Yep. It’s just you.
[moderating]
Moved from GQ to IMHO.
[/moderating]
Yep. It’s just you.
[moderating]
Moved from GQ to IMHO.
[/moderating]
I happen to love the sound of trains in the distance as well. It seems I inherited that from my father who also likes the sound of trains in the distance. I probably got used to it as a kid.
The house I own now is a good distance from some commuter train tracks (GO transit). Unfortunately, I don’t hear them at night as I a falling asleep, which is the best time for train sounds.
I love that sound in fact I often used it to fall asleep.
I live close enough to hear the L. It doesn’t bother me. What I’ve heard is unbearable is living near an L platform. Every few minutes you have listen to “DING DONG Doors closing.”
I really like the sound of a train in the distance, but a friend of mine once lived right next to tracks, and dear Og was it loud - and the house shook! - every time a train went by. Too much of a good thing.
And here’s the thread and post where Cecil gave the details of the overhead crane story:
I am reminded of my first semester at the U of Hawaii, when I lived in a small apartment in the Makiki area of Honolulu. I had a raging hangover on the morning of December 7, when the jets of the US Air Force came screaming low over the city at the exact time of the Pearl Harbor attack. Shook me right out of bed. Not pleasant.
I find trains in the distance to be very soothing. One of my favorite memories is of Thanksgiving every year. We camp about 5 miles from a rail line, and on a still winter’s night the sound carries beautifully across the valley. I could listen to that sound for hours. But it usually puts me right to sleep.
I like that Cecil apparently posts at work like the rest of us.
I live in a town where the RR company has a nexus you might say. There are four nearby crossings. Each time a train passes a crossing it hits the horn four times. At night the sound is really NOISY. Some expensive homes are right near those crossings. I don’t understand how anybody can live there. A distant train sound is pleasant.
Until a couple of years ago, I had always lived within a quarter mile of an interstate highway. Those particular kind of traffic sounds don’t bother me… I find them comforting in fact.
But they’re completely different from living near a major intersection, where everything is stop-start all the time. That drove me crazy.
Huh. I love train horns. I grew up about two blocks from freight tracks and every time I hear a train horn I get homesick. I now live about three “blocks” (there are no blocks so I’m using them as an estimate) from tracks and I love hearing the train at night.
That said, little bro lives on (well, right at the end of his back yard) Amtrack tracks and the train blasts through at about 70 mph. Not digging that quite as much…
I could have written this word for word. My back yard (about 40 feet deep) is one pivet hedge away from the train tracks. You can see them pass a couple times per hour from my kitchen window. The good thing is they don’t blare horns or changing tracks, though; changing tracks can sound like nails on iron chalkboard. I guess I got this house a little cheaper or sooner because I didn’t mind the tracks, and somebody else might have.
But I used to live on the upper floor of this house, and when the apartment below us came up for sale, I jumped at the chance to buy it. So I guess I really don’t mind.
Psychology says that people mind sound less if:
Hearing a car horn raises your hackles because you automatically default to: “some impatient asshole thinks I haven’t noticed the light turning green yet, but I can’t go because the car in front of me hasn’t moved” or “holy crap an accident is about to happen, do I break, swerve, or full steam ahead?”
Most (modern) people’s mental association with trains is generally positive, hence it’s considered soothing.
(There is also the low frequency, heart-beat-like rhythm of train tracks.)
I, for one, associate train sounds to riding in a train, falling asleep to the gentle swaying and the sensation of the wheels going over the tracks.
Yes, the “clickety-clack” isn’t bad at all, but a horn will drive me crazy. And yes, some Engineers seem to enjoy overdoing them just for the sake of being a asshole.
35 posts in and nobody has yet quoted Art Garfunkel’s ex-partner?
mmm
Where are you in PA?
One of my clients is a music venue called Knuckleheads. It’s a classic “roadhouse” right next to the railroad tracks. When I say “right next to” I mean it. Here’s an overhead of the place.
For the most part, the patrons and the performers seem to really like the trains coming by. Here are a couple of examples:
Raul Malo - Matter Much To You (The train comes by at 3:21)
Rev Peyton’s Big Damn Band - Train Song (Train takes a solo at 1:50)