There's not much of anything to see in DC sitting on the right. What good stuff there is (Pentagon, Lincoln Memorial, Capitol if you know when to look) is on the left.Maybe on the starboard side, you'll get a better view of DC before crossing the Potomac. Once over the river in DC you're down in a ditch and won't see much. Don't recall many "Oohs" and "Aahs" between HBG and WAS. Not a particularly spectacular route.
I'll go with the port side now. The starboard gives you a view across the river from Virginia but the port you see the Pentagon and catch glimpses of monuments and the mall going into DC. These are just flashes as the train passes the N-S streets but on the right side you'll see nothing once you cross the river.What exactly is it that you think you see out of the right side of the train heading north?
DC would be a good place to do that. You book through to DC, get off, store your bags ($). Go visit the National Gallery, Air & Space Museum, Library of Congress, Botanical Gardens or fuss at your Congresscritter. Eat lunch. Grab an afternoon NER or Acela to NYC. AFAIK, the only real down-sides are that it would cost a bit more and the WAS-NYP trains don't have checked baggage.Every time I see another thread asking which side of the train to focus on I can't help but think how much more would be seen and experienced if the question were worded "When should I get off the train and do some actual in person exploring?"
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