Why I should...
Reprinted from "Crown Jewels of the Wire", August 1997, page 32
"Why I should carry a cross-arm when I hunt insulators...,"
said
Bob Jones of Lynchburg, Virginia.
This could be bad, I thought in that moment the water rose above my boot....
very bad!.. .as my knee disappeared into the murky water. Just how deep could
this trench be?
It's December 30th and thankfully one of the warmest Decembers
in Virginia history. Tommy Snead, NIA #5419, and I are spending the day
following up on several insulator leads.
The first three produced nothing
positive, but this one seemed more promising. An ex-railroad employee had given
us a general location and description and had personally gathered insulators
there including CD 154 Lynchburgs. The railroad had removed the top cross-arms
and had tossed them beside the poles and strangely enough in this instance
across the property fence into private pasture land. With the owners permission,
we could search for the insulators without trespassing.

Bob Jones and Tommy Snead leaning on that lifesaving
cross-arm surveying the
day's cache of insulators.
The insulators were there: Hemingray 42's in clear, Hemingray 19's in Hemi
blue, plastic H.G. Porters, CD 162 , Stars in blue and yellow green, CD
126.3, CD 133 and CD 145 Brookfields, and the biggest surprise, several CD 151 I-bar
8's in celery green. In all, there were about 80 insulators.
We did
find two CD 154 Lynchburgs, but in poor condition. Most had minor damage,
probably a combination of the drop to the ground, being stepped on by livestock
and vandalism as the railroad bordered a rural road. Oh, by the way, the water
was at least 2-1/2 feet deep, and what had appeared at first to be about
18" wide was well over five feet. That pasture grass is really deceptive.
The cross-arm I was carrying on my first trip across became a temporary bridge
enabling me to pull myself out of this swamp -- a real Kodak moment! I only wonder
what the result would have been if I had decided to start with the bag of
insulators!
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