R Johnson
Train Attendant
- Joined
- Mar 12, 2010
- Messages
- 25
[SIZE=14pt]I am hoping to use Amtrak to get to, and get home from, a months long hike on the Appalachian Trail this summer.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]Getting to the trail will be easy. I can walk to the Connersville Amtrak station, and once I get to Charlottesville it will be an easy walk to the on-ramp of I-64 where I can thumb the short distance to the start of the hike at Rockfish Gap.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]Getting home on the other hand…..[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]The Amtrak website shows service to Bangor, ME, although actual train service doesn’t appear to be available north of Portland. As near as I can find, there is zero information on Amtrak’s website pertaining to bus/train connections. If you enter Bangor and Portland it tells you that there is no service. I was also a little shocked at the prices of seats in the northeast corridor. It looks like getting to Charlottesville from Bangor by any of the several southbound trains might cost over 400 or even 500 bucks total (due to seat availability ). On the other hand, I can get from Bangor to Charlottesville by way of LaGuardia in five hours for under two hundred bucks. I would really prefer the train for the experience, and the scenery. Time isn’t that important, but money probably will be. What are the chances of missed connections in Boston and New York? Is what I want to do practical to do without having to stay overnight in either Boston or New York? Please understand that there are too many variables in a hike that will take three and a half to four months to make reservation very far in advance.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]Taking 51 for the trip home is important, because if I get finished with the main hike early enough, I would like to rent a car in Charlottesville, drive to Pearisburg, VA, and walk the approximately two hundred miles north back to Rockfish Gap. Doing so will fill in all the missed sections and I will have walked the entire trail [/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]Getting to the trail will be easy. I can walk to the Connersville Amtrak station, and once I get to Charlottesville it will be an easy walk to the on-ramp of I-64 where I can thumb the short distance to the start of the hike at Rockfish Gap.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]Getting home on the other hand…..[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]The Amtrak website shows service to Bangor, ME, although actual train service doesn’t appear to be available north of Portland. As near as I can find, there is zero information on Amtrak’s website pertaining to bus/train connections. If you enter Bangor and Portland it tells you that there is no service. I was also a little shocked at the prices of seats in the northeast corridor. It looks like getting to Charlottesville from Bangor by any of the several southbound trains might cost over 400 or even 500 bucks total (due to seat availability ). On the other hand, I can get from Bangor to Charlottesville by way of LaGuardia in five hours for under two hundred bucks. I would really prefer the train for the experience, and the scenery. Time isn’t that important, but money probably will be. What are the chances of missed connections in Boston and New York? Is what I want to do practical to do without having to stay overnight in either Boston or New York? Please understand that there are too many variables in a hike that will take three and a half to four months to make reservation very far in advance.[/SIZE]
[SIZE=14pt]Taking 51 for the trip home is important, because if I get finished with the main hike early enough, I would like to rent a car in Charlottesville, drive to Pearisburg, VA, and walk the approximately two hundred miles north back to Rockfish Gap. Doing so will fill in all the missed sections and I will have walked the entire trail [/SIZE]