Info request: Rocky Mountain related
I'm working through my new book again and need a bit of information.
In my current story I need to place several townships in remote areas of the US Rocky Mountain, areas primarily accessible by rail. I would want locales that are small sized cities - no airport but its own water and electric - or strips of track/road where there is literally nothing around except tree's/nature.
Since I've never traveled to Montana, Idaho, Wyoming or Colorado I have no idea where areas like this exist. I have been to Nevada and Utah but in very limited areas.
If anyone can offer any first hand info on this subject (basic locations and environment - trees/mountainous/water, etc) it would be appreciated.
Allan
In my current story I need to place several townships in remote areas of the US Rocky Mountain, areas primarily accessible by rail. I would want locales that are small sized cities - no airport but its own water and electric - or strips of track/road where there is literally nothing around except tree's/nature.
Since I've never traveled to Montana, Idaho, Wyoming or Colorado I have no idea where areas like this exist. I have been to Nevada and Utah but in very limited areas.
If anyone can offer any first hand info on this subject (basic locations and environment - trees/mountainous/water, etc) it would be appreciated.
Allan
There is also the town of Minturn (near Vail) at the foot of Tennessee Pass which is fed by a rail line through Leadville.
Literary license is cool. In my novel, Paris, Wyoming, I moved the Wind River mountain range a hundred miles.............. Jim
http://www.amazon.com/PARIS-WYOMING-Jame...
www.http://pariswyoming.com/
CLASS "A" literary license! '-)
"fill-it-sir Prize" or something like that, when the new pages are covered with words...
:)
In the mountains west of Denver is the historic old mining town of Leadville. The Denver & Rio Grande Railroad served the area until it was taken over by the Union Pacific. Baby Doe Tabor and her husband Horace Tabor and their Matchless Mine are fascinating stories. The railroad is still there but the trains no longer run.
The old town of Georgetown is in the mountains and along a very busy I-70. Its trains still run, but only for tourists taking a short ride on the Georgetown Loop Railroad. Look up the history of this old mining town.