You had me going there for a minute Kaley, but I think I can answer your
question. At some point in the vicinity of Dry Creek, construction
contractors built an aerial tramway to lower material from the canyon rim to
the floor of the valley. I took a look at one old photo and the structure
you mention shows very clearly. To me it looks like the head frame of an
aerial tramway. and I'm willing to bet a good chunk of money that's exactly
what it was.
Joe Smuin
- "Joey, the secret to telling a good railway story is to always try to
stick just as close to the facts as possible." --- Cliff Inkster.
- The secret to contacting Joe by email is to be sure to insert "Joe" or
"Mr. Smuin" into the main text portion of any message you send to him, and
thus your message should percolate through his spam filters.
----- Original Message -----
From: "Kaley Hoffman" <khoffman@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <cpsig@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Monday, March 26, 2007 6:39 PM
Subject: [cpsig] identity of a structure on the Coquihalla-- Dry Gulch
bridge
Hello,
In every picture that I can remember seeing of the mountainside above the
east side of the Dry Gulch trestle (MP 20.7) on the Coquihalla, there
appears to be a wooden structure up on the mountain above the track. There
appears to be telephone poles going from the track level up to this
structure, although I can't make out any wires connecting them. It is also
possible that what looks like the telephone poles are actually just tree
trunks. Was it some sort of early antenna for a radio system, or perhaps
some sort of observation post? Hopefully someone else has seen this and
knows the answer.
Regards,
Kaley Hoffman
PS: sorry for the cross post for those of you who have already seen this
question on the BC Interior site
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