FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - ON THE ROAD AGAIN: Autumn Travels at Home and Abroad
Old Feb 11, 2023 | 7:58 pm
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Originally Posted by TheFlyingDoctor
Well, this is a wonderful treat. I was going to save some of it for tomorrow's five or so hours of train travel across the south of England, but, well, here we are; a few evenings of 'just one more post' and I've happily consumed the lot!

It has made a timely companion to my current dead-tree reading material: a book called "The Journey Matters", by Jonathan Glancey. This is a collection of trip reports, but with a twist - they are fictionalised accounts of real services from the golden era of 20th century travel. This also creates a slightly strange piece of science fiction: an un-aging plane and train enthusiast sampling one mode of transport after another across the decades. I mention it for a few reasons. Firstly, it introduced me to the Whyte notation for locomotives you also used. Second, it comes with notes on what, if anything still survives of some of these services - from which I had just added the Friends of the 261's Cedar Rapids to my long list of possible future adventures. So I was delighted to see it featured here - although Glancey's 'trip report' actually covers an earlier incarnation of the Afternoon Hiawatha; still streamlined and featuring an observation car at the end of the train, but hauled by steam! Finally, like you I suspect he would have liked to have been born 50 or perhaps even 100 years earlier for these to be real memories rather than imagined ones... there are a few chapters on actual trips later in the book I have yet to reach, but I get the strong sense that Glancey considers modern travel a pale imitation of the past.

Having had a few goes myself, I sympathise with the time it takes to put a report together of even a fraction of this length - my contributions here have slowed partly because it's so much easier to wrangle photos (or even video) on my blog, and partly because I was fortunate enough to get back to travel with a vengeance in 2022 (I write only at a desktop PC, so no opportunity to bash out a few paragraphs on the move). My thanks, then, for sticking with it (and supplying many more ideas for that travel shopping list); by way of a possible trade, my only report from 2022 may be of interest to you, being devoted to a hop-on, hop-off ride of the California Zephyr.
It's good to hear from you again, Doc! Thanks for your kind comments. Two things - first, I wasted no time in ordering a copy of Jonathan Glancey's "The Journey Matters". Thank you for the tip there. Then we suffered through two days of internet issues on the community based system I'm on. Now that things have improved somewhat, second - I look forward to delving into your most recent trip report tomorrow. I'd check it out tonight but I'll have company. Then again, I've a roomette booked on the Zephyr from Sacramento to Chicago in early March. As you well know, trains are great places from which to read trip reports. But nah! l can't wait that long!

It is always a great honor to read that any of my travels as reported upon in my trip reports have influenced others to try them out themselves. There are still quite a few steam hauled excursion trains out there - be that here in America or abroad - and 1950s era streamliner cars abound, perhaps most prominently on ViaRail's Canadian between Toronto and Vancouver. The 4 day ride on that train is the ultimate North American "excursion train" ride. In any event, I wish you well in your upcoming quest to ride some of these trains and to that end, might I recommend the latest edition of the Tourist Train Guidebook. I'll post the link below -

Tourist Train Guidebook - 9th Edition
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