Hopefully some will find this of interest. First part of a report from a 7 week long trip which I did a couple of months ago. It was written for a UK based group (World Rail Gen) over on groups.io Bits will refer to a term we call "loco haulage" which is popular amongst some railfans in my country. However I fall very much into the "line traveller" category. Any prices quoted are in Canadian Dollars.
Post retirement treat which was basically a coast to coast trip by rail with time off in some cities for beer and sightseeing. I'll keep this report centered on rail travel plus moves by other forms of transport from city to city. This was primarily a track clearing trip, so no scratching of F40PHs or 'insect leaps' on GO Transit.
After flying out from Heathrow to Halifax and a day off in case of any flight mishaps, my first move was Friday 23 August on train 15, 11:30 Halifax to Ste-Foye. Booked sole use of a double sleeper with shower in one of the Renaissance cars which were of course supposed to be used for the ill fated Nightstar. Haulage was 6404 and 6409 couped with cabs at opposite ends with no track layout to turn the 20 or so car train at Halifax. So instead, a normal run round has to be done. Fare includes meals, though these are only reheated on board rather than cooked from scratch by chefs. Had lunch and dinner, and arrived at Ste Foye too early for breakfast. With both Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Kansas City on strike / lock out we had a good, on time run thanks to no freights. The good news was the strikes were over by Sunday meaning CPKC lines would reopen to passenger traffic as their controllers were also in dispute. CN Lines remained open as it was just their train crews. On arrival at Ste-Foye, VIA Rail provides a shuttle bus to Québec Gare du Palais as the station won't fit 20 plus cars.
Two nights in Québec and Sunday 25 August saw me do the tourist line from Chute Montmorency just on the outskirts of Québec through to La Malbaie and back. Nice run alongside the St Lawrence estuary, shame the trains are former DB 628 units.
Monday 26 August
2216 (new Venture set) train 35, 08:06 Québec to Montréal.
After getting into my room just after midday at the very good Best Western Europa near to Montréal Central and lunch, the afternoon peak was to cover the exo line to Hudson.
1366 16:27 Vendôme to Vaudreuil (note Lucien D'Allier was closed due to rebuilding, fully reopens in Spring 2025)
1364 17:45 Vaudreuil to Hudson
Bus (route 21) conveniently will connect from the first and just about with the 2nd PM train out to Hudson to get you back to Vaudreuil for a train to Montréal. 5 mins walk between station and bus stop.
1361 19:55 Vaudreuil to Vendôme
Tuesday 27 August
All day clearing off the track on three exo line routes. Bits not covered on exo are duplicated with VIA Rail.
1324 09:40 Vendôme to Candiac (with a platform only long enough for two sets of doors!) then back on the 10:30
Metro to Sauvé as off peak not all exo services run into the centre.
1345 12:30 Sauvé to Mascouche and 13:32 return
Metro Sauvé to Vendôme then:
1368 15:16 Vendôme to Montréal Ouest
1358 15:26 Montréal Ouest to St-Jérôme
1369 18:50 St-Jérôme to De La Concord
Metro back to Lucien D'Allier
Wednesday 28 to Friday 30 August were to cover the lines north of Montréal. These were ones I was a tad nervous about seeing as they have poor timekeeping and during hot weather revert to overnight running due to the track condition. However, all was good.
6452 07:30 Montréal to Senneterre with 6424 (not powering) detached at Hervey Jonction for Jonquière. Arrived around 30 minutes late at Senneterre and accommodation is limited to just 3 motels. All three can only be booked by phone. However La Bell'Villa was a 5 minutes phone call with English speaking staff, Door codes emailed as the front desk is closed at night and spotlessly clean. The train crew also are booked there too. Note these trains have limited catering coffee, beer, sandwiches but nothing cooked. Cash payment unless there's a phone signal. After La Tuque, the last town it is 7+ hours with no mobile coverage.
Thursday was re-tracing the route to Shawinigan with the same locos and the Jonquière portion attaches onto the back at Hervey so again then unpowered towards Montréal. 06:28 start, but a convenience store near the station did fresh croissants and coffee to warm me up. It was about 5C and foggy, a stark contrast to Tuesday in Montréal at 28C! Overnight at Shawinigan. Ended up walking to the hotel as the Uber app though there were vehicles, booked, charged me, then timed out after 10 minutes.
Friday was to complete the lines. 6452 on the Senneterre portion (powering) and two 6434 plus 6443 both powering on the Jonquière portion. Each portion was again one baggage car and one economy seat. Arrived in Jonquière over half an hour early. As with Senneterre, scenic forest and lakes, very much like Scandinavia. I booked an Airbnb in Jonquière simply because all three hotels near the station had a 21:00 check-in curfews.The Airbnb was about 15 mins away on a quiet residential road. A full sized self contained flat, door code to get in. Was paid for in GBP total £72 fees included.
As there are no trains back from Jonquière or Senneterre on Saturday, I took an Intercar bus, which took around 3 hours to Québec to rejoin the rail network.
And Québec was where it all started to go wrong. Had time for beers and lunch before train 39 at 14:57 to Ottawa. Whilst in the brewpub, I got an email alert from VIA Rail to say it was an hour late. The Siemens Venture set that was due to form 39 had developed an air pipe fault around midday between Montréal and Québec. Line blocked and attempts to move it took 8 hours. I did consider giving up and staying the night in Québec. But being a Saturday night on a holiday weekend in a popular tourist city, we were looking at £400+ VIA Rail said no accommodation would be provided or compensated for as they would get us to our destination. They fed us pizzas and around 22:00 two trains from the Montréal direction pulled in about 15 minutes apart. The failed one was left in a loop and passengers did a side to side evacuation onto another set after getting pulled to the loop a few Kms south of where it came to a stand. Train 39 left 22:30, arrived Montréal 02:00 and terminated there. VIA Rail laid on a coach with further food and water supplied and we pulled up outside of Ottawa 05:00, a mere 8 hours late. The incident reached national news and VIA Rail management were asked to explain at a meeting with the Transport Minister after being raised in Parliament.
Post retirement treat which was basically a coast to coast trip by rail with time off in some cities for beer and sightseeing. I'll keep this report centered on rail travel plus moves by other forms of transport from city to city. This was primarily a track clearing trip, so no scratching of F40PHs or 'insect leaps' on GO Transit.
After flying out from Heathrow to Halifax and a day off in case of any flight mishaps, my first move was Friday 23 August on train 15, 11:30 Halifax to Ste-Foye. Booked sole use of a double sleeper with shower in one of the Renaissance cars which were of course supposed to be used for the ill fated Nightstar. Haulage was 6404 and 6409 couped with cabs at opposite ends with no track layout to turn the 20 or so car train at Halifax. So instead, a normal run round has to be done. Fare includes meals, though these are only reheated on board rather than cooked from scratch by chefs. Had lunch and dinner, and arrived at Ste Foye too early for breakfast. With both Canadian National and Canadian Pacific Kansas City on strike / lock out we had a good, on time run thanks to no freights. The good news was the strikes were over by Sunday meaning CPKC lines would reopen to passenger traffic as their controllers were also in dispute. CN Lines remained open as it was just their train crews. On arrival at Ste-Foye, VIA Rail provides a shuttle bus to Québec Gare du Palais as the station won't fit 20 plus cars.
Two nights in Québec and Sunday 25 August saw me do the tourist line from Chute Montmorency just on the outskirts of Québec through to La Malbaie and back. Nice run alongside the St Lawrence estuary, shame the trains are former DB 628 units.
Monday 26 August
2216 (new Venture set) train 35, 08:06 Québec to Montréal.
After getting into my room just after midday at the very good Best Western Europa near to Montréal Central and lunch, the afternoon peak was to cover the exo line to Hudson.
1366 16:27 Vendôme to Vaudreuil (note Lucien D'Allier was closed due to rebuilding, fully reopens in Spring 2025)
1364 17:45 Vaudreuil to Hudson
Bus (route 21) conveniently will connect from the first and just about with the 2nd PM train out to Hudson to get you back to Vaudreuil for a train to Montréal. 5 mins walk between station and bus stop.
1361 19:55 Vaudreuil to Vendôme
Tuesday 27 August
All day clearing off the track on three exo line routes. Bits not covered on exo are duplicated with VIA Rail.
1324 09:40 Vendôme to Candiac (with a platform only long enough for two sets of doors!) then back on the 10:30
Metro to Sauvé as off peak not all exo services run into the centre.
1345 12:30 Sauvé to Mascouche and 13:32 return
Metro Sauvé to Vendôme then:
1368 15:16 Vendôme to Montréal Ouest
1358 15:26 Montréal Ouest to St-Jérôme
1369 18:50 St-Jérôme to De La Concord
Metro back to Lucien D'Allier
Wednesday 28 to Friday 30 August were to cover the lines north of Montréal. These were ones I was a tad nervous about seeing as they have poor timekeeping and during hot weather revert to overnight running due to the track condition. However, all was good.
6452 07:30 Montréal to Senneterre with 6424 (not powering) detached at Hervey Jonction for Jonquière. Arrived around 30 minutes late at Senneterre and accommodation is limited to just 3 motels. All three can only be booked by phone. However La Bell'Villa was a 5 minutes phone call with English speaking staff, Door codes emailed as the front desk is closed at night and spotlessly clean. The train crew also are booked there too. Note these trains have limited catering coffee, beer, sandwiches but nothing cooked. Cash payment unless there's a phone signal. After La Tuque, the last town it is 7+ hours with no mobile coverage.
Thursday was re-tracing the route to Shawinigan with the same locos and the Jonquière portion attaches onto the back at Hervey so again then unpowered towards Montréal. 06:28 start, but a convenience store near the station did fresh croissants and coffee to warm me up. It was about 5C and foggy, a stark contrast to Tuesday in Montréal at 28C! Overnight at Shawinigan. Ended up walking to the hotel as the Uber app though there were vehicles, booked, charged me, then timed out after 10 minutes.
Friday was to complete the lines. 6452 on the Senneterre portion (powering) and two 6434 plus 6443 both powering on the Jonquière portion. Each portion was again one baggage car and one economy seat. Arrived in Jonquière over half an hour early. As with Senneterre, scenic forest and lakes, very much like Scandinavia. I booked an Airbnb in Jonquière simply because all three hotels near the station had a 21:00 check-in curfews.The Airbnb was about 15 mins away on a quiet residential road. A full sized self contained flat, door code to get in. Was paid for in GBP total £72 fees included.
As there are no trains back from Jonquière or Senneterre on Saturday, I took an Intercar bus, which took around 3 hours to Québec to rejoin the rail network.
And Québec was where it all started to go wrong. Had time for beers and lunch before train 39 at 14:57 to Ottawa. Whilst in the brewpub, I got an email alert from VIA Rail to say it was an hour late. The Siemens Venture set that was due to form 39 had developed an air pipe fault around midday between Montréal and Québec. Line blocked and attempts to move it took 8 hours. I did consider giving up and staying the night in Québec. But being a Saturday night on a holiday weekend in a popular tourist city, we were looking at £400+ VIA Rail said no accommodation would be provided or compensated for as they would get us to our destination. They fed us pizzas and around 22:00 two trains from the Montréal direction pulled in about 15 minutes apart. The failed one was left in a loop and passengers did a side to side evacuation onto another set after getting pulled to the loop a few Kms south of where it came to a stand. Train 39 left 22:30, arrived Montréal 02:00 and terminated there. VIA Rail laid on a coach with further food and water supplied and we pulled up outside of Ottawa 05:00, a mere 8 hours late. The incident reached national news and VIA Rail management were asked to explain at a meeting with the Transport Minister after being raised in Parliament.