• @[email protected]
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    23 hours ago

    sadly incorrect now that SJ dropped the night trains göteborg-umeå, despite significant protests

  • @[email protected]
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    413 hours ago

    why does italy have 2 identical lines where one of them just skips taranto what did taranto do

    • @[email protected]
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      38 hours ago

      That looks fine to me. I’m no civil engineer but the lines connect on both ends, so a person can hop off and go to taranto, or stay along the top coastline. I’d assume the lines were doubled because people used that line so often that it was better to just create a whole new one.

    • Zement
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      16 minutes ago

      Tried to get a train to a festival in Portugal next year. Not a chance. 24H travel time, multiple layovers at remote stations… 200€ per person.

      Flight, 90€, 3H… Sorry climate. ={

    • @az04
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      2423 hours ago

      It existed up until the pandemic, Trenhotel, I took it once. Fell asleep in the center of Madrid, woke up in downtown Lisbon. The trip had beautiful snowy landscapes lit by the full moon. It’s such a shame it’s gone.

    • MudMan
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      1324 hours ago

      And Ireland? Or is the map just having a very specific interpretation of “Europe”?

        • MudMan
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          -123 hours ago

          I don’t know, but that’d be the point, right? If it framed Western Europe we’d know that those countries don’t have any, but cutting them off just makes it ambiguous.

          • DeeDan06
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            120 minutes ago

            night trains are for long distances. Can’t really do that on an island. Night trains are basically just sleeper trains, but those connections need more than 3-4 hours of distance to make sense

            • MudMan
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              19 minutes ago

              … yes, I know what a night train is. Your point?

              For the record, there are far longer routes in Ireland, Spain and Portugal and far shorter routes captured in the map (in distance, we could have a long talk about the pros and cons of promoting overnight train over high speed rail for the same trip).

            • MudMan
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              -622 hours ago

              And I don’t read it that way. That’s why it’s ambiguous.

              I am even more confused with that link, though, because they do seem to have listed lines in Spain flagged as “important seat-only connections”. So… connections to where? Why are they cut off? Do those extend into Portugal or terminate in Spain?

    • @[email protected]
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      223 hours ago

      They used to have the Pau Casals train BCN-ZRH but they deemed it non profitable or something :(

  • @JubilantJaguar
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    920 hours ago

    Unpopular opinion. Night trains are never going to make a dent in air travel.

    I’ve traveled right across Europe by train a bunch of times, so I’ve taken a good few night trains. In Germany, France, Austria, Switzerland, Denmark, Italy, a couple in the Balkans, even the Dogu Express right across Turkey. I’ve also taken day trains everywhere, of course.

    Every single experience on a night train was something of an ordeal. That’s because a night train is basically a hostel on wheels. Staying the night in a tiny cabin in extreme proximity to strangers, without privacy, without access to a decent bathroom, this is just never going to be competitive with a short flight, no matter how cheap it is. For students, young people and more adventurous types, sure, it’s a great idea.

    The only genuine solution to the plane problem is high-speed rail that is fully competitive on price.

    • @[email protected]
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      1919 hours ago

      There is another answer: improve comfort in night trains.

      Being able to eat in a restaurant in a country A, sleep in a comfy night train and eat a breakfast in a country B would be way more comfortable than a flight imho.

      • @JubilantJaguar
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        519 hours ago

        The problem is that for most people over about 21, the biggest component of “comfort” is privacy. This is why people book hotels rather than hostels, even when the hostels are stylish and luxurious. Of course, night trains can be hotels-on-wheels too. The better ones have first-class cabins with private bathrooms. But this makes no sense from an environmental point of view. At this point you might as well take the short flight.

        The best couchette-style service in Europe right now is the recently introduced Nightjet mini-cabins. Capsules, basically. This is a major step forward IMO but I still don’t see this tempting most normie travelers. And so expensive, too.

        • @[email protected]
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          11 hour ago

          Once they start rolling out more mini cabins I hope it will become more affordable. I think this can be the future to expand sleeper trains to a wider audience

  • @[email protected]
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    22 hours ago

    There used to be one going directly from Northeastern France near Basel to South France Cerbere. It was the best one for going on vacation from Germany. They killed it because it wasnt profitable enough :/ Now you have to go through Paris which is a horrible stop to have to take.

    • @JubilantJaguar
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      321 hours ago

      You don’t absolutely have to any more. There’s a Strasbourg-Lyon TGV link. Less than 4 hours.

    • @EnderMB
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      419 hours ago

      I tried it once to get to London for a meeting. The best way I can describe it is this: if you manage to go to sleep, it’s great, otherwise it’s horrible.

      • @guy_threepwood
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        112 hours ago

        Penzance to London is a similar experience, but with older trains.

    • @[email protected]
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      623 hours ago

      Caledonia Sleeper

      I wanted to take that train when I went on holiday in Scotland, but there was a train strike which jumbled our plans a little. Sad