“Wow.”
That’s all I could say when photos of Evan Daes’ great model railroad.
Evan, who lives in Belgium, models Canadian railways. I first saw his
work on the Canadian Railway Modellers group on Facebook.
From scenery to backdrop to locomotives to rolling stock, everything is superb.
I knew right away it was a candidate for my Great Canadian Model Railroads
series.
There are three unusual things about Evan’s layout.
First, it’s just 13 feet long by about two feet wide. It’s a diorama, in
his dining room.
Second, it took him only two weeks to build it.
Third, Evan lives a long way from Canada—in Belgium.
So how did someone from Europe get interested in Canadian trains?
“After several trips to the U.S. and Canada for holidays, I was quickly
sold to those massive trains and scenery instead of the local European trains,”
he says.
He started building small Canadian-themed layouts, taking them to local
shows, and formed a club with others focused on Canadian railways.
A custom layout builder, he has built 18 layouts in the past eight years,
mostly on European themes. “But my heart is in Canadian railroading,” he says.
This layout, set in the Alberta-B.C. area, is not era-specific. “So
I can use BC Rail, CP and CN,” he says.
As for construction, the layout is made from three modules, so it’s
transportable if needed.
The track is handlaid on cork. Ties are made out of matches, and the
rail is Peco Code 75.
The switches are also handlaid directly on the layout, and the points
and frogs are made from a Fast Tracks jig.
The scenery is a Styrofoam base covered with Sculptamold—“my all-time
favourite modelling medium,” he says.
The rocks are also made from Sculptamold, while the dirt and stones are
all natural cover he collects during the year.
The trees are a mixture of commercial and handmade, with most of the commercial
ones are from a European company called Anita Décor.
The self-made trees are made from twisted wire covered with Static grass
and fine turf, and the bushes from Welberg Scenery.
The has a small lake and a creek. The creek is made on a base with Sculptamold,
then covered with real crushed limestone and set with PVA glue.
The lake is a flat layer of Sculptamold painted and sealed with acrylics
to obtain the typical silted colours.
Evan used Woodland Scenics Deep Pour water for the creek and lake.
There is only one building on the layout, a house from a kit. The layout
is operated with Digitrax DCC.
For Evan, “the small layout was and ideal way to try some new scenery
techniques.”
“A layout is never finished,” he adds.
From what I see, it looks very finished
to me!