In the distant past, there was Pottendorf, the layout was based on the notion that the original branch from Ebermannstadt to Heiligenstadt in Oberfranken was extended as proposed towards Pegnitz but only reached Pottendorf (actually Aufseß)
Pottendorf
Monday, 30 March 2026
Layout
Sunday, 6 July 2025
Gallery
Places of interest
Seekuh Erlangen - Eschenau
A few random images of the trains in Oberfranken -
98 521 runs through Eschenau 'Seku' - Peter König98 812 Eschenau Courtesy of Eisenbahnstiftung
On 1 May 1961, 98 855 on the last passenger train ran between Eschenau and Neunkirchen am Brand
64 031 enroute to Leupoldsdorf with exUSRA wagon - Bufe
Courtesy of Eisenbahnstiftung
Workbench
Upgrading the Piko VT 70, it is an old but accurate model but it needs a modern discrete mechanism, I am using PMT 32401. The hardest job is replacing the windows. This example was in excellent, unbroken condition.
VT 70 942 in Erlangen
The VT 70 was not capable of being used as a multiple unit, it had to run around its trailer at the terminus, as a result the VT 70 was often used as a single unit. These standard railcars were developed in the 1930s by the Deutsche Reichsbahn for passenger transport on branch lines.
Piko Model with PMT mechanism
Monday, 21 April 2025
The farm & cottage
The small farm comprises of a low house and a small yard separated by a railway line.
A small Faller building carefully rendered and weathered
The cottage garden has a couple of fruit trees, vegetable garden and chicken coop.
Wednesday, 7 June 2023
Beside the road and track
There are a couple of vegetable gardens on the layout and it’s a sight that greets visitors on the approach to almost every town in Germany -- the clutter of ladders and rakes leaning against the back of the structures, neatly ordered flowerbeds, well-tended fruit trees and picture-perfect picket fences are lined up like regiments of tin soldiers. The phenomenon is known as a Schrebergärten -- an area outside the city where the gardening-obsessed Germans can rent out a small plot and plunge their fingers into the soil.
Ordered, trimmed, enclosed, ornamental, each strip has some kind of glorified shed with floral and vegetable displays. As for people, they’re only temporary visitors, because however fabulous the summerhouse/cottage/shed – and some are very fancy –one of the many hundreds of rules is that a Schrebergärten is strictly non-residential and rules are there to be obeyed.
I like creating Schrebergärten, mine are largely Busch, Noch and scratch, they include strawberries, green and red cabbage, cauliflower, green and red lettuce.
The layout is home to three small vegetable allotments, a reflection of what I see from my workbench and each is slightly different both in size and scope. The small garden is part of the farmhouse, the original is at least 20 years old and used on two previous layouts.
The farm worker's garden
The oldest is attached to the farmhouse, the cottage has a more formal arrangement whilst the station garden is tucked away near the end of the station.
The station garden
Naturally, the allotment must have a shed and it must have an armchair.
The tatty fence is in place, the furrowed earth inset has developed a slight curve whilst the tomatoes and potatoes are growing but it still needs a lot more detail.
Buddleia - the butterfly bush















































