With gas prices nowadays, why is US rail travel still so inconvenient?
Here's what brought this on: my family is going camping in upstate NY and I will be joining them for part of the time. It's about a four-hour drive from here, on a toll road most of the way to boot. Besides the cost, I just plain dislike driving long distances by myself--hard to stay awake so then I end up drinking a big iced coffee and often when I reach my destination everybody gets to deal with a spaz :eek:. So, I decided to look into Amtrak and see if that would be a possibility since I knew there was a train I could catch here that goes through Albany and thought there would possibly be a connecting train heading north, and also thought the cost would be comparable to driving. Well, the Lakeshore Limited (the one I'd get on to go to Albany) does intersect with a line that goes right where I need to go (Adirondack) but they each only run once a day and there is NO WAY to connect (Lakeshore Limited gets to Albany at 5:35 pm and Adirondack leaves Albany at 11:05 am...not gonna work!!). How stupid. If I could get where I needed to go, the cost would indeed be pretty comparable to driving (and it would be much nicer than driving). I wrote them an email on their website about these issues and we'll see what kind of response I get. It's just frustrating that the infrastructure is there (at least here in the Northeast), the price is reasonable, but the severely limited service makes traveling by train not feasible for most regional trips. You'd think with the current energy situation there would be some attention to improving this; I know for a fact that ridership has gone up lately (heard it on the news the other day). Ridership would increase even more if it were actually possible to make connections between lines:rolleyes:.