Though Bud Lutz's hometown of Bowman, N.D., was an early railroad stop, trains pass right by the town these days without slowing.
"They just blink their eyes and miss the town," said the Eagan resident.
However, in his backyard garden railway, Lutz has re-imagined Bowman as a bustling railroad stop. His G-scale train runs up to an elaborate handmade cedar depot with shingles the size of a fingernail, each one carefully laid by Lutz.
"It probably took me longer to put the roof on that than it would for someone to roof my house," he said.
Conductor Bud's railway garden has long been a destination in Eagan. In warm months, he opens it on select Sundays to the general public, attracting, he said, about 100 to 150 visitors a day. The last one of the season is next Sept. 15..
His train runs past miniature alpines on mossy hills, waterfalls turning water wheels, petrified wood cliffs. (He brings them back from a relative's place in Bowman, which is full of petrified wood, he said.) The beauty is in the details: a mosquito coil is lit to make a thin stream of smoke come out of a chimney. A pond mister hidden in a volcano causes it to steam lazily.
Clad in his red T-shirt and conductor hat, Lutz uses a remote control to stop and start the cars and blow the whistle. As the train rattled by, he clicked a button and from the cattle cars came a low mooing sound.
"There's something new this year," he said, motioning to an area underneath a cable car lift bringing passengers up to a mountaintop resort. He pressed a button, and from a tiny lake, a geyser shot up.