A classic scene in Rensselaer as 148 heads eastbound to Decatur. The old code line and signals still in place is reminiscent of the old Wabash era.
A pair of RCPE's finest head over the trestle on the Cottonwood River in New Ulm.
The Northtown to Lincoln manifest heads west through Grove City past the grain elevator. The cars on the spur are dropped off by the East Local for loading at the elevator.
The Aberdeen local continues the struggle as it crawls up the 13 mile 1% grade in the Coteau des Prairies , nearing the peak outside of Summit on a beautiful spring evening. It was quite the sprin... (more)
A loaded ballast train heads west on the Paynesville Sub at MP 39, with a KCS MAC leading the way. They would meet a few eastbounds on their journey west.
A quad-windowed SD40-2W leads ore empties north through rural Northern Minnesota.
An intermodal flies west through Maiden Rock. Despite it being very late into October, a good amount of foliage was still present.
Autoracks head up the St. Croix Sub on a nice autumn afternoon along the Mississippi.
An ex Santa Fe warbonnet leads a 6-unit power move into Argentine yard after waiting for a very short auto rack train to pass (visible in the background).
On the tail of a long 298, the Glenwood wayfreight slowly heads east into Eden Valley with a nice surprise, an ex MILW GP40. Normally, this job uses ECOs, so seeing anything other than that is a t... (more)
A rebuilt SD40 leads a fertilizer train Eastbound toward the twin cities in March of 2016 on the Staples Sub.
After going in the hole for an EB manifest, the Willmar East Local throttles up the grade over the Washington Creek bridge in Dassel, perfectly fitting this pair of geeps.
A heavy snow squall ensues as a steaming taconite train makes its way south on the Missabe Sub through Culver.
A pair of CPKC EMDs lead hotshot train #148 through Westminster. Leader being a heritage ACU, trailer a KCS MAC.
Late in the evening, after dumping ballast in Loretto, this rock train was seen here heading back to Humboldt, kicking up quite a storm.