Full steam ahead as CAMA season opens

KENT — The Connecticut Antique Machinery Association (CAMA) opened its 2019 season on May 4 and 5, at its large property in Kent. 

The annual spring show is smaller and more relaxed than the September festival and exhibits primarily CAMA’s own permanent collection, with a few members’ exhibits. 

The spring show is known as the “power up”: The massive antique steam engines in several old barns and sheds on the property are powered up for the summer season; visitors come to see the machines, to visit an old blast furnace there and to tour the Eric Sloane museum, full of antique tools collected by the artist/writer when he lived in town.

One of the most popular attractions: Riding the old narrow-gauge locomotive train, brought to Kent from Hawaii.

The autumn “power down” is usually a larger event, with dozens of old-engine enthusiasts setting up tents on the grounds to show off everything from steam-powered farm gear to Cub Cadet tractors from the 1970s. There are also tables full of old parts and machine-themed knickknacks from the last couple centuries. 

The multitude of “tag sales” is much smaller in spring than in autumn, so moving around and getting up close with the displays is far easier — as is talking with and learning from the exhibitors. 

Steam power is always at the heart of the day: machines chug-chugging and blowing white clouds of steam define the ambience. 

CAMA’s own collection of machinery encompasses a stunning variety of sizes and types, from massive steam rollers to delicate, jewel-like miniature engines, to magical-seeming tiny railroads. It’s all here and more.

An enormous working steam engine in the machinery hall, built by the T. M. Nagle company, is 100 years old and was used to power an entire paper mill in Pennsylvania. It was peacefully and smoothly running over the weekend — with a nickel balanced on its edge on the engine block. The nickel was described as the “vibration indicator”; the giant machine operated so smoothly, the nickel never moved.

The CAMA grounds will be open Wednesday through Sunday, until the power down in autumn. For hours and more information, go to www.ctamachinery.com.

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