Thank you, Ken.
Oh, yes, it takes some work but rainy days know very well how to get you there.
Anyway that drawing dates from at least two or moew years ago and it is just a hint to myself.
I have learnt inmore than three decades ago that plans are to be discarded because they main task is to provocate the Muses: when they see my sketches they smile and start changing things until you see no traces of the original plan.
See this sequence:
For years I have been wanting to build a layout centered in the reversing triangle at one end of a line and had made sketches for a track plan on many white areas of every paper arround while having breakfast or even dinner.
Yesterday I decided to see if it would be possible so I took my old collection of discardeds track material (from who knows which forgotten layouts and got this:
IMG_0058 (2) by
Daniel Osvaldo Caso, on Flickr
I was surprised to see it could be done even if my sketching used H0 switches of a much bigger radius than my average 200/300mmm ones and that pushed be ahead so I came to this:
IMG_0060 (2) by
Daniel Osvaldo Caso, on Flickr
Then I started cutting colour paper to see ventual buildings for the scene:
IMG_0064 (2) by
Daniel Osvaldo Caso, on Flickr
Then I notice I was too centered on the doubts about the viability of the triangle and didn't notice I was making what every beginner often do: letting the contour of the baseboard to lead.
So I came to this:
IMG_0068 (2) by
Daniel Osvaldo Caso, on Flickr
... and I liked it a lot better.
After dinner I suddenly realized it would be a high desnsity trackwork (where I am probably the worse in the world) and started to laugh at myself whyile deep inside this text appeared without sounds or letters but with absolute clarity:
" OVER MY DEAD BODY!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"
Then, suddenly, I notice I have as much energy as I could want to invest in creative work but not for soldering track.
I realised there is not in the horizon any chance that the triangle plan will be, but it fullfilled it's duty: it reversed my efort sending it back to the creative work and letting the technical co,mplexity for those able to enjoy it.
That is one way or the other the main fucntion that plans have in my life nowadays. A rare way to re-rail me.
Now I must go, I want to answer a couple of very touching e-mails I've got from my friends from Nevada.
