras, and it turned out I recognized both of them, Charlie
Mutschler and Ryan Reed. I’d make both
their acquaintances in the past (although I doubt Charlie remembered me as my
14-year-old self, hanging out in the train department of Columbia Cycle) and
had recently corresponded with both.
That was a cool coincidence.
At this point on its journey, 290 was doing the work all by
itself. Probably my favorite photo from
the day was one I shot just north of Four Lakes as the train wrapped around a
slight curve with only the 290 at the head of the train. It reminded me I had once considered
buying an Athearn “blue box” HO-scale SDP-40, but had refrained because I
thought a single six-axle passenger locomotive pulling a freight train by
itself around my 4x8 layout would not appear realistic. As they say, there’s a prototype for
everything!
My next encounter with the train turned out much less than I’d
hoped. One thing I remember about the CW
line from my youth was it skirting the north edge of North Silver Lake as it
approaches the community of Medical Lake.
I’d fished there with Dad many times, so I thought a shot across the
lake would be pretty cool. I parked
along the road and walked out onto the causeway that separates Silver Lake from
North Silver. It hadn’t been that long
since I’d seen the train at Four Lakes, so I expected it to roll through my
viewfinder within minutes.
For 5 minutes, I waited.
After 10, I wondered. After 15, I
worried. With no train yet in sight, had
I missed something? Was the train not
going out as far west as I’d expected?
Were the tracks not visible from this vantage point, as I believed, and
had the train slipped past me? Finally,
after nearly a half-hour, I gave up and headed into Medical Lake.
From there, I doubled back along the other highway, only to
find the train calmly rolling toward me.
With some sense of relief that the rest of the chase would continue, I
set up for my next shot. As the train
rolled past me again, I realized what had caused the delay. Ex-UP C40-8 9129 was now coupled behind the
290. The train had stopped to pick up
the 9129 off the Geiger Spur, where it had returned from some down time at Western
Rail.
As I stopped north of Medical Lake to get another series of
shots, Ryan Reed pulled up alongside me in his Subaru (full of furry
companions, as I’ve come to expect from previous communications with Ryan). Not recognizing me at first, he introduced
himself, and after I assured him we already knew each other, we talked
trains. He planned to shoot the
EWG train as it crossed under the BNSF mainline a short distance from where we
now stood.
The shot he planned to take is one many Spokane-area train
chasers attempt, but in this case would be particularly fitting. The BNSF mainline at this location, the
Columbia River Subdivision, is a former Great Northern property. When the 290 was new, it had crossed the CW
line at this location many times at the head of the Empire Builder and Western
Star. Now, a photo of it crossing
underneath its former stomping grounds would be a neat memento.
I declined to follow him, though. I believed it would take considerable time getting
into, and out of, the location for that shot. I see there now are roads permitting
better access to that overpass than there were in my Spokane days. So maybe I’ll try for that shot next time.
Instead, I continued north to US Highway 2, then west to
Espanola Rd. Between Medical Lake and
Reardan, the next town of note on the CW route, the tracks drop off the West
Plains into a trough formed by Deep Creek, before regaining elevation onto the
rolling wheat fields that form the northern edge of the Columbia Plateau. I was always curious about the loop of track
visible just south of US 2, and had decided to check it out for myself.
Climbing up out of Deep Creek |
Although it turned out it is nearly impossible to photograph the
loop from the sunlit south side without trespassing on someone’s property, I
did find an interesting location where the tracks cross MacFarlane Rd. on their
way down toward the creek (see top photo). Again, I’m pretty sure this road crossing wasn’t
here when I was younger. Taking
the shot here gave me time to get back to the Espanola Rd. crossing and shoot
the train as it worked its way upgrade toward my location.
After ducking under US Highway 2, the EWG train enters the wheat country of Lincoln and Douglas counties. |
On to Reardan, I set up for a classic shot of the train
splitting the town’s grain elevators and passing where the old depot used to
stand. Once more, the train seemed to
take longer than expected arriving here, and once it did, my hopes for one last
great photo came to naught. To accomplish
a little bit of work in Reardan, possibly having to re-position some stored
well cars, the crew had dropped their train just east of town and come in light
– locomotives only. I still took a few
shots of the 290 with the elevators in the background, but the scene was not
what I’d hoped for: a solid string of grain cars behind the engines.
At this point, I headed south for home. This particular trip had been more than I had
hoped for, despite a few glitches, and there was no way I could complain. The 290 is still hanging around the EWG until
its lease runs out, and whether or not it stays there much longer, I plan to go
back. Based on past performance, the
motive power mix will always be interesting.
Also, I have never spent time on the CW east of Wilbur, so maybe I’ll
find an opportunity sometime soon to chase a train back from Coulee City.