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Ken in the cab of a CPR unit at Portage la Prairie, Man. |
Nothing lasts forever—not
model railroads, or the people who built them.
In 2009, my brother-in-law, Ken Epp
dismantled his HO scale
Cougar River Subdivision, due to a planned move to a
condo. On Oct. 14, Ken passed away, due to cancer.
The Cougar River Sub. was one of the largest layouts in
Winnipeg—maybe the largest at that time. Ken hosted many open houses, and the
layout was open for several conventions. It was also featured on local and national TV.
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A scene from the Cougar River Sub. |
Together, we also organized the annual
Winnipeg Model Railroad Club's annual
train show, starting in the early 1990s. Our first show was in our church's basement; thereafter, it was held at a local high school. I worked with Ken on the show until about five years ago, and he let it go three years ago.
Before Ken died, I had a chance to
talk with him about his interest in trains. I asked him where that interest came from.
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One of Ken's favorite places wa the Skoonka tunnels in B.C.'s Thompson River Canyon. He modelled it on the Cougar River Sub. |
“Maybe it started when I was a child," he said. "I remember standing up in my crib
in Coldwater, Ont. when the 12:30 mail train came along. But how does it grow
and take hold? I don’t know. My love for trains just grew somehow.”
Ken
never intended to build a huge layout. “I just started and it grew.” Taking it
down wasn’t easy. “I took it down slowly, in pieces. It took me three years to
tear down the canyon scene.”
Taking down the layout was similar to how
Ken approached the end of his life. “Nothing is permanent, including me,” he
said. “That is reality of life.”
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Ken and me in my layout room, two weeks before he died. |
Looking back, Ken fondly recalled his
many train trips on VIA and Amtrak—over 180,000 miles by train in all. (Yes, he kept a record of each and every one.)
His many times taking the train made him a bit
of an informal expert, and he frequently found himself telling other passengers
about the terrain they were riding through or providing information about
railroading in Canada.
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His favorite place: In the dome car on The Canadian. |
Ken’s favorite place to ride a train was in the
dome car of
The Canadian.
“I have to say that sitting in the dome car at night
as the train goes across the Canadian Shield, watching the signals get knocked
down, seeing the northern lights and the snow on the trees—I don’t know if what
heaven is like, but for me, that’s heaven,” he said.
As for me, I was lucky to have a model railroader for a brother-in-law. In fact, my wife joked that I only married her because her brother liked trains. It wasn't true; we only discovered our mutual interest after the wedding. But it was a most fortunate discovery, and we spent many happy hours trackside or working on each other's layouts.
Of his layout itself, it featured
at 530-foot loop-to-loop three-level mainline that travelled through the rec room, spare
bedroom, small office space, washroom and other basement areas.
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Another view of the Skoonka tunnels. |
Scenically, the layout featured mountain, prairie and Canadian shield
scenes, including a concrete snow shed from the Thompson River Canyon.
In terms
of era and railway, it featured both CN and CP Rail, with classic CPR maroon and
grey running beside CN white, orange and black.
Train lengths were 25-30 cars,
and four trains could be run at a time. It took
about 25 minutes for a train to run between the lower and upper staging
yards.
All train movements were controlled by a dispatcher, who was
located in a small specially-built room that featured a seat from a real CN
SD40-2; 40 operating signals and radios helped operators move their trains along
the line.
In 2004 another friend,
David R. Dyck, succumbed to cancer. Ken, Dave and I were church and model railroad friends, and took some railfan trips together. After Dave learned that his cancer was terminal, we took one last railfan trip; the photo below is from that trip. Now both Dave and Ken are gone.
To remember them, I have made
special commemorative patched cars carrying their initials, age and date of death.
Rest in Peace, Ken. It's hard to believe you aren't with us any longer.
Find links to videos of the Cougar River Sub. here.