T
twa904
Guest
Are there any tunnels along the route of the Crescent?
Can you tell me where in Alabama. I've followed Google Maps looking at the track from Tuscaloosa to the Georgia state line and can't see what looks like it might be a tunnel entrance.One in Alabama
Cassie,I don't like tunnels and I counted about 6,all are short except the one around Washington. I either try to go to the diner or turn on the light in my sleeper and close the curtains. Sometimes I just shut my eyes. I was talking on the phone this time and my daughter talked me thru it. If I can make it thru, anyone can.lol
Somebody better have some xanax for me and that Cascade tunnel would freak me out. No tunnels going to Chicago on the CONO,please say no!!! lolCassie,I don't like tunnels and I counted about 6,all are short except the one around Washington. I either try to go to the diner or turn on the light in my sleeper and close the curtains. Sometimes I just shut my eyes. I was talking on the phone this time and my daughter talked me thru it. If I can make it thru, anyone can.lol
Stay away from the Empire Builder [seattle Section] and the California Zephyr. You'd have to deal with some loooooong tunnels on those routes!
Gadzooks! I'd forgotten all about that one. Probably because I got so engrossed over the history of Stevens Pass, its original tortuous switchback route, the first Cascade tunnel, the Wellington avalanche, etc. prior to my first trip on the Empire Builder. So much so that the last time out that way I rented a car, drove to the East Portal and video'd a BNSF freight emerging from the tunnel. The sound of those two 800hp electric motors spooling up to drive the exhaust fans after the doors closed was a sound to behold.There's also the seven mile long Flathead Tunnel in western Montana.
I can tell by the sound and the diesel smell.There's also the seven mile long Flathead Tunnel in western Montana. But you go through it for the majority of the time while it's dark anyway, so you won't know the difference. :lol:
The tunnel in Alabama is between the stations at Birmingham and Anniston. Specifically, it is about half way between the towns of Leeds and Pell City near I-20 Exit 152.Can you tell me where in Alabama. I've followed Google Maps looking at the track from Tuscaloosa to the Georgia state line and can't see what looks like it might be a tunnel entrance.One in Alabama
The only tunnel on the entire route of the CONO is at Union Station in Chicago.Somebody better have some xanax for me and that Cascade tunnel would freak me out. No tunnels going to Chicago on the CONO,please say no!!! lolCassie,I don't like tunnels and I counted about 6,all are short except the one around Washington. I either try to go to the diner or turn on the light in my sleeper and close the curtains. Sometimes I just shut my eyes. I was talking on the phone this time and my daughter talked me thru it. If I can make it thru, anyone can.lol
Stay away from the Empire Builder [seattle Section] and the California Zephyr. You'd have to deal with some loooooong tunnels on those routes!
The joke has always been that the surveyor for the Georgia Pacific was paid by the mile. Like many lines in the South that were laid out in the 1870s, the Georgia Pacific had to be built inexpensively. But to be fair, the roller-coaster topography of the foothills was a pain in the neck.I have a notion that the stretch Atlanta-Birmingham needs more tunnels. Isn't it extremely curvy going thru the tail end of the Appalachians, and so extremely slow? Meaning, the Crescent wouldn't lose so much money on its southern leg if it didn't take 4 hours to crawl 162 miles from Birmingham to Atlanta. Am I right about this? Maybe I'm getting the time zones backwards or something.
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