Showing posts with label Amtrak Crescent. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Amtrak Crescent. Show all posts

Friday, September 20, 2024

Thursday, September 17, on the Amtrak Crescent

Thursday, September 19, 2024

 I woke up in North Carolina, and it was still fairly early when we hit Virginia. Claude, our Porter, told us to get the cameras ready. As we came out of a tunnel in southern Virginia we crossed the James river. Quite beautiful.

In DC, we spent a bit of time at the station whiled Amtrak changed out the two diesel engines for a single electric engine, as everything north east of DC is on electrified line. I was part of the sidewalk superintendent group supervising the train workers.. They tolerated me very well!


I detrained, Yes, that’s a word, at Newark New Jersey and got ready to board another train to the Newark airport, but I realized as I got ready to get on the train that I had forgotten to claim my baggage from Amtrak baggage. Ran around like a chicken with my head cut off and still made the train. 

I am staying in a hotel at the Newark airport because it’s about half the cost or less than anything I could find in Manhattan. I have a very nice King size bed in a king size room, and the bed is comfortable, and the breakfast was good.

A crazy thing about this Best Western, is that I can probably throw a baseball from the front door to the train station where I will head back to New York. But because of fences, parking lots, and whatever, going from the train station to my hotel involves a 1 mile trip on the airport Airtran People mover,  and a 2 mile roundabout trip on the hotel shuttle that I swear, went on and off of seven different freeways! Urban geography is different!

Next: New York City

Wednesday, September 18, 2024

From New Orleans on the Amtrak Crescent




Wednesday    I’m in car 2010, roomette five and we are going from New Orleans to New York .


Claude is my car attendant. He said he’s been doing this for 30 years.   I mentioned to Claude that the impression I have always gotten through my magazines was that Amtrak is the playground of the well-to-do since it is not cheap.    But what I saw yesterday and this morning is that everybody rides Amtrak and Claude confirmed that.    I met a lady yesterday named Wanda who’s travelled about 35 times on Amtrak. She lives in South Carolina. We shared an Uber to the train station and she’s well known at the hotel.    The Crescent departed right on time.    Claude was telling us they have problems with passengers who try to make up their own own berth and that’s how they get hurt.    The upper berth is stored about 2 feet higher than it’s nighttime configuration and if you don’t know what you’re doing you can drop this heavy upper bunk on your pumpkin head.  Since making up my berth is one of Claude's primary responsibilities, I will be happy to let him do that!


I saw a yard diesel with Amtrak colors parked close to the terminal.     It moves the cars around but in an emergency, like Katrina, they run a power cable from the diesel into the terminal and they can run the terminal off the locomotive.


      The room has a pulldown sink and a fold up toilet right in the roomette!    Seems to be more legroom than the sunset limited when the berths are made up.  


Two engines, three coaches, an observation/lounge/snack car, dining car, sleeper and a sleeper/baggage.     


I walked the three blocks from the depot to the hotel last night in New Orleans. Holiday Holiday Inn express is right around the corner from the World War II museum.   There are trolley tracks outside and the desk clerk said the trolley runs about every 15 minutes. The room is nothing fancy but the Bed was comfortable. Everything was clean and breakfast was quite good. I saw a new thing for a hotel breakfast: automatic pancake machine    Push the button, hold your plate under the end of it looks like a large toaster oven and you can watch the belt, carry the pancake batter and then flip it, and in a minute you’ve got a pancake.  Who knew?



The bad news is that sometime around 10 o’clock last night I found a bad piece of sidewalk or curb or something, but the New Orleans pavement threw me down onto the middle of the street! I skinned my knee for about the 5 millionth time in my life, both wrists hurt And I have a scrape just under the hairline on my forehead.   This morning, I am sore.      


The Sunset Limited from Los Angeles to New Orleans does not offer Wi-Fi     There is Wi-Fi on the Crescent but I’m under no illusions about how dependable it would be in the deep woods of Mississippi and Alabama.


Picayune Mississippi.    Nice name


My sleeper car has 13 roomettes, each with an upper and lower birth, a toilet and sink in the room, although I think I’ll go down the hall. Car also has three bedrooms that have considerably more room.     My porter said this train usually has 2 1/2 sleepers (the other half is baggage), but they pulled one of the cars for something else.     The end of the train is a baggage car/sleeper with 9 roomettes.    The engineer and the conductor are hour-limited by federal regulations so after eight hours or so we’ll have a crew change.   The attendant and the dining room staff travel from one end to the other and they have berths down here in the sleeper car area.


The dining car just got a new menu and while everything comes prepackaged, everyone is telling me the food is quite good     Passengers in the sleeper cars get their meals in the diner at no additional charge. Last night, as a coach passenger, I paid $45 to sit in the diner car.  The next car over has a snack bar and doubles has a lounge.   Coach passengers have to pay to eat in the dining car, and I found last night that was very expensive     Upfront, the three coaches each have room for at least one Wheelchair and a bathroom that appears to be rather accessible.   At the moment the lead coach is totally empty but my attendant tells me it will fill starting in Birmingham.  (Actually started filling in Hattiesburg).   The cars of this train are considerably newer than those are the sunset limited and the attendant pointed out to me that these cars were built for comfort.      The train is not full, so most people are sprawled out across several seats    Staff are very friendly and helpful.     




Wednesday, September 11, 2024

Planning the Next Trip

 I now have firm plans and commitments for my Boston trip, September 17-Ocober 1.  I tell you something I really miss from the old days - travel agents!  I am supposed to do all of my planning at the computer.   The planning takes far longer than the trip itself.

I will take Amtrak to Boston.   Amtrak's "Julie" says the way to get to Boston is to take a bus to Longview, take the Texas Eagle to Chicago, and then take another train to Boston.   Sounds like how Southwest wants to route me home!   I found a better way.    Amtrak's Sunset Limited (Coach, it's cheaper) to New Orleans, overnight in a hotel on St Charles, take the Crescent to New York, stay a few days in Newark and then take the Acela to Boston.   Trying to book this on line, with a credit from my last voyage, and a few other variables was very frustrating.    I finally jumped in my Kia and drove downtown to the Amtrak station, where a very pleasant human being helped me with my tickets in short order.   Very satisfying.



Here is where i need your feedback.   I am doing this set of blogs from my phone and iPad, as the laptop takes up weight and space in my baggage.  Please comment, below as to whether you can view the video and any images.   

The little AMTRAK n scale train is a faithful model of the Sunset Limited.  The second car behind the engines is the sleeper.  I had a lower berth there to Los Angeles last month.   The last car in the consist is the coach, with airline-like seating.  I will ride it to New Orleans on September 17.

My credit cards have paid for trains to Boston, My hotels are booked thru Friday, September 27.   My Southwest flight from Hartford to Houston is also booked.   My hope is to pay off the credit cards now and by the end of my trip.  Just about done.

I was channel surfing during the Olympics and came across an episode of NOVA, on PBS.    They were talking about the longest wooden covered bridge in America, located in New York, not far from Albany, and also not far from Cooperstown, so now I will add a couple of bridges and some baseball to my final weekend.   I also hope to look at the Eastern terminus of the Erie Canal.

I am dictating this paragraph. This is a whole lot easier than typing on the iPad! Maybe you can teach an old dog new tricks!

Here is a shot of my layout.   The two modules were built in the 80s     I recently brought them out.  They and the other trackwork occupy a 9 x 5 area of my living room


Please comment below.   I think this works

Dan