Lets see. Track work is hell. I worked up in Honesdale over the summer(birthplace of the US railroad) and one of the things that we did was to get the tracks ready for the excursion.
Tell me about it! You're either dodging trains, or the (some times wet) sleepers, which means, you end up doing the splits. I've had close encounters with trains many times and we even ask them to give us a
mile notice (25mph, loud whistles, plenty of time). When you have 300 tons worth of train charging towards you, its no fun!
I was somewhere near Alton at one time, emptying out a van which had spares, the only way to get to it, was next to the running line and in the six foot. So i got a wheel barrow from Alton station, wheeled it along the ballast, did a few trips and returned to the van on my own, while there where trains running. The problem is, I had a wooden board and rope on the barrow and this train came out of nowhere. I could hear it, but I couldn't determine if it was a train or an aircraft!
Thats until it emerged 200yards or so infront of me from a deep cutting, my first words? Well, it begins with S, hid the barrow on the under frame, hid myself there and got out the way in time.
Not long after that, 3 of us were walking the very same section and yes, we asked the same request, one trip, too late, his face was right near us when we saw the train comming and I was right up next to a bank (the other 2 guys were in a safer position! In the six foot with wagons that have their handbrakes on!). The best idea is to lay on the bank, but banks have nasty plants on them and ouch, that hurt!!! They recently cut the bank too, so, you got sharp bits of sticks, sticking up your back.
However, lunch by the lineside was nice.

Early summer, in the shade, while the service trains go by.
