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I have a burning need to know stuff and I love asking awkward questions.

Friday, November 24, 2017


5 comments:

Stephen said...

Better do it quick, too, because it won't be long before the military monopolizes them with freight and troops..

CyberKitten said...

Do people in the US use trains much these days? I guess for local travel the car would be more useful and for long distance you'd fly. I appreciate that a lot of fright would use rail but people? Not so much.

I used to commute every day into London from about 15-20 miles out and these days I travel by train maybe 2-3 times a year but over longer distances (about 200 miles) but even then if I drove I'd probably pop in the car rather than train it anywhere.

Stephen said...

There are two lines that get a lot of use: the corridor in the north east, where a lot of major cities are bunched together (DC - NYC - Philadelphia -Boston), and to a lesser extent, California. Amtrak still operates lines across the country, but connections are weird and it's a week's journey to get from one coast to the other. It's really only viable if you have time to kill and hate flying. If I wanted to go west, I would first go to DC and Chicago because of the availability of connections. (Amtrak doesn't even have a station in Alabama's capital: the main one is in Birmingham, with a minor stop in Tuscaloosa to account for the University of Alabama.) Traffic did go up during the oil crunch when gas was $4/gallon, but I don't know how much it has receded now. Greyhound is still the poor man's choice of transit.

I'd like to take a month off, fly to England, and then spend a week just riding the trains..

CyberKitten said...

I'd heard that train travel in the US was..... often problematic, at least for passenger traffic. I'd also forgotten Greyhound! How could I - so iconic in so many movies.

How much is 'gas' there now? I shudder to think what it is here in comparison!

BTW - If you want to ride the rails in the UK I suggest you bring lots of money We probably have the most expensive rail system in Western Europe. When I went to see my Mum a few weeks ago (around 200 miles away) it cost me $130 for a return ticket - 2nd Class.

Stephen said...

One issue with Amtrak is that outside the NE corridor, they don't own their own rails: they use the rails of the freight companies, and obviously freight shipments take precedence, so passenger lines are frequently sidelined. Gas varies depending on locale -- Californians pay a LOT in gas tax -- but right now it's about $2.19 - $2.30 per gallon in various Alabama counties.

If I ever did a train tour of Europe, it would be more on the continent -- seeing the mountains and such. Of course, that's a remote possibility for me...I can't exactly take a month off! Perhaps once I've seen enough of the Southeast I'll try England, southern France, Spain, or Germany.