After last week’s adventures in building a cabin, I decided to build a railroad trestle in N scale suitable for a Nn3 train at some point in the future. It came out pretty good all things considered.
This trestle was constructed based loosely on a bunch of different trestles that I found photos of online. The photos I’ve seen are mainly of big, impressive trestles. It is harder to find photos of smaller trestles like this would have been. The smaller, regular and very average trestles weren’t noteworthy enough back in the day to waste much film on.
I’m not sure what i’ll build next out of twigs from the yard. I am starting to run out of straight twigs that are the right size for building things. I might have to go further afield to find new construction materials.
I decided to try my hand at building a little 15×20 scale foot log cabin in N scale out of some twigs that I found in the yard. With the current global situation, rather than going to one of the local chain craft shops, I figured I’d try and scavenge materials. Aside from one chunk of tooth pick to make the chimney, the entire log cabin is made out of twigs from the yard and some Elmer’s wood glue.
All done. Door, chimney, shake roof, and log cabin sitting on some big sill logs.
I wouldn’t necessarily want to spent more than a few days in this cabin. It would be a wee bit drafty. But overall it’s a very passable little N scale model.
Here are some early in progress photos. It feels a bit like I’m building a real log cabin except with an x-acto knife instead of an axe and hatchet.
I built this over two days using about seven or eight hours total while watching model train YouTube videos in the background.
In progress photos of putting the roof together. I ended up making shingles out of the twigs from my yard because that’s what I had on hand.
Let me tell you… making individual shingles is hard work. But the effect is great. Looks pretty prototypical from photos I found online of old miners cabins. Some of them used big slabs of wood as shingles because that’s what they could get. My shingles are about one scale foot wide on average.
Some detail of the roof line and chimney. It would have been useful to have thinner shakes for finishing the roof but I did what I could do with what I had.
Here are a couple finished shots with a dime for scale. I think this is a very passable crude log cabin that you might see in a mining district 100-150 years ago somewhere in the American west or up into Canada.
All in all, I think the little modeling experiment turned out pretty well. It’s pretty fun to build something like this from scratch just based on the materials I have on hand around the house or out in the yard. Now i have to think about what I might make next. I was considering a simple tipple or similar. However, I don’t have dimensional bass or balsa wood so that would be a bit of a challenge. Maybe I could start working on a little diorama to put this cabin into and eventually install on a Nn3 (narrow gauge N scale) model train layout?
William Bozza from the PC800 FB group recently posted these images of his PC800 Mad Max Edition bike that he saved from the scrappers. As our beloved Honda Pacific Coast PC800 motorcycles become long in the tooth, some of them end up getting stripped of their valuable plastics and then broken apart for sale as parts on eBay and elsewhere. This bike was headed in that direction before William rescued it and made this wonderful homage to the Mad Max franchize. His words describing the bike are below
Wats up guys thanks for the add ! This is my 89 I got it stripped so rather than watch another good bike go to the scrapper I bought it and got creative Introducing the pc800 mad max edition. What y’all think? Not shabby for budget build to rescue this bike?