Matthew H Fish
Lead Service Attendant
- Joined
- May 28, 2019
- Messages
- 499
This was a very intense trip that lasted a little over 48 hours, leaving Friday afternoon and coming back Sunday afternoon.
I have done two day trips where both nights were spent on a train before, both times going to the Bay Area on the Coast Starlight. But looking at schedules, I saw that the same thing could work on the Empire Builder. So I took the Empire Builder from Portland, sleeping on it overnight, and waking up in Montana, giving me 12 hours to spend in Glacier National Park, before returning on the same train.
If this seems like a difficult trip, it was. While I am a little more amiable to the idea of sleeping in coach than most, I got like 3-4 hours of broken sleep, then got out, walked to the park, walked around in the park, ended up taking a shuttle and doing a 3 mile hike at 7000 feet while carrying my pack. I actually don't really know how I pulled it off!
So this type of trip is possible. It is probably a lot easier if you can get a room or roommette. Like a lot of my train and transit ideas, it is a good idea...for people who have something to prove. I don't expect that most people in the Portland or Seattle areas would actually do this. But, if someone has a lifelong desire to visit Glacier, and also really likes trains, it is actually one of the cheaper and easier ways to accomplish this.
Also, environmentally friendly. A point I make in the video (at some times with some saltiness) is how much Glacier (and other National Parks) are based around automobile tourism. Which has a lot direct and indirect environmental damages, and also ruins a lot of the aesthetics of why people visit national parks. I included lots of views of parking lots in this video, and I could have included even more. Having a 300 vehicle parking lot at a place like Logan Pass just is not part of the ambiance I would like.
I know that of course some people, especially large families, are going to need personal vehicles to get to and explore the park. But also---there is a train station, right there! But the park doesn't really directly incentivize people to use the train station. For example, there are no shuttles between the train station and the park. There is also no other forms of transportation, as far as I know, between Whitefish and West Glacier. All of which could be done pretty easily---I mean, at least as easily as building 300 vehicle parking lots at the top of a winding mountain road.
On the plus side, there is a good shuttle system in the park. The schedules and tops were a little confusing, but I took the shuttles between Apgar, Avalanche Creek, and Logan Pass, and got to see a big section of the park that way.