The volunteer log for Friday has been updated to show 82 names. Today's (Saturday) volunteer log listed 108 names, which I believe is a new record for a work weekend day.
Some photos from today:
A damp morning to start (it rained heavily overnight). Looking from the Sheepscot platform, we see two steamers out on the main: No. 9 by the water tank and No. 3 by the north yard switch.

Streams were running well after all the rain. All the drainage work performed by Mike Fox has worked well. Here we see the stream at location 10.


Jacques and Vincent LeRow prepare for tamping. Our tamper Big Joe is at the north end of the track, just south of caboose 554.

Roadmaster Joe Fox sets the first jacks.

Tamping is underway!

Dave Buczkowski operated Big Joe in the morning.

Joe led the setting of jacks as the tamping crew followed.


A marker was left at the start of the tamping.

Meanwhile, stone trains dropped ballast south of the tamping crew. Locomotive no. 52's engineer Jonathan St. Mary talks with Joe Fox just north of the slide area.

By late afternoon, tamping had reached just south of the pinch point.

After a nice dinner, Mass Bay RRE President David Brown and Leigh Webb made a formal presentation of the 2019 H. Albert Webb Memorial Railroad Preservation Award to WW&F Railway Museum President Dave Buczkowski. The $10,000 grant aids our Mountain Extension, and we greatly appreciate their support!

After dinner and the presentation, Jay Barta provided training for the three new AEDs recently purchased for our Museum through donations by several members. One of the AEDs has been installed in the lobby of our restroom building.

We then went out on an evening train ride to the Mountain Extension, where a walking tour was provided to MBRRE members and other friends of our Museum. Upon return from the trip, many were attracted to our shops, which were still busy. Here's folks walking into bay 1.

Several folks have been busy this weekend completing the wall sheathing and window trim in shop bay 1.

Meanwhile, others had been busy replacing end sills and making other minor repairs to a Maine Narrow Gauge flatcar on sort term loan. The repaired car was flipped back over this evening and put back onto its trucks.



