Matthew H Fish
Lead Service Attendant
- Joined
- May 28, 2019
- Messages
- 499
I just finished a five day, four night long trip, and I have a lot to talk about! I will be editing and posting videos for each day, probably about once a day.
This is my video showing my trip northward, on May 27th. I took a city bus from Corvallis to Albany, took an Oregon POINT/Amtrak Thruway bus to Portland, and then got on a train proper all the way to Mount Vernon.
The video does a pretty good job covering the trip, although as is often the case, there are places I focused on some things more than others.
There are a few important takeaways, though.
This is my video showing my trip northward, on May 27th. I took a city bus from Corvallis to Albany, took an Oregon POINT/Amtrak Thruway bus to Portland, and then got on a train proper all the way to Mount Vernon.
The video does a pretty good job covering the trip, although as is often the case, there are places I focused on some things more than others.
There are a few important takeaways, though.
- This was the Saturday of Memorial Day weekend, so the train was sold out. But in general, most of my experience with both rail and long distance bus transit in the past few months is that they are usually booked close to solid. Seeing how many people were taking the train, it makes sense for Amtrak to run more trains, at least from a demand standpoint. Also, from this trip, I wonder why none of the Amtrak Cascades go the entire route--- there are Seattle to Eugene trains, and Portland to Vancouver BC trains, but no Eugene to Vancouver BC trains. I know there are probably many logistical reasons for this, but it still seems to be something to aim for. Or, if the border crossing is the issue, Eugene to Bellingham.
- The Amtrak Cascades isn't a "long distance" route...but it isn't a short route either! It is over 450 miles on its entire route, counting the Canadian portion. I ride the Cascades often for what amounts to "commuting" travel between Portland and Eugene, but taking almost the entire route made me realize how big it is. This was also meaningfully for me personally because I am a Northwesterner who has travelled a lot in the Pacific Northwest---but has gone north of Seattle only around 10 times in my life. Before taking this trip, I would have thought of the Northern Puget Sound area as basically the same thing as the areas I was familiar with. This trip made me realize that the area north of Seattle, and north of Everett, was both further away, and different, from what I was familiar with. This is also important for people wishing to schedule travel north of Seattle---there are only two trains and two buses a day, as opposed to the five trains between Portland and Seattle. Mount Vernon and Bellingham are nice places to visit, but they might not be easy places to reach for day trips.
- There are some small towns along the route. And there are places between Vancouver and Olympia where I was surprised that I couldn't even pick up any radio stations. Compared to many places I've been, I think of the I-5 corridor as basically totally settled, but there is a lot of woodland and natural areas that the train passes through around Kelso and Centralia. This is also important in terms of the trains' passenger base: the train is usually thought of as the Portland-Seattle train, but the passengers, and the political support, also comes from people in towns like Stanwood and Kelso in Washington, and towns in the mid-Willamette Valley in Oregon.