I tell people that our Florida vacation starts as soon as we turn our luggage over to a Redcap. A vacation by air does not start until you find your luggage in the "arrivals" room. However, to be honest, we always fly home.
As an avgeek, I definitely disagreeA vacation by air does not start until you find your luggage in the "arrivals" room.
Same. It can work out quite well and I agree it can be quite productive!I use the train for 'medium' to LD business travel. Yes, apparently the lone Amtrak passenger to do so.
I'd say that for long-haul trips they are correct. Also, it costs as much as a business-class air ticket, if you get a roomette. For shorter trips, or just about anywhere in the Acela Corridor, the math is more in the train's favor.If someone says it is a waste of time and you could get to where you're going faster by plane, what would you tell them?
The time on the train is much more productive, so the amount of wasted time in transit on the train is actually much lower than the amount of wasted time on the plane.What is your motivation for traveling by train?
If someone says it is a waste of time and you could get to where you're going faster by plane, what would you tell them?
As someone who spends a significant amount of time explaining why I prefer to sail an ocean rather than fly over it, this is a much easier task. Those who know me aren't surprised I'd rather take a train than fly. In fact, once hubby and I are both retired and don't have to fit vacations into tiny boxes, our plan is for surface travel only, with no flying unless there's an emergency. Airlines never seem to disappoint in finding more and more ways to make flying unpleasant, and adding the latest cancellation disasters over the past month just seems to confirm that speed isn't everything.
Hm, I've never experienced this. Most flight attendants I've encountered have been friendly, some even very friendly and cheerful. However I don't fly domestically very often or on US carriers.I don't have to fight attendants in the aisles just to use the bathroom.
Train rides are great for some quality crochet or knitting time -- and no one gets in a tizzy over metal yarn snips, hooks or needles!I can knit all day in the observation car and not even notice the time.
Same with us. We took a long train trip to visit our son and his wife in Oklahoma. Right when I stepped onto the train, I felt like the vacation was beginning.For my wife and I, the train is part of the vacation. Not just a way to get there.
Here is a positive experience with timeliness. Last Summer my wife and I went from Connecticut to Florida on Amtrak. We then took it to South Carolina to visit friends. Then we went Back to Connecticut. This involved quite a few connections because we had no thru trains. All of the trains were on time.Friends of mine traveled around the world in 2015 without taking a single airplane. Really. The single biggest transport challenge was finding a cargo ship willing to take them across the Pacific. Lots and lots of trains, of course. "We had some 25 different train connections in the nine countries we visited in Europe, Asia, and China. Every one of them was on time to the minute." Until they boarded the Empire Builder in Seattle on the last leg of their journey.
http://www.josephhowellphotography.com/howellsbigtrip/
I'm always motivated to take a train. I live in Meriden, CT and my daughter lives in Milford so it's a straight shot on Amtrak/CT rail and Metro North. I can walk to the station or have my wife drive me. It beats battling traffic through New Haven. We have taken a lot of LD trains and plan on taking it to Florida for her wedding next year.It’s pretty hard to get motivated to take a train if you need to get to a destination now. In most cases.
I can certainly see how that works for you.I'm always motivated to take a train. I live in Meriden, CT and my daughter lives in Milford so it's a straight shot on Amtrak/CT rail and Metro North. I can walk to the station or have my wife drive me. It beats battling traffic through New Haven. We have taken a lot of LD trains and plan on taking it to Florida for her wedding next year.
Trains take me to a place other modes of transportation don't even get close to. They also go to the places others go, like Chicago and Saskatoon and so on. But the place I want to go only exists as seen from the tracks. It's beyond space and time. It's my happy place. And when I go, that's where I'm going to.
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