Posted by Mitch Goldman on November 17, 2015 
So, then - Mike, anyone? Why the zig-zag? Perhaps to continue straight would require a deeper less reliable fill? Wild shot - what, may I ask is the vantage point?
Posted by on November 18, 2015 
All along the radio tower... Must have been a chilly wait up there.
Posted by Ed Eaglehouse on November 18, 2015 
Very dramatic shot. I love your photos, Mike. I also love the stories that go with them.
Posted by Jim Thias on November 18, 2015 
Are you implying Mike is a princess, Rolf? ;-) Superb shot, Mr. D!
Posted by Bobby Tables on November 18, 2015 
Mitch: The Lucin Cutoff as this is called originally had a wooden trestle section. In the late 1950's the trestle section was replaced with a parallel causeway and the kink is where the new causeway transitions to the old causeway. I've often wondered why they didn't use a more gradual transition between the two though.
Posted by Steve Larson on November 18, 2015 
I've always been a fan of this line. The Lucin cutoff was a marvelous achievement for the Southern Pacific cutting all sorts of miles off the overall trip of going around the northern end of the lake & taking it past Promontory Summit. Union Pacific did well "merging" with both the Denver & Rio Grand Western (Southern Pacific) & the Western Pacific to get both Routes from Ogden & Salt Lake City, to all points west. Wonderful shot, Mike, & thanks for sharing.
Posted by John Simpkins-Camp on November 18, 2015 
Perhaps it's just the telephoto lens compacting the field of view, but those curves in the transition look a bit tight and sharp. Does anyone know of the speed through those curves?
Posted by Altaf Siddiqi on November 23, 2015 
Wow! Stunning
Posted by Christopher LF on November 24, 2015 
The S-curves are approx 1 mile long, so trains go normal speed through there. From the one end of the S-curve to the other end you can see jogging back to the original route is a distance of 11 miles. If you can't see where the line jogs back, the land at Promontory Point is 13 miles away.
Posted by Ringo Clark - on December 12, 2015 
If the Wasatch mountains and Ogden are in the distance, that would make this a Westbound, not Eastbound
Posted by Mike Danneman on December 13, 2015 
Ringo: The train is going away from Lakeside and is eastbound.
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