(The article is reprinted by permission from the Highland Sun Newspaper.)
Two years ago, retiree Jim Ritten of Lake Placid discovered a new hobby which has taken over what used to be his home gym: model trains.
His model village features two tracks, an upper eight-foot track, and a 14-foot lower track. He owns six trains, including two passenger trains,
as well as tankers, freight cars, and coal cars.
“This thing started on a pool table,” Jim explained. “I paid 20 dollars for my first train. Took it home, cleaned it up, and fired it up,”
he said with a smile. “I tell Elaine (a worker) from Nu-Hope (Elder Care Services Thrift Store), it’s all her fault for selling it to me.”
“He loves it, it’s great,” said Jim’s wife Chris. She described how sometimes when a husband retires, he doesn’t know what to do with himself.
“This is a great hobby.”
“It’s a lot of fun,” Jim added. “It’s over and over. You get a lot of miles out of it … I can sit here with a coffee or beer, and just watch the trains run."
The village is an eclectic collection. Some of the buildings are plastic, but the new police station came from a kit of pre-printed cardstock pieces
that Jim assembled. He finds train and village supplies in antique stores, thrift stores, and craft stores. He also frequents Zitnik Trains hobby store
in Pinellas Park.
The many details of the village include a post office, a church, an apartment building, a farm, and even a tiny person running for the school bus.
Jim always strives to make his models realistic.
Much of Jim’s personal history can be found in his model train village, including a miniature service station with a car perched on it. Jim explained,
“Growing up in Florida back in the ‘50s, my dad owned an Amoco service station with a car on top, off U.S. Hwy 1.”
In the 1960s, when Jim was stationed on the USS Independence in the Mediterranean Sea, he visited the leaning tower of Pisa, which can be seen in his village.
“Back then, they let you go up in it, and there were no safety rails,” he recalled.
Jim served in the Navy from 1966-1970 as an aviation hydraulic mechanic. He is very proud of his military heritage, and explained that his family
has served in every conflict since World War I.
After the Navy, Jim went back to school, earned his Airplane and Powerplant Mechanics Certification, and also a private pilot license.
He retired after 35 years working at Yellow Freight as a truck driver.
Jim’s love of trains isn’t limited to model sets. The walls of the train room are adorned with train paraphernalia, including posters, framed puzzles,
and there’s a mug with a picture of the train Jim’s great-grandfather drove. Jim and his wife have taken train trips to the North Carolina Smokey Mountains,
Vermont, and Clewiston.
According to Jim, train-lovers at the Smokey Mountain Trains Museum in Bryson, N.C., have been working on their model train display for
18 years — and they’re still not finished with it. A docent told Jim, “Son, you ain’t never done with it. You’re always going to be tinkering with it.”
Jim agreed. “It’s a work in motion. You’re never done … Sunday afternoons I come and change the configuration to keep it interesting … It brings out the
creative side of me.”
Train models are a work of love, Jim explained. “It takes hours and hours. You don’t do it all in one day.”
“What’s the difference between a man and a boy?” Jim asked with a grin. “The price of his toys.”
And, of course, the Ritten household Christmas tree isn’t complete without a remote-operated train around the base.
Jim wants to start a model train group in Lake Placid. If interested, call him at 352-454-5144.
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