One of the first orders of railfanning business after I
arrived in Phoenix was to head up Flagstaff and check out big
show on the BNSF's main through northern Arizona. This is the
original transcontinental line of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa
Fe and it's as busy as ever. In a single day, as many as 100
trains ply the two pairs of steel rails that stretch across the
state and crest the Arizona divide. The freight is hot and the
speeds are fast. Trains are loaded up with the biggest, newest
locomotives and much of the line has 70 mph speed limits for
freights, and 90 for Amtrak. I wasn't disappointed with what I
saw.
These next shots aren't in Arizona--they're in New Mexico, on the Raton Pass line.
Semaphores are a fast-disappearing piece of railroad history, and I had to shoot a
few on the way back home in August.