PeeweeTM
Lead Service Attendant
- Joined
- May 9, 2011
- Messages
- 265
Well, everything is fine again at home. So I can start with the second part of my trip. My wife will be at home again Sunday evening, which gives me enough time to visit the other countries, Czech Republic, Poland and Denmark.
These were the plans for today, in The Netherlands:
And in Germany:
My train from Rotterdam after on time arrival in Utrecht:
And my second train for today, after arriving in Arnhem:
This train left Utrecht five minutes late and arrived in Arnhem on time; it was an earlier train so I didn't have to wait there (and longer in Arnhem...). Intercity trains from Utrecht to Arnhem leave at xx.11/23/41/53. I took the 12.41 +5.
The tracks from the border into Germany are being extended from 2 to 3 and that means a part was single track today. So my train arroved with some delay:
The engineer already switched his front signal to tail while arriving.
We left about five minutes late, were on time after a couple of stops, but had to wait a few times for the single track part and arrived probably ten minutes late in Duisburg Hauptbahnhof (Hbf, main station), no biggy!
My train to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe arrived and left on time. We crossed the northern part of the Ruhrgebiet, the former German industrial powerhouse based on coal. In Hamm the train split and only one set reversed direction to travel via Soest, Altenbeken:
... to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe. The train itself remained unfotographed by me, but it was the same type single/double deck EMU as the one which took me from Koblenz to Neuss last week.
This station was build for the first dedicated high speed rail line in Germany. Kassel Hbf is a terminal (dead end) station.
My train from/to Halle(Saale) arrived five minutes late in Kassel, but we left about on time. En route there were a lot of slow orders, because a lot of concrete sleepers/ties needed to be replaced. But the timetable had some slack and we still ran mostly on time, passing landscape filled with plots of windmills:
Arrival in Halle was on time. I took a short walk into the city centre:
... and walked back to the station and my hotel.
In the Netherlands no conductor checked my ticket (which is pretty normal nowadays ...).
In the trains from Duisburg to Halle conductors checked tickets multiple times.
The Czech Republic and Poland are on my list for tomorrow.
These were the plans for today, in The Netherlands:
And in Germany:
My train from Rotterdam after on time arrival in Utrecht:
And my second train for today, after arriving in Arnhem:
This train left Utrecht five minutes late and arrived in Arnhem on time; it was an earlier train so I didn't have to wait there (and longer in Arnhem...). Intercity trains from Utrecht to Arnhem leave at xx.11/23/41/53. I took the 12.41 +5.
The tracks from the border into Germany are being extended from 2 to 3 and that means a part was single track today. So my train arroved with some delay:
The engineer already switched his front signal to tail while arriving.
We left about five minutes late, were on time after a couple of stops, but had to wait a few times for the single track part and arrived probably ten minutes late in Duisburg Hauptbahnhof (Hbf, main station), no biggy!
My train to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe arrived and left on time. We crossed the northern part of the Ruhrgebiet, the former German industrial powerhouse based on coal. In Hamm the train split and only one set reversed direction to travel via Soest, Altenbeken:
... to Kassel-Wilhelmshöhe. The train itself remained unfotographed by me, but it was the same type single/double deck EMU as the one which took me from Koblenz to Neuss last week.
This station was build for the first dedicated high speed rail line in Germany. Kassel Hbf is a terminal (dead end) station.
My train from/to Halle(Saale) arrived five minutes late in Kassel, but we left about on time. En route there were a lot of slow orders, because a lot of concrete sleepers/ties needed to be replaced. But the timetable had some slack and we still ran mostly on time, passing landscape filled with plots of windmills:
Arrival in Halle was on time. I took a short walk into the city centre:
... and walked back to the station and my hotel.
In the Netherlands no conductor checked my ticket (which is pretty normal nowadays ...).
In the trains from Duisburg to Halle conductors checked tickets multiple times.
The Czech Republic and Poland are on my list for tomorrow.