
At holiday time, trains whiz through Richard Kloewer's yard, past the lighted evergreen trees, dolls, teddy bears, even a miniature Harley Davidson display.
"I don't want to disappoint anybody," said Kloewer of Englewood, Colo.
Kloewer is one of many garden railway enthusiasts who share their hobby with friends and strangers alike. Each year, he and his wife, Alice, turn their yard into a winter wonderland featuring 10 trains, more than 35,000 lights and 80 Christmas houses, and they open it to the public between Thanksgiving and New Year's Day.
Kloewer, who created his first over-the-top holiday display 27 years ago, added the trains in 1998.
Garden railroading, which began in England about 150 years ago, is the fastest growing segment of model railroading, said Marc Horovitz, editor of Garden Railways Magazine, based in Waukesha, Wis.
Developing a permanent, outdoor layout for the trains, which are a bit larger than the popular indoor Lionel trains, requires some knowledge about the plants around which the tracks wind, Horovitz said. Hobbyists must consider how the plants will grow, and how that will affect the scenes they construct.
Donald and Jane Nute installed a train in their backyard 10 years ago because they thought it would enhance their garden. A few times a year, they invite the public and members of their garden railway club to their Athens, Ga., home for an open house.
The Nutes have enjoyed figuring out what types of plants work best with their railroad. They use a lot of miniature plants to complement the scale of the train cars.
"It's an interesting aspect of gardening," said Donald Nute.
In addition to learning about new plants, he has had to create a layout that can withstand various kinds of weather. Most garden railway train operators leave their buildings and track outside year-round, and that requires more maintenance than indoor layouts need.