Spyke
lemmy.today

As a Washingtonian these pics always make me sad. Thankfully there's more preservation these days, but I would have loved to see these majestic trees still standing.

42

Oregonian here but same. There's nothing quite like hiking PNW old growth, and to imagine the forests used to be mostly these giants.

10

"Any fine morning, a power saw can fell a tree that took a thousand years to grow.” — Edwin Way Teale

28
lemmy.world

I dunno if it's an optical illusion, but I feel like you can see the tracks buckling under the wheels on account of the incredible weight.

6
lemmy.world

They do visibly pump with each car when the ties aren't tamped well on clean rock. I doubt their hand-laid tracks were as easy to get right as we can with extra rock and a modern surfacing gang.

Also rail weight has gone up an astonishing amount over time. Rail used to be puny compared to what is used now.

6
PugJesusreply
lemmy.world

Yeah, but I don't know that wanting working class folk living payday to payday to die because the higher-ups don't know or care about conservation is reasonable.

4

The members of timber dynasties (e.g. wheeler, as well many others) would have deserved it. These laborers rarely had other options but to starve. Ethics under capitalism or whatever.

4

"Values".

Ugh.

Proud to have butchered those magnificent living beings..


I used to be like them..

Cultural-brainwashing's really effective in "forming" children..

"The Rogue Hypnotist" wrote a little book on cultural-trance, to try to get more people to consider & understand its workings..

_ /\ _

-2

You reached the end

Loggers next to logs loaded onto a train, Washington state, USA, ~1920 | Spyke