The title will become a little more apparent later. For now, let me tell you a story about how Swiss punctuality and efficiency can be a double-edged sword, how to apply lessons I have just recently learned, and how Swiss train operations allow me to not worry about it too much.
12 September 2023
ICE 275 Freiburg im Breisgau - Bern // 11.02 - 12.56
After a great few days in Freiburg, I needed to get to my last destination of this trip - Lausanne, Switzerland. I needed to get there before 6:30pm so I could pick up the keys of the apartment I was renting from the owner. Seeing as I had a few hours to get there after checking out of my rented apartment in Freiburg, I bought a train ticket that stopped at Bern to check out the city for a few hours before heading to Lausanne. I heard that you could spend a day in Bern but it's not a place that requires much more than that.
For this part I seriously considered buying tickets on the day as I had done with French and Belgian trains. However, I saw an ICE ticket that fit very well with my schedule and it was priced fairly. This would also allow me to eat lunch on the train, which would give me a bit more time to roam around Bern. I admit that the currywurst on Deutsche Bahn's (DB) menu caught my eye, and it's apparently very popular. That settled, I felt comfortable about purchasing an ICE ticket weeks in advance and saving a bit of cash.
Fast forward to the night before this train, when during dinner I get another message from the DB app that "my journey has been canceled". Unfortunately, there are no options to rebook on the app. This isn't what I was expecting! So after dinner I trundled down to the train station and talked to one of the staff members in the service center (Reisenzentrum). He prints out a page with the updated itinerary.
My train isn't "canceled", but it's terminating at Basel SBB because something's happened on the Swiss side. Instead of a through-train, I now have to change trains at Basel SBB with a nine-minute transfer time.
Fortunately, I've been to Basel SBB before and it's an easy transfer. What makes it slightly more annoying is that hundreds of people are probably doing this with me. Again, this is no big deal. Nine minutes is plenty of time to make the transfer here, unless you're going from the French TER tracks to the Swiss tracks.
Once I get back to the apartment I pack my bags as best I can, tidy up the apartment, watch a little TV, and then eventually fall asleep with confidence that everything will be fine.
12 September 2023
ICE 275 Freiburg im Breisgau - Bern // 11.02 - 12.56
After a great few days in Freiburg, I needed to get to my last destination of this trip - Lausanne, Switzerland. I needed to get there before 6:30pm so I could pick up the keys of the apartment I was renting from the owner. Seeing as I had a few hours to get there after checking out of my rented apartment in Freiburg, I bought a train ticket that stopped at Bern to check out the city for a few hours before heading to Lausanne. I heard that you could spend a day in Bern but it's not a place that requires much more than that.
For this part I seriously considered buying tickets on the day as I had done with French and Belgian trains. However, I saw an ICE ticket that fit very well with my schedule and it was priced fairly. This would also allow me to eat lunch on the train, which would give me a bit more time to roam around Bern. I admit that the currywurst on Deutsche Bahn's (DB) menu caught my eye, and it's apparently very popular. That settled, I felt comfortable about purchasing an ICE ticket weeks in advance and saving a bit of cash.
Fast forward to the night before this train, when during dinner I get another message from the DB app that "my journey has been canceled". Unfortunately, there are no options to rebook on the app. This isn't what I was expecting! So after dinner I trundled down to the train station and talked to one of the staff members in the service center (Reisenzentrum). He prints out a page with the updated itinerary.
My train isn't "canceled", but it's terminating at Basel SBB because something's happened on the Swiss side. Instead of a through-train, I now have to change trains at Basel SBB with a nine-minute transfer time.
Fortunately, I've been to Basel SBB before and it's an easy transfer. What makes it slightly more annoying is that hundreds of people are probably doing this with me. Again, this is no big deal. Nine minutes is plenty of time to make the transfer here, unless you're going from the French TER tracks to the Swiss tracks.
Once I get back to the apartment I pack my bags as best I can, tidy up the apartment, watch a little TV, and then eventually fall asleep with confidence that everything will be fine.