Experience photographic views from a new perspective – by quadcopter. Cass Scenic Railroad State Park is offering an Aerial Workshop led by experienced quadcopter operators and professional photographers Walter Scriptunas II and Tyler Evert Aug. 28-30.
The workshop weekend provides a rare opportunity to learn how to fly a quadcopter safely, techniques on how to capture the best photos and video of the stunning landscape and structures using the light to your advantage, and post-processing work flow.
This aerial workshop can accommodate 15 participants. Advance registration is required. The workshop cost is $215. To register for the Aerial Photography Workshop, contact Monica Fleming at 304-456-4300, ext.111.
To learn more about aerial photography and this workshop visit www.scriptunasimages.com/AerialWorkshop.

The town of Cass remains relatively unchanged. The restored company houses add to the charm and atmosphere of the town. From the company store and museum to the train depot, you’ll find an abundance of things to do prior to your departure on the historic Cass Railroad.
The Cass Scenic Railroad is the same line built in 1901 to haul lumber to the mill in Cass. The locomotives are the same Shay locomotives used in Cass, and in the rain forests of British Columbia for more than a half-century. The passenger cars are old logging flat-cars refurbished and made into passenger cars.
Once you board the train, the real excitement begins! The great pistons of the carefully restored Shay locomotive will start pulsing, driven by hundreds of pounds of steam pressure. The shaft begins turning, the wheels find traction, and the locomotive begins to move. With thick, black smoke belching from its stack, the train pulls away from the station, passing the old water tower from which the locomotive tanks are filled. As the train rounds the curve up Leatherbark Creek, you’ll pass the Cass Shop, where the locomotives are serviced and repaired, and a graveyard of antiquated, but fascinating equipment on sidetracks. As the pressure builds, the locomotive is driven at full steam, and the laborious journey up the mountain toward the two switchbacks begin. The loud huff of the stack, the clanking of gears and pistons, the furious scream of the whistle at the crossings, and the ever present clackety-clack of the rails will indeed make you feel as if you have been transported back i