Train Journeys

111 posts / 0 new
Last post
KenS

I just saw this thread, and have not looked back to see if there are accounts of riding freight trains.

I remember once riding the old BCR passenger train- had not been on a passenger train for some time. The scenery was nice, but I couldnt help feeling the view was a lot better hopping a freight.

Lots of interesting rides through mountains all over Western US and Canada. But maybe my first ride, could not be more unplanned, makes the most interesting story.

I was hitchiking from the Rockies in Wyoming, having walked out of spending the summer is the high valleys, headed for San Fransisco. Hitchiking in the early 70's was almost always slow. And dreadful for long haired youth in the US West. [The Deep South was much better.] I needed a sign that said, Heh, I'm really a cowboy you know. [Just dont look the part.]

I had spent all day getting from nowhere to nowhere, still a long way from the Interstate. Hot. Plenty of traffic, but no one stopping.

The tenth nowhere spot of the day I had been. Bored. And I'm watching this milk train picking up cars that were waiting on a siding.

Now I knew nothing about freight trains. Never even heard about people hopping them for anything other than a short joyride. And I had enough sense to know that a milk train is not a great prospect for getting places.

But the train is going south. Considering the alternatives.... I'm going.

Couple hours later I arrive in the yard outside Salt Lake City. Pleased as punch. Get off the train. First worker I see, I ask him how I get to the I-80. He asks me where I'm going. When I tell him San Fransisco, he tells me which train is going there in about an hour. Wow, this is working out great.

Unlike the I-80, the train goes on a LONG causeway over Salt Lake. It was spectacular. Colours in the setting sun sky like I had never seen.

After the sun set, as it does in the mountains, temperature immediately drops. Now I should have thought of this. I grew up in the dessert, and spent a lot of time in the high dessert. And nights are very cold. And here I am, on a train going 70 mph, on a flat car, wearing nothing more than a windbreaker.

"I'll have to get off the first stop."

Did not take too long to realize there were not going to be any stops. I got myself to a piggyback trailer car. I stood behind the trailer, hanging on to the gear, walking and jogging all night long to keep myself from freezing to death. I knew the danger of giving in to urges to just have a little nap. Got so exhausted that I hallucinated.

But obviously I made it. After that I figured out how to do it right, and had many a spectacular and reasonably comfortable ride while getting from point A to point B.

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

We had a really cool rail journey this year aboard the ICE (Inter City Express) train from Copenhagen to Lubeck, Germany.    The tail end of the trip involved loading the entire train onto the ferry for about a 45 minute trip across the Baltic.    Somehow we managed to luck out on the fare too...only 40 Euros.

Someone on youtube posted this video of the train being loaded onto the ferry...mind you these folks were going the other way...from Germany to Denmark.

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

One other cool thing about rail travel in Germany is the regional passes.    Not only do they cover inter-city travel on the German rail system within the region, but they also cover the municipal public transit systems within the region.   They're a really good deal.

 

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

Given the great "LRT debate" here in Toronto, here's a little city in Germany we found that really does it right...Gotha in the former East Germany.

Here's a 17 minute youtube video that someone uploaded for all of you tram geeks!

Gotha is a small city of about 50,000 and yet has six tram lines!

The longest line is about 20 KM and travels through the Thuringian forest up into the hills to a little village called Tabarz.   Since this line has been there since the 1920's, it has lasted through four "regime changes"...Weimar, the Nazi era, the GDR and post wall reunification. 

 

Timebandit Timebandit's picture

We took the train from Oslo to Stockholm and then Stockholm to Copenhagen this summer.  It was the wild girls' first time on a train, and they loved it.  It was great for us, too - nobody had to drive, everyone got to enjoy the scenery, get up, move around...  Just a lovely way to travel.  We drove between Oslo and Steinkjer (pronounced stane-chair, not stink-jar) earlier in the trip and in restrospect would have preferred to take the train and just rented a car for the local exploration. 

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

We found that the municipal public transport systems everywhere we went were really great and so no need for a car at all...we used taxis maybe a couple of times over a month and one of those was just because we had to get up really early to catch the train to the airport for the flight home.  For us it was Denmark, Germany and coming home from Amsterdam.

I look at the proposed fare for the Union-Pearson Express train in Toronto...expected to be in the $20-30 range and it's ridiculous.   The train fare from Copenhagen Airport to the central train station is the equivalent of about $6.00.    They run very regularly, are electrified, comfy and have plenty of space for people to store their bicycles.  

Timebandit Timebandit's picture

Oh, we used public transit in the cities, for sure!  But up around Steinkjer we were in quite a lot of rural areas, visiting historic sites (Stiklestad rules! Viking longhouse reproduced at the site of the last pagan uprising against the Christians!), family historical sites like the farm the blond guy's grandmother grew up on, and stayed at a cottage on the fjord out in the country - we really needed to have a vehicle there. 

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

Of course have to post a link to a video of this train!

 

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

Timebandit wrote:

Oh, we used public transit in the cities, for sure!  But up around Steinkjer we were in quite a lot of rural areas, visiting historic sites (Stiklestad rules! Viking longhouse reproduced at the site of the last pagan uprising against the Christians!), family historical sites like the farm the blond guy's grandmother grew up on, and stayed at a cottage on the fjord out in the country - we really needed to have a vehicle there. 

True, our travels were a little more urban

radiorahim radiorahim's picture

Found this video on Youtube.    The train between San Jose and Puerto Limon, Costa Rica.   Did this train trip around 1990 I think.

Pages