This line crosses Catalonia from Barcelona all they way north to the Pyrenees. From suburbia to the high mountains.
We left Barcelona with 29 degrees and lots of humidity π₯΅, some hours later we could feel the chilly breeze as doors opened on some stationsβ¦ 13 degrees! π₯Ά
We were lucky, since we got a "refurbished" train, with somewhat softer seats. Nevertheless, still not ideal for 3h tripsβ¦
Also, check those signs! I guess many of you weren't expecting β·οΈ signs on Catalan trains... π as if Rodalies would be the SBB (if only... π₯²)
The line climbs rather steep slopes up the Vall de Ribes, reaching a spiral tunnel followed by a really long "standard" tunnel. It almost feels like the Gotthard! π
After the tunnel, we reach "La Molina" station, summit of the line at 1420 m high, located within a ski resort.
πποΈ A nerdy fact about the "Ferrocarril Transpirinenc", is that, on the southern side, it's the highest (1494 m) of all Iberian gauge railways
But also on the northern side, the track will go even slightly more up, 1562 m, making it the highest french rail line outside the Alps
After La Molina, we go down towards the Cerdanya plateau, a relatively flat area in the middle of the Pyrenees. Elevation 1200 m
Most passengers get off at PuigcerdΓ , the main town of the area, and just a couple continue on board for the short hop to last stop.
ππ§ Border nerds will find this area interesting. Right next to PuigcerdΓ there's the exclave of LlΓvia, which had a rather surrealist "war" with π¨π΅ in the 20th century π
Nevertheless, people feel mostly Catalan on both sides of the "imposed" border.
The 4km intl stretch between PuigcerdΓ and La Tor de Querol is rather unique. Instead of one track with double gauge, there's two tracks. One iberian, one standard.
No french train has regularly crossed since 1969, but thankfully @rodalies does make it still across the border.
I was expecting some kind of border sign... this is what I got π
"Sale de RFIG", leaving RFIG, the Spanish acronym used for the rail lines considered of "state importance".
In other words, leaving Spanish state, entering France.
@rodalies uses the Catalan spelling in timetables "La Tor de Querol"
@Adif_es & the displays on Renfe trains use the Spanish spelling "La Tour de Carol"
It can be confusing when searching online timetables π€ͺ
La Tour de Carol. End of the line. Quite literally.
Iberian gauge trains can't go any further.
Approximately 3 hours after departure from Barcelona, we arrive at the French border station, where our #NightTrain#TrainDeNuit awaits for us.
We have 45 minutes to change trains which is OK. I've heard horrible stories of some years ago where πͺπ¦π«π· timetables didn't match and travelers had to spend 3h waiting here
Enough time to grab a sandwich for dinner at the "Bistrot de la Gare" & take some pics around the station
The station is rather impressive - as one would expect for an old border station - and has a distinct high-mountain look.
A little sign also reminds us that this station was one of the routes that Spanish Republicans took on their way to exile, as they escaped fascism in 1939 βπΌ
This is also one of the few stations in Europe (the only one perhaps?) with 3 different gauges.
1668mm for Rodalies trains going south, 1435mm for SNCF trains going north and 1000mm for the "Train Jaune" (the wonderfully retro & scenic "yellow train") which also uses 3rd rail β‘
The long #IntercitesdeNuit is about to leave Toulouse for a direct night run to Paris.
Depart after dinner. Sleep onboard. Arrive early in the morning.
No airports, no queues, no waking up at 3:45am for an early morning flight.
We need more of these
Bonne nuit from a full compartment traveling north to Paris!
πποΈπ
Arrived exactly on time to Paris at 06:52.
The sleep was really good. The "1st class couchette" is really comfortable. The pillow is also very good. Just note, no plugs.
Arrival into the formerly beautiful Austerlitz station. Now it's just a mess full of scaffoldings π
Changing trains in Paris⦠means taking the metro between mainline stations.
At least in Austerlitz you're treated with rather unique elevated platforms, literally above the railway station.
For us is a very convenient ride on metro line 5, direct to Gare du Nord.
At Gare du Nord, my friend and I say goodbye. He will go upstairs to check in for his Eurostar. And endure all the Brexit + covid paperwork. And get stamped out of the EU π’
For me it's just a simple ticket check and I'm onboard my Thalys direct to Brussels.
Weekend in Barcelona
π¨π₯π¨π₯π¨π₯π¨π₯π¨
A little thread ππποΈποΈπΈ
Starting by the Metro. Line 1 opened in 1926 and, uniquely, it uses Iberian gauge tracks. There's even a connection to the adif/renfe network near Plaça Catalunya.
Renfe being renfe means... check-in before boarding π€·π»ββοΈ
Also, Bilbao must be one the largest cities in Europe with the worst long distance rail service. Tell me about another place in Europe with a population of +1M in the metro area that only gets 4 trains per day...
Agur Bilbo ππΌ
(These views have expiry date. The whole Abando station will soon be fully reconstructed for the arrival of high speed trains... and all platforms will be located on underground levels π’)