Wow, how interesting to hear from someone who was once buried and then rose!
Sorry, had to post this.
Regards,
Retro.![]()
that ok retro. At the age of 67 the one thing you fear is the day that you are unable to rise.:hehe:
Bill
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Wow, how interesting to hear from someone who was once buried and then rose!
Sorry, had to post this.
Regards,
Retro.![]()
Thank you for the compliment Mike (I am always open to them). However, You make a very good point in comparing the size of the countries against the railway track mileage plus size of population. I have never had a great interest in American railways so this may sound a naïve question, but do the western seaboard states and cities have any railways whatsoever. I have always imagined that cities such as Los Angeles and San Francisco would be connected to other states and cities by a railway network or is that just my imagination.
Also what percentage of the population of America as a rough guess do you reckon would witness a rail movement of any kind in the course of a 12 month.
Bill.
I wasn't talking about the mod descision, I was talking about the actions of the forum members that were talking about the good old days
Jamie
I have no doubt that the interest in real trains in the USA is pretty slim and dimishing daily. Nowadays most folks (including kids) consider them an inconvenience that stops them from gettting where they are going in their cars.
One good thing came out of this: Kentucky Fried Chicken.
Sadly today that quality of life has gone! the reason is political correctness, you can't breathe, fart or say anything out of place in case your upsetting Jo next door!
The good old days are gone, never to be seen again
Jim mentions the building of the Interstate Highway System in the U.S. contributing to people not riding trains. It also contributed to people not seeing trains. Many of the older U.S. "routes" (like the famous "Route 66") paralleled railroad tracks (in the case of Route 66, the old Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe from Chicago to Los Angeles). By and large, the Interstates were built miles away. In some cases this wiped out whole towns whose only purpose was to feed, house, and gas up travelers.
One good thing came out of this: Kentucky Fried Chicken. Colonel Sanders was one of the restaurant operators wiped out when his town got bypassed by a new Interstate. To survive, he hit the road selling franchises and his chicken recipe. The rest is history.
Beyond that point, the stores peeter out to a few shops here and there (it's now mostly banks and a few bar rooms), and then nothing closest to the real Main Street - Route 125.
John
In a recent trip (May of this year) to the USA I was struck by the opposite impression. I travelled on a number of long distance trains - the Downeaster between Boston and Portland ME, the Acela Express from Boston to Washington and Washington to Philadelphia, the California Zephyr from Chicago to Emeryville (San Francisco), as well as regional, local commuter and many metro trains. In most cases the trains were full and not just during rush hour.
I learned that patronage is up significantly on virtually all of Amtrak's trains. Amtrak was expanding its network with new track from Portland north to Brunswick and are considering a new service from Chicago to LA via Los Vegas.
A common complaint I heard from my fellow passengers on the long distance trains was the increasing costs and difficulties of air travel - the latter I experienced myself on several internal flights within the US. One airline in particular that I travelled on did not have a single flight that was not "delayed", not "cancelled" or not "undergoing maintenance". That seems to be the mantra of budget airlines everywhere.
Peter Ware
Ahhhh...but what you don't know or perhaps forgot, is that Amtrak is a LOSING business that has to be propped up by Uncle Sammie to the tune of billions of dollars. [snip]
Amtrak LOSES $32 per passenger. And that was back in 2009. It's a lot wprse today.
What is really scary and amazing is that the POTUS wants to put high speed rail on US tracks. US FREIGHT tracks. There are a LOT of accidents already with low speed passenger and freight trains in the US. And the trackage is in need of major upgrade to make it suitable for high speed travel.
In England and Australia you may not have the options of being able to drive or take a plane to get where you are going. I can tell you right now there is no way I would take a plane to go ANYWHERE. Trains or cars would be my two options.