Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Moving’

Bachmann Trains Thomas And Friends – Ben Engine With Moving Eyes

June 26th, 2011

Bachmann Trains Thomas And Friends – Ben Engine With Moving Eyes

  • Build your Thomas and friends collection one friend at a time
  • Compatible with Bachmann HO scale E-Z track and other popular brands of HO scale track
  • Metal wheels
  • International style hook and loop couplers
  • HO scale

For use with Bachmann HO Scale Thomas trains

List Price: $ 63.99

Price: $ 34.83

Customer Reviews
There are no customer reviews for this item.

Be the first to review this item on Amazon.com

Model Train Talk , , , , , ,

Bachmann Trains Thomas And Friends – Henry The Green Engine With Moving Eyes

June 23rd, 2011

Bachmann Trains Thomas And Friends – Henry The Green Engine With Moving Eyes

  • Build your Thomas and friends collection one friend at a time
  • Compatible with Bachmann HO scale E-Z track and other popular brands of HO scale track
  • Metal wheels
  • International style hook and loop couplers
  • HO scale

Build your Thomas & Friends collection one friend at a time with separate sale accessories.

List Price: $ 85.99

Price: $ 46.77

Customer Reviews


5.0 out of 5 stars
Henry the awesome green engine, April 14, 2011
Durability:5.0 out of 5 stars Fun:5.0 out of 5 stars Educational:5.0 out of 5 stars 
Amazon Verified Purchase(What’s this?)
This review is from: Bachmann Trains Thomas And Friends – Henry The Green Engine With Moving Eyes (Toy)

Henry the green engine is one of my favorites. The model works very well and is able to pull heavy loads at relatively high speeds. If you are someone who likes to collect bachmann trains, especially thomas trains, then this is a must have. One of the best engines ever, would definitley recommend.

Help other customers find the most helpful reviews 

Was this review helpful to you? Yes
No

Share your thoughts with other customers:

 See the customer review…

Model Train Talk , , , , , , , ,

MODEL RAILROADING MOVING MINIATURES. TRAINS #7330. VHS TAPE

April 21st, 2011

MODEL RAILROADING MOVING MINIATURES. TRAINS #7330. VHS TAPE

NOT RATED APAORX 30 MIN. ALLEN KELLER PRODUCER

Price:

Customer Reviews
There are no customer reviews for this item.

Be the first to review this item on Amazon.com

Model Train Talk , , , , , ,

I’m moving away, how do I tell my best mate?

September 14th, 2010

Recently we decided to move (me and the family) , as we are unhappy with the place we are living.

I spent the last two years studying art at college with my mate, who is a keen photographer. Up until the start of our second year at college, he had been hanging round with a group of trouble makers. I’d always been a model student, so when we started hanging out allot, his grades went from passes to distinctions and he avoided that bad crowd. We’d walk into college together every day, and do all the work together.

We live five minutes away from each other, so we hang out all the time.

He is enrolling for his final year at college in six days, but I don’t no how to tell him that I won’t be enrolling because I’m moving in a few months time, and will need to take up a place at another college.

We will be a three hour train journey away from each other.
I’m worried that either he will decided not to go back to college, fall out with me, or both.

I just want us to stay friends. How do I break the news to him?

Model Train News , , , ,

Electric Pallet Trucks – What You Need When Moving Heavy Loads

October 30th, 2009

Having to move heavy loads from one location to another is a common thing today whether it’s for commercial use or industrial, and there are a few different options. An electric pallet truck is just one of them, can also be referred to as a power pallet truck, pallet jack or power pallet jack.

There are a few advantages to having an electric pallet truck such as:

easily move very heavy loads quickly

move stacked pallets effortlessly

protect your back from strains and injuries by allowing mobility in a safe manner

How do electric pallet trucks work?

Electric pallet trucks, as with any piece of equipment, can be dangerous if you do not how to work them properly. Follow these safety tips to ensure your safety when using a powered pallet truck:

Only operate the pallet truck if you been given the proper training

Familiarize yourself with the powered pallet truck that you will be using before you operate the machine

Review the manufacturers manual and operating instructions

Check the capacity load of the pallet truck and never exceed this amount

Be sure you know how to use the power controls and brakes properly

Load the materials on to the pallet truck securely to make sure they do not shift during movement

Ensure the pathway is clear before you begin

Give people right of way while in movement

Never block your line of vision and so do not load too high

Use a spotter if you can see clearly

Be extra careful on slopes, inclines, and narrow aisles

Electric pallet trucks can be very dangerous if not used in the correct manner, always take extreme pre-cautions while operating one.

Model Train Talk , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

Reiki: Back to Basics – All About Second Degree

October 22nd, 2009

 

People learn Reiki for many reasons and come from an amazing variety of backgrounds, all attending for their own personal reasons. Reiki courses in the UK present a whole variety of approaches, some “traditional” Western-style, some more Japanese in content, some wildly different and almost unrecognisable, some free and intuitive, others dogmatic and based on rules about what you should always do and not do. Reiki is taught in so many ways, and students will tend to imagine that the way that they were taught is the way that Reiki is taught and practised by most other Reiki people.

What I have tried to do in this article is to present a simple guide to what in my view is the essence of Second Degree: what it’s all about and what we should be doing and thinking about to get the most out of our experience of Reiki at this level. My words are addressed to anyone at Second Degree level, or anyone who would like to review the essence of Second Degree.

The first thing I want to say is that there should usually be an interval of a couple of months or so between First and Second Degree if you want to get the most out of your Reiki experience, and that it is unwise to take both Degrees back-to-back over a weekend. We would not take an advanced driving test the day after passing our basic driving test, so why would we believe that moving on to a more ‘advanced’ level with Reiki would be an effective way to learn when we have had no opportunity to get the hang of the basics of First Degree? Can we get the most out of Second Degree when we have had no opportunity to get used to working with and sensing and experiencing energy, when we have had no opportunity to enhance our effectiveness as a channel and our sensitivity to Reiki through regular practice, when we have had no opportunity to become familiar with a standard treatment routine and have had no opportunity to feel comfortable and confident in treating other people? Reiki is not a race, and we need to be familiar with the basics before moving on.

Second Degree is all about:

1. reinforcing or enhancing your connection to the energy

2. learning some symbols which you can use routinely when working on yourself or treating others

3. enhancing your self-healing

4. learning how to effect a strong distant connection (distant healing)

And ideally it is also about opening yourself up to your intuitive side so that you throw away the basic Reiki ‘rule book’ and go freestyle, gearing any treatments towards the individual needs of the recipient.

There are many approaches to doing these things, and I wanted below to touch on each one and to dispel some myths that may have been passed on.

Enhancing your Connection to the energy

On your Second Degree course you will have received some attunements or some empowerments. Attunements are not standard rituals within the world of Reiki and take many forms, some simpler and some more complex. They have evolved and changed greatly during their journey from teacher to teacher in the West. There is no “right way” to carry out an attunement and the individual details of a ritual do not matter a great deal. They all work. Equally, there is no “correct” number of attunements that have to be carried out at Second Degree level. Whether you receive one, two, or three attunements on your course, that is fine.

On your course you may have received some “empowerments” rather than attunements, though these are less common. The word “empowerment”, or “Reiju empowerment”, refers to a connection ritual that has come to us from some Japanese sources, and is closer in essence to the empowerment that Mikao Usui conveyed to his students. If you are receiving empowerments rather than attunements then you really need to have received three of them at least.

What we experience when receiving an attunement or an empowerment will vary a lot. Some people have fireworks and bells and whistles and that’s nice for them; other people notice a lot less, or very little, or even nothing, and that’s fine too. What we feel when we have an attunement is not a guide to how well it has worked for us. Attunements work, and sometimes we will have a strong experience, but it’s not compulsory! Whether we have noticed a lot, or very little, the attunement will have given us what we need.

Since in Mikao Usui’s system you would have received empowerments from him again and again, it would be nice if you could echo this practice by receiving further empowerments (or attunements) and perhaps these might be available at your teacher’s Reiki shares or get-togethers, if they hold them. But it is possible to receive distant Reiju empowerments and various teachers make them freely available as a regular ‘broadcast’. This is not essential, and your connection to Reiki once given does not fizzle out, but it would be a beneficial practice if you could receive regular empowerments from someone.

Being “attuned” to a symbol

For many years within the world of Reiki, people believed that the symbols would not work for you, that they were essentially useless, until you had been “attuned” to the symbol: then it would work for you. Unfortunately the only connection rituals available in the West were ‘attunements’ which involved attuning you to a symbol, so no-one knew how to carry out a ‘symbol-free’ attunement to see if you really needed to be attuned to a symbol for it to work for you.

But in 1999, from Japan, emerged Reiju empowerments, a representation of the empowerments that Usui conferred, and these empowerments do not use symbols. Finally we were able to see if you really needed to be attuned to a symbol for it to work for you. Lo and behold we discovered that the symbols work fine for people who are connected to the energy using Reiju; they work fine for people who are connected to Reiki but who have not been ‘attuned’ to the symbols. It seems that once you are connected to Reiki – and now we know how to achieve this without symbols entering into the process – the symbols will work for you, and in fact any symbol seems to push the energy in a particular direction without you having to be specifically ‘attuned’ to it (whatever that means). The Reiki symbols are simply graphical representations of different aspects of the energy, a way of representing and emphasising what is already there.

“Sacred Symbols”

In some lineages students are not allowed to keep copies of the symbols and have to reproduce them from memory, based on what they learned on their Second Degree course. There is the suggestion that the symbols are sacred and not only sacred but secret, and should not be shown to people who are not involved in Reiki, or people who are at First Degree level. Where this idea came from in the Western Reiki system is not clear, since certainly Dr Hayashi had his students copy out his notes by way of preparing their own manuals, including copying down the symbols.

For me, the Reiki symbols are simply graphical representations of different aspects of the energy, useful tools to assist us in experiencing or becoming consciously aware of different aspects of what we already have, and what is special or sacred is our connection to the source, not the squiggles we might put on a piece of paper.

Because of the ‘Chinese whispers’ that have resulted from students not being allowed to take home hard copies of the Reiki symbols, there are many different versions of the symbols in existence, but they are mainly variations on a theme and they all seem to work in practice. Do remember, though, that the original CKR had an anticlockwise spiral, and to use a version of CKR with a clockwise spiral is to use a symbol that is not part of the Usui/Hayashi/Takata system.

Using Symbols in practice

Some students are taught there is one ‘correct’ way that symbols have to be used. Reiki is not so finicky. The important thing when using a Reiki symbol is to focus your attention on the symbol in some way, so whether you are drawing the symbol with your fingers hovering over the back of your hand as you treat someone, whether you are drawing out the symbol using eye movements, or nose movements, or in your mind’s eye, all approaches will work. You do not need to visualise the symbols in a particular colour and if you can see the symbol in your mind’s eye in its entirety – this takes practice – you can ‘flash’ the whole symbol rather than drawing it out stroke by stroke.

Just because we have been taught some symbols does not mean that we are now obliged to use them all the time when we treat or when we work on ourselves. They can be used to emphasise different aspects of the energy, but this is optional. Use of symbols does seem to boost the flow of energy, so we can use them when it feels appropriate. This is the key: to bring a symbol into a particular part of a treatment when we have a strong feeling that we ought to, to work intuitively rather than following a set method.

I have written in other articles about the issue of simplicity within Reiki practice, and the complicated way that people have ended up using the Reiki symbols, for example mixing symbols together or using complicated symbol sandwiches. Remember that the simple approach is usually the most effective, and that there is no hard and fast way that you ‘have’ to work with the symbols you have been shown.

By the way, if you have been taught that you have to draw the three Second Degree symbols over your palm each day or else they will stop working for you, you can safely ignore these instructions. The symbols will work for you no matter what you do or don’t do with your palms!

Why the symbols are there

At Second Degree, the prime focus of Reiki is still your self-healing, and the first two symbols are there to help you get to grips with two important energies that will further or deepen your self-healing. Putting the ‘distant healing’ symbol to one side, the other two symbols represent the energies of earth ki and heavenly ki, and we need to fully assimilate these two energies to enhance our self-healing and self-development. If we are going to use these energies when we treat other people, it makes sense to be thoroughly familiar with these energies, to have spent time ‘becoming’ these energies. We can do this by carrying out regular symbol meditations.

Making ‘distant’ connections

The third Reiki symbol that you are introduced to on a Second Degree course is commonly called the ‘distant healing symbol’. We should remember that distant healing is perfectly possible at First Degree level and that we do not need to use a symbol in order to send Reiki to another person: intent is enough. But using this symbol can help us to learn to better ‘click’ into a nice strong merged state.

There is no set form of ritual that ‘has’ to be used in distant healing, there is not set form of words that has to be recited, no established sequence which needs to be reproduced in order for distant healing to be effective, so we can find our own comfortable approach, different from other people’s but equally valid. The details of the ritual that we use are not important. All we need to do is to focus our attention on the recipient and maybe use the symbol in some way, merge with the energy, merge with the recipient, and allow the energy to flow.

Intuitive working

Ideally, Second Degree should be the stage where you start to leave the basic ‘rulebook’ behind and go ‘freestyle’, gearing your treatment towards the recipient’s individual energy needs, so that each treatment will be different, as the recipient’s energy needs change from one treatment session to another. Some students will already be modifying the basic treatment routine by the time that they arrive on their Second Degree course.

Set hand positions and a prescribed scheme to follow are useful things to have at First Degree, and allow the student to feel confident in treating others, but sequences of hand positions can be left behind when we open to intuition. Intuitive treatments seem to do something special for the recipient: when you direct the energy into just the right combination of positions for that person on that occasion you allow the energy to penetrate deeply and this seems to lead to a more profound experience for the recipient. Treatments using intuitively guided hand positions may involve much fewer hand positions being held, and each combination being held for much longer, than in a ‘standard’ treatment.

We recommend that the Japanese “Reiji ho” approach is used to help Second Degree students to open to their intuitive side, since the approach is so simple and seems to work for most people even within a few minutes of practice. The resulting strong belief that the student is “intuitive” is a hugely empowering state and opens many doors.

Finally

Reiki has the potential to make an amazing, positive difference to you and the people around you. Remember that Reiki is simplicity itself, and by taking some steps to work on yourself regularly, and share Reiki with the people close to you, you are embarking on a very special journey. How far you travel on that journey is governed by how many steps you take. Carry on with your Hatsurei and self-treatments, get to grips with the energies of CKR and SHK through regular meditation, find your own comfortable approach to carrying out distant healing, and open yourself to intuitive working. And have fun!

Reiki Evolution is a Reiki training organisation in the UK that provides small scale Reiki training throughout the country. The Reiki Evolution web site is a very useful resource for people who wish to find out more about the Reiki system, and for Reiki practitioners and Master/Teachers who are interested in developing further with Reiki.


The web site offers free Reiki guides, a free ezine and loads of interesting and inspiring Reiki articles written by Taggart King. You can order professionally printed Reiki manuals and books, download ebooks and self-help guides, and order Reiki CDs or MP3s with commentary and guided meditations.


We teach a form of Reiki that is close to Mikao Usui?s original system, rather than the ?Western-style? Reiki that is found on most Reiki courses, and our approach is based on information coming from a group of Mikao Usui?s surviving students.


We are one of the few people in the world to be offering high-quality Reiki home study courses that are the equal of live training, with one-to-one e-mail support, quality manuals, CDs and DVDs, and detailed course instructions. So you can train with us no matter where you are in the world. www.reiki-evolution.co.uk

Model Train Scenery , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , ,

How to grow your model train track without moving house

October 21st, 2009

If you want to build your model train collection then you need to start by building more model train track. This is the first step, as your trains need something to run on. It is best to start small and then build up from there. You can find all the train track that you need in the model stores, online or in discount shops.

 

You should also think about joining model train clubs in order to learn form other members and enthusiasts. Often you can buy trains, track and other accessories from them for a good price. The price that you want to pay is the first consideration, as well as the space that you have available to build in.

 

If you have limited money then you need to look for discounted prices. As such, you can find old collectors that may be unable to continue, have passed away or want to sell their collections. You can often find these people in newspaper adverts, on auction sites, or advertised in model train clubs.

 

If you are able to find these old collections then you can get a great again. Otherwise, you can choose to buy all your trains and track brand new. This is a nice way to build your collection but it is going to cost you a lot of money.

 

The next thing you need to think about is the space that you have to build in. If you have a large space or room in your house then you are set. Also if you have a garden that you can use, then you may want to opt for the garden railroad scale trains. This is a luxury that most hobbyists simply don’t have.

 

In order for most people to keep building their model train tracks, then need to think of new innovative ways to expand. This can be done but it requires a certain level of skill and planning. You need to know the basics of track building and also have the skill to execute your plans.

 

You can think about adding more ovals, curves and bends into your track. You can also have two-tier track layouts in order to maximise your space. Another idea is to use straight track to replicate a train station. This is often the most difficult type of model train track to setup, as it requires skill to allow the trains to change direction.

 

Still, with practice and planning you can certainly achieve these results and ensure that your train collection keeps growing. You can also have great fun within a small area. If you have very limited space then you should think about using the smaller scales of trains and track. Use the N scale.

 

The N scale is very popular because of the details that are given to every locomotive. The result is very life-like and realistic. The trains also look great when they are running around the track.

 

As you can see, there are many options for expanding your model track within the space you have. You just need to be creative and use some imagination and skill.

Philip Redfearn is an avid model train enthusiast. For more great information on model trains, and to sign up for a free Ultimate Model Railway Secrets 11 lesson mini-course, visit http://www.ultimatemodelrailway.com

Model O (1:48) Trains , , , , , ,