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Not as extravagant as others before me, but this was my 1st attempt at a mountain side cliff and a foam bridge (The bridge was actually the 2nd attempt).

 

There is a real life story with the truck hanging off the edge like that.  Several years ago my son and I went train chasing.  We were in Perry County following the NS Mainline.  The road became elevated over the track and we were climbing a mountain.  The road turned to dirt but the GPS showed it continuing. 

 

We saw a sign that said, "Continue at your own risk".  Everything seemed ok.  The road was wide, it appeared safe, the GPS said it went through.

 

It was early April and a bright sunny day... maybe 50 degrees.  We kept going along following this mountain road.  As the road twisted and turned we went around a corner and instantly found the road to be nothing but ice.  We were on the north side of the mountain and the sunny days had not melted all of the winter ice.

 

With every inch forward the back end of the truck got closer to the edge.  I stopped the truck and got out.  The ice was so slippery, when I stepped out, I immediately fell right on my back. My son got out to see if I was ok. 

 

I walked him off the road near the mountain side and gave him the cell phone.  I told him if the truck goes over, he has to call 911.

 

I went back in the truck and tried to go forward away from the edge.  The back end kept sliding closer and closer.  I put it in reverse steering away from the edge and I still got closer.  Probably to the point where you see the truck in the picture below.

 

In one last effort I turned the wheels toward the cliff and put in in reverse.  I really thought I was going over.  But the truck swung around hit some branches and bushes and righted itself going back down toward the mountain.

 

My son jumped back in and we called it a day and went home.

 

The moral of the story....

Turn around when you see a sign that says, "Continue at your own risk".

 

Ron

 

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Last edited by Ron045

Here's a hillside/tunnel I've been working on.  I'm not completely satisfied with how it turned out, but I can live with it.  In the back corner of the hill, I left a flat spot to put a rotary beacon or a radio tower of some sort.  At the hill's base I'm planning to build a "plateau" hill about 3"-4" high to put three or four houses on.

 

For now I think it makes a good 3D backdrop.

Last edited by PRRfan

Absolutely great scenic foam mountains, cliffs and groundscaping work folks.

 

And ronO45's mountain road story reminds me of when I lived in the N.C.mountains and had to walk over 3 miles and talk a logger into bringing a John Deere to pull my truck out of a frozen ravine. I almost needed it to get myself out. Yep, lesson learned- 4wd has no traction on ice.

Last edited by Dewey Trogdon

Excellent examples everyone!  In the past, I used blue and pink foam, and do not recall a preference.  Just this past Saturday, I bought a 2-inch sheet of green foam At the local Lowes.  It is the stuff that has some small air voids in it.  It was all they have had since I started pricing it a couple of months ago.  We will see how it is to work with.  This sheet will be used mostly for a base, so I won't be doing much cutting or carving, however.

     PRRfan i had 2 of them 1 was A chopper and the other 1 was stock for parts to get the chopper running. Before I could get the chopper finished we moved and I could not take them with me. No one wanted to give me any money for them so I ended up giving them away. Bummer  Take care and remember it does not matter what you ride but that you ride! Choo Choo Kenny

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