Turned out that we didn't get to operate trains for very long today, but did get through about half the timetable in an hour. As the stock was mostly at Bonneyville and no timetabled freight train was due to leave until the "afternoon" we managed to squeeze in an Extra by sending locomotive #4 as a pilot on the first Southbound departure from Cattewater. The engine was uncoupled at Hogwood and continued to Bonneyville alone, while the rest of the train made its scheduled trip to Southvale. Later #4 returned with an Extra bound for Clydes Creek, which was then without any general freight cars, apart from the pulp-rack.
As only one guest could attend I was trying to double as Engineer and Dispatcher, and consequently some mistakes in the sequence were made. The timetable with meets at both depots really does need someone separate to keep an eye on operations and keep them in the correct order, particularly when unscheduled extras are being run.
Here's a shot of #5 switching at Hogwood. The loco was running poorly today, probably due to dirty track or pick-ups. I may substitute #4 for these duties and keep the diesel for the ocasional Extra
#8 leaving Cattewater at the head of a mixed train - the combine is off-camera at the rear of the train.
Later in the day #1 crosses the trestle, bound for Southvale, with the daily timber train
I'll try and run through the rest of the timetable later in the week. At present I'm still trying to determine the optimum number of freight vehicles the line needs to run trains without repeating any cars during the same "day". The trick seems to be to pick the right waybills so that depots do not become clogged with cars waiting for a pick-up or unloading, given the shortage of space at the two depots. I would guess, however, that not all the available unused cars will need to be converted and run on the layout.