Continued from Page 4 N, G or HO) which determine the scale of the trains. Layouts feature carefully measured track and appropriate scale-sized build- ings, including depots and stations. Penin- sula club members have their pre-built on modular layouts which they clamp together for shows, drastically reducing set-up time. They plug in, adjust control devices, then the fun begins as visitors of all ages watch. Sometimes as many as five trains are run- ning simultaneously. “We run the trains as if we were run- ning the schedule,” Clemmens said. “We are ‘playing trains,’ as if we are doing the real thing, except in miniature.” Enjoyment is generated as the carefully crafted locomotives reverse, pick up extra railroad cars, attach them safely and chug into a yard or station. “For some people, it’s just watching the trains go around and around,” he said. ‘Hooked’ Two retired U.S. Coast Guard mechan- ics, George Normandin of Long Beach and Budd Lather of Ilwaco, both speak senti- mentally about the joy their hobby brings. Normandin’s career was spent keeping giant ship’s motors functioning; his hobby engines are way smaller. “I got into it as I got older,” Normandin said. “It’s just fun.” In his youth, older kids away at college would spend weekends home in Michi- gan and travel back to Chicago on “Sunday Flyers.” “We got hooked on trains as a kid,” Lather said. “We knew people that worked for the railroad.” Lather is the club’s president. One of his fondest memories as a high school student in Seattle was accompanying his eighth-grade sister on a two-day adventure to a wedding in the early 1960s. “We spent nights sleeping in recliners and spent all day in the observation car,” he said. “A hamburger on the train was $5 then — we were broke by the time we got to Chicago.” Later, memories of watching real trains at Ballard Locks in Seattle and a more recent preservation project in Portland rekindled his interest. He moved to Ilwaco 10 years ago and now has a 20-foot model layout above his garage. Coach A variety of stage displays will be avail- able to view, hosted both by visiting clubs and local residents. Those attending the Clamshell Railroad Days can enjoy one of only two opportu- nities during the year to climb aboard the Rich Blake Alan Murray, right, runs a train watched by fellow railroad enthusiast Mark Clemmens at a prior gathering of the annual Clamshell Railroad Days. Enthusiasts run their trains year-round at homes and in their shops, dismantling them and reassembling for shows. museum’s largest artifact. The Nahcotta, a refurbished passenger train coach built by the Pullman Palace Car Co. of Chicago, will be available from 10 a.m. to noon and 2 p.m. to 3:30 p.m. each day. The coach was attached to trains that ran from 1889 to 1930 on the local nar- row-gauge line. This was nicknamed the Clamshell Railroad and gives its name to the annual event. The Cranberrian Fair in Octo- ber is the only other time the real rail car- riage is open for public viewing. The museum, housed in Ilwaco’s old telephone company headquarters, which was built in the 1960s, features a recreation of elements of the Ilwaco Rail & Naviga- tion Co.’s freight depot, which served as the south peninsula’s commercial transportation hub in the early 1900s. Upstairs in a permanent fixture is a dis- play created by Arthur Shumway highlight- ing the Spokane Portland and Seattle Rail- way Co. On the museum’s changeable wall featuring “Peninsula characters,” are portrait photos of Ilwaco railroad pioneers Edwin and Lewis Loomis. For children, there will be storytimes in the Nahcotta at 1 p.m. each day. There will also be kids’ take-and-make kits available from the Ilwaco Timberland Library. Patrick Webb Budd Lather, president of the Peninsula Model Railroad Club, gears up for the annual Clamshell Railroad Days at the Columbia Pacific Heritage Museum in Ilwaco. THURSDAY, JULY 15, 2021 // 5