Vanamonde Posted Thursday at 09:42 PM Share Posted Thursday at 09:42 PM 8 hours ago, magnemoe said: Its some sort of weird drider like statue outside our lunch room. Its on a roof in an backyard so it can only been seen from some offices. An serious weird place for an statue, suspect it ended up there after getting rejected from an better position. And not an drider, only 6 legs and some part going down past the hip. Maybe it's just pretending to be a statue! :O Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
DDE Posted Friday at 11:02 AM Share Posted Friday at 11:02 AM 13 hours ago, Vanamonde said: Maybe it's just pretending to be a statue! :O Only one way to be sure. *sips Liber-Tea™* Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
SunlitZelkova Posted Friday at 10:24 PM Share Posted Friday at 10:24 PM In 1958, a local family disappeared in the Columbia River Gorge after journeying from Portland to gather things Christmas decorations. A journalist at my local TV station has covered the story for about three decades; it’s a complete mystery as to what happened. Or it was, until what based on design features and a partial license plate match is the family’s car is believed to have been found underwater near the Cascade Locks. I’m not really posting about this because of any strong true crime interest. I just think the local journalism around it is kinda… cool? Exciting? They’re trying to put all their coverage into it because not much happens around here. They’re interviewing local town members for their reactions and now they actually have a model to show where the car is underwater and how it was found It’s nice to see in an age of flashy CGI animations, to be honest. If anyone is curious about the story, here’s a link. It has a little bit of background and contains a video with the interview using the model. https://www.koin.com/news/oregon/diver-interview-missing-martin-family-station-wagon-found-03072025/ The car was found by an amateur diver. I’ve been to the shoreline just a hundred meters or so from where it was located, and there is a playground nearby I frequented during trips into Gorge each summer as a kid. Very eerie to think bodies may have been nearby the whole time. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
CatastrophicFailure Posted 15 hours ago Share Posted 15 hours ago Unrelated… Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlamoVampire Posted 11 hours ago Share Posted 11 hours ago Stuck at a railroad crossing watching a super long freight train with distributed power go by. Distributed power is a locomotive slotted into the middle of the train. Basically 2 trains in 1. 065803082025 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
magnemoe Posted 6 hours ago Share Posted 6 hours ago 5 hours ago, AlamoVampire said: Stuck at a railroad crossing watching a super long freight train with distributed power go by. Distributed power is a locomotive slotted into the middle of the train. Basically 2 trains in 1. 065803082025 So they only require one crew and only take up one slot in the scheduling of rail traffic, but an long one US freight trains are seriously long. it also has the benefit that you can divide the train in two easy who make breaking it up easier. You need to adjust power for the locomotives in the center say front is going downhill but center is still uphill Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AlamoVampire Posted 5 hours ago Share Posted 5 hours ago (edited) @magnemoe there are a lot of tracks near where i live and its a bunch of union pacific freighters most of the time. Typically its either petroleum or autoracks coming through. Often its 2-3 locos. Sometimes 4-5. Rarely its distributed power. Was fun to see. The rarest train i see is amtrak. 125003082025 Edited 5 hours ago by AlamoVampire Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.