STO 7901 Charter:
Prologue:
In 2006, OC
Transpo in
In late 2008,
I read on the Canadian Public Transit Discussion Board that someone was
planning on chartering STO fishbowl #7901 which is the last original STO
fishbowl in service at the end of May. This would be the first time since the
I was
originally planning on flying to
I got to
I then walked back to await the boarding of my train. When I got back to the great hall, I saw my friend Jason with the THRA tour of Union Station. On the last Saturday of each month, the THRA holds a tour of Union Station that takes people to places regular passengers who pass through Union station don’t usually go. I have been on one such tour.
I joined the line to board train 44. Soon it was time to board. I photographed the train before I got on.
I was
seated in LRC coach #3322 which was the last car on the four car train. The
train departed on time. I barely managed to film the yard where on my last trip
I saw a TTC fishbowl parked. However, I was unable to film the TTC’s
The train
stopped at
The train
stopped at
We left
I walked through the station before I took one more photo of my train.
I then headed to the Transitway and boarded a D60LF on route 95X. Shortly after I boarded the bus, I ran into another bus fan on the way back from a charter on an OC Transpo 1990 New Flyer D40. I had decided not to attend that charter but he told me it was enjoyable. However, he would most likely not be on the STO charter.
I got off
at the
I then walked to the Ottawa Backpackers hostel. I checked in and dropped my suitcase in my room. I went downstairs and had a chat with two women in the lobby about the O-Train.
In 2006, there was a proposal to turn the O-Train into a more traditional light rail line which would have shut the line down for two years. However, the proposal was shelved and the O-Train operates as it did when I first rode it in 2004.
I left a
few minutes later discovered my hostel was two blocks away from the hotel my
family and I stayed at in 2004. I also ran into Richard Hooles who I know at
the Toronto Transportation Society who was in
Soon, I caught a bus back to the Rideau Centre after buying a day pass. I took some photos and then boarded a bus on 95 and road eastbound.
When I got to the Hurdman Transfer station, I saw a 1990 D40. I got off and photographed it.
I also photographed one of OC Transpo’s new Orion 7 NG’s.
Even though
Orion 7 NG’s are common in
I then got on a bus on route 95 and rode to the St. Laurent Transitway stop and walked upstairs. I immediately saw Classic #9317 which I photographed.
I hung around for several minutes. During the time, I filmed another OC Transpo D40 leaving. Meanwhile 9317 went into service on route 14. I photographed it before getting on. The driver asked why I was taking pictures. I told him I was a bus fan. He seemed to be okay with that.
I rode 9317 briefly before I got off and filmed it pulling away.
I then
headed back to
At one point, I saw an OC Transpo Invero being towed back to the garage. I also saw two of OC Transpo’s three new double-decker buses. I was hoping to ride them in service. However, I wouldn’t get to.
I then
walked over by the front looking for a warehouse where a group is restoring an
original
One of them thought they saw me before. It turned out they were on the Toronto Transportation Society’s last two charters: GO Transit Provost #1600 and a York Region Transit New Flyer D40.
At Hurdman, we got off. I saw Flyer #9028 was back and I was told it was the extra in case a bus broke down. They were very interested when I told them about my ride on it earlier.
I heard that a Flyer was on route 9 and it showed up a couple minutes later. I took a photo of it before we got on.
The route 9 has low frequency. The people I was with said if it ran more frequently, it would get more riders. Route 9 is the closest route to where the Prime Minister lives; however, it’s a long walk.
At one point, we passed 1992 Flyer D40 #9221 operating on route #1. I filmed it as it passed. We got off at the Rideau Centre and I took one more photo.
We then waited for a bus to take us to the Bayview station on the O-Train. We got there just in time to miss a train. We waited for the next train. When it arrived, I filmed it arriving.
The operator went into the cab and we were soon off. We noticed the operator opened the curtain in the cab more so we could see even more. It may have been the O-train hat I was wearing!
We rode the entire length of the line. At Carleton, I filmed the train going the other way. We arrived at Greenboro. We got off and I took some photos.
It was here where we went our separate way, though I would see the people I was with again on the charter the next day. I caught a bus and rode to the South Keys Transitway station. When I arrived, I got off and walked over to the nearby Wal-Mart and had dinner at the McDonalds.
I had eaten
lunch at the same Wal-Mart when I came to
Back at the Wal-Mart I work at, management bought walkie-talkies for associates to replace paging over the P.A. Unfortunately as I found out through a manager who has “rubbed me the wrong way”; Wal-Mart was too cheap to buy enough so each department can have an associate with a radio.
At one point, the manager paged the associates to the Jewelry department for a meeting, I wandered over there in case the manager was a former manager at my store, though not surprising, he wasn’t. I soon left the store and headed back to my hostel. Along the way, I took a few more photos at Greenboro and Hurdman.
I got back
to my hostel shortly after
I told him
about some of my encounters with the police including that run-in with the
Amtrak cop in
We talked about reincarnation. I told him that a fortune teller had once told me I was a warrior in a past life and my two run-ins with YRT drivers who were under the impression that photography was not allowed and how one transit fan contacted the head of YRT. After a long series of calls, YRT has since informed drivers that bus fan photography is allowed without exception. Or so I thought.
A month after my last trip, I had two run-ins with the first YRT driver who gave me problems about photography. The second time, I asked for the bylaw, the driver said the privacy bylaw which I knew was a lie and I argued with her and I came out on top which seemed to vindicate my past live as a warrior.
I took a walk and soon, I called it a night.
Click here for part 2: part 2.