Qapla
Engineer
will not remove any storage space. In fact it would create more since you can place things on the floor.
That's the point .... some would still want the cabinets because they don't want to put things on the floor
will not remove any storage space. In fact it would create more since you can place things on the floor.
That's the point .... some would still want the cabinets because they don't want to put things on the floor
Absolutely. You open the valve and lay on it for a few minutes. All the air eventually comes out, you close the valve, fold it in half lengthwise and roll it up. Or you can leave the valve open as you fold and roll, and all air escapes. Considering how comfortable it is when inflated, it rolls up quite small. Shocked-corded to the extended handle of our 20" Samsonite Spinner, it's quite easy to travel with. (You'd want to put it in the suitcase if checking it for air travel.)Looks like it's harder to flatten out and stow away.... Does it really get close to getting back to original size?
Are you in the syndicated news business?Absolutely. You open the valve and lay on it for a few minutes. All the air eventually comes out, you close the valve, fold it in half lengthwise and roll it up. Or you can leave the valve open as you fold and roll, and all air escapes. Considering how comfortable it is when inflated, it rolls up quite small. Shocked-corded to the extended handle of our 20" Samsonite Spinner, it's quite easy to travel with. (You'd want to put it in the suitcase if checking it for air travel.)
In a short video posted to Instagram, Amtrak shows off what appears to be a Viewliner II bedroom (because of the maroon fabric on the headrest) with new bedding and amenities.
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There's also large pump-style bottles, with a wall mount bracket (presumably to be mounted on the wall of shared showers).
There is a problem for every solution.All over the Internet there is great concern now that many hotels have gone to the shared pump bottle model in the showers due to growing environmental sensitivities. Suddenly personal safety and the real possibility of sickness/death has made the practice dangerous due to the virus epidemic.
I don't see shared pump bottles being a particular risk. They wash off the spouts daily with a disinfectant like any other surface in the bathroom tub / shower area. In Amtrak showers' case, I think this would be an improvement over random bars of soap littering the soap basin and floor in the shower.There is a problem for every solution.
It would be a step up if they actually put the blanket on the bed again instead of sticking it in a plastic bag and making you do it yourself. No plastic means a bit less trash. Plus, if I wanted to do housework, I would stay home.
Perhaps I've been lucky. I've never had to remove the blanket from the plastic myself. The attendant has always removed it and placed it on the bed for me.I've found this to be a net negative, since when I head back to the room to sleep, the last thing I want to do is mess with figuring out how to unfold the blanket.
Based on my experience I would say that you have led a charmed life (at least as far as sleeping car blankets are concerned.)Perhaps I've been lucky. I've never had to remove the blanket from the plastic myself. The attendant has always removed it and placed it on the bed for me.
On my trips in recent years, it has been about 50-50. Sometimes your bed is made up for you and other times you get the blanket in plastic and make up your own bed.Yeah my experience is that they did not make up the beds for us the last time we rode the Meteor.
Amtrak claims that it's a cleanliness thing to show passengers that the blankets are clean. Really? Did they really receive complaints about that?
Yet they still want me to put my face on the unwrapped pillow that is just tossed on a seat where every prior passenger put their feet and butt!
Give me a break.
Any speculation when things will open up?Shoot. The next time I ride a sleeper I’ll be happy as hell that it’s safe enough for me to travel.
I really don’t know. But as soon as it opens up I’m booking if the medical people say it’s safe.Any speculation when things will open up?
I'm thinking summer we'll be more open in some capacity across much of the U.S.
Am I the King of Wishful Thinking ??
My hubby seems to be warming to the idea of a train vacation, even before we retire. (Plus he's getting REALLY tired of not being able to go anywhere on weekend day trips!) So just before the weekend, he suggested that the two of us take a week off this fall for a train journey. If we go East, he'd like to visit Gettysburg and Mount Vernon (but NOT DC). Plenty of time to research such a trip before actually booking it, at least!I really don’t know. But as soon as it opens up I’m booking if the medical people say it’s safe.
Virginia and Pennsylvania are really nice in the Fall! ( As is DC actually! lol)My hubby seems to be warming to the idea of a train vacation, even before we retire. (Plus he's getting REALLY tired of not being able to go anywhere on weekend day trips!) So just before the weekend, he suggested that the two of us take a week off this fall for a train journey. If we go East, he'd like to visit Gettysburg and Mount Vernon (but NOT DC). Plenty of time to research such a trip before actually booking it, at least!
I suspect we might have to go via DC on the train; he just doesn't want to spend the night there or attempt to drive a rental car in DC. (We were there once for a convention a couple of decades ago, and the traffic seemed even worse than Chicago!) Fall colors would be nice, though, and fall weather in the Mid-Atlantic states should be moderate enough for pleasant travel.Virginia and Pennsylvania are really nice in the Fall! ( As is DC actually! lol)
Alexandria, Virginia, would be a good option instead of staying in DC. A lot of trains that go through DC also stop at Alexandria (station code is ALX).
Several good hotels, a free trolley back and forth, plus I believe you can do a day boat trip from there to Mt. Vernon.
When we had our “Gathering” in DC, quite a few people chose to stay in Alexandria and liked it.
That's what we thought but we went by train in September so as to avoid leaf season (we have that here where we live in the mountains ow western NC). What we got was ridiculously high leaf season prices in hotels, temperatures in the 80s and no colors at all. But worse, people were not particularly friendly at all. We found friendlier people in NYC unlike when I was young and living there.I keep thinking about a short trip to Vermont during the Fall. Yet to happen, though.
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