Here are the times for the 6(!) trains this morning! Were France a country with a sensible railway, Dijon-Reims would be an InterCity. But no… Just irregular TERs instead.
#CrossBorderRail Autumn 2022 Train 1
TER 91390 06:39 Nuits-sous-Ravières - Dijon Ville 07:29
Ave speed: 107 km/h
Operator: @TER_BFC_Trafic
This is one of the trains usually used on Belfort - Paris Est via Troyes. InterCity layout but running as a TER. It’s quiet, comfortable and spacious, but why does SNCF choose horrid colours and poor materials for seats?
“How about some fake wood?”
“Where should we put it?”
“How about only on the toilet doors?”
I don’t get how designers managed to make such weird choices for the interior of what’s essentially a good train
Meanwhile the Dijon - Is sur Tille - Culmont Chalindrey line is pretty slow (GPS doesn’t show more than 110km/h). It’s dual track electrified but used mostly for freight.
Culmont-Chalindrey
8 BB67200 diesel locomotives of SNCF Infra, gently rotting
And a slightly more modern yellow machine for @zugkatze was passing too
One of the melancholy aspects of #crossborderrail - I feel like I’m diagnosing forgotten places. Culmont-Chalindrey is one of those. Everything is orderly, but it’s not seen investment in a long time
#CrossBorderRail Autumn 2022 Train 3
TER 39552 09:29 Culmont-Chalindrey - Chaumont 09:57
Ave speed: 98 km/h
Operator: @TERGrandEst
Same as the previous train, only a little older. Arm rest material already fraying. And for whatever strange reason the doors are blue on this one, having been green on the other one. Did they employ a Playmobil colour palette?
Crossing the Viaduc de Chaumont. It’s more impressive from below!
#CrossBorderRail Autumn 2022 Train 4
TER 39806 10:09 Chaumont - Reims 12:25
Ave speed: 84 km/h
Operator: @TERGrandEst
Old TER carriages, parked up and rotting, Greek railways style. Outside St Dizier
Bushes growing in the ballast ✅
Bolted not welded track ✅
Knackered wooden sleepers ✅
Platform too low for step free boarding ✅
Not the best impression at Châlons-en-Champagne
Ceux sont les choses qui t’énervent comme voyageur. 3 employés @TERGrandEst SNCF ont contrôlé les billets dans le TER 39806 Chaumont - Reims. Mais aucun n’a penser à nous informer concernant les correspondances/quais à Reims 🤷
#CrossBorderRail Autumn 2022 Train 5
TER 40815 12:30 Reims - Charleville-Mezieres 13:26
Ave speed: 94 km/h
Operator: @TERGrandEst
Train type: Bombardier AGC electric version
⚡️
🚲: ✅
🦽: ✅ (step free)
📶: ⛔️
🍽: ⛔️
#CrossBorderRail Autumn 2022 Train 6
TER 38833 13:35 Charleville-Mezieres - Givet 14:32
Ave speed: 67 km/h
Operator: @TERGrandEst
It’s barely lunchtime. And I’m onto my 6th and final train of the day in France… When I get to Givet in an hour it’s time to get on the 🚲 and head to Dinant 🇧🇪. And from there 1 more train to Bruxelles today.
Ahhhh finally. The Meuse! And I’m on what used to be the cross border line, today curtailed at Givet (final station in France)
And the bike path on the other side of the Meuse looks so good! But sadly I’ve not got time to cycle anything other than the cross border section today where… 🥁 even part of the cycle path is missing!
Belgium is along there somewhere
Somewhere beyond the bushes
Ooops. Went into Belgium without noticing
It’s so nice here. Even on a grey day.
And the tourism and move-out-of-the-city potential is clear here. The track bed for the rail line is still useable. Now if only it weren’t at the 🇫🇷 🇧🇪 border - 2 of the most dysfunctional #crossborderrail countries - you’d hope this could be fixed…
#CrossBorderRail Autumn 2022 Train 7
IC 2539 17:57 Dinant - Bruxelles Schuman 19:24
Ave speed: 58 km/h
Operator: @sncb
Train type: @SiemensMobility Desiro EMU
⚡️
🚲: ✅
🦽: ✅ (step free, but big gap!)
📶: ⛔️
🍽: ⛔️
And sure, the @SiemensMobility engineering is ok, but the interior design… This is a IC train. French TERs have more space and nicer seats. That disabled / bike area is a recipe for space conflicts when it’s busy. The v few plugs are above your head. Bad decisions @sncb!
Also I know Dinant was hit by floods last year. But this to get to the platforms? Really?
Bruxelles. That’s all for the trains for today. It’s been a fascinating day. Opportunities for Givet - Dinant were better than I’d expected!
Okay. So that was a strange cycle ride. Dude on a hire kick scooter overtakes me, brakes sharply, slides on the damp road, falls off… and skids the scooter into the bumper of a police car. No damage to person, scooter or car, thankfully!
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OK, so I am going to use the channel I know - Twitter - to help me address something I’ve no idea about, namely whether I should write a book
This morning I was asked, for at least the 10th time, would I write a book about #CrossBorderRail
The answer was “maybe” - but how?
🧵
First of all: what do I know?
After having crossed 95 borders, travelled 30000km by train, having taken thousands of photos and hundreds of videos I have more than enough material. And I feel like I have not even begun to address many of the issues I discovered
What do I not know?
Should I write a book? If people are suggesting it, perhaps I should. But maybe they are more confident in this than I am?
Were I to write a book, how am I possibly going to finance the time such a massive undertaking would require? Who publishes this?
I want to set aside the problems I have with the monarchy for the moment, and examine something else that’s nagging at me regarding the death of the queen - the extent to which many people have a strong emotional reaction to her death.
This is not in any way to deny this reaction exists - it most definitely does.
It is also not to downplay the sorrow of the moment - for that is definitely the case, as the death of any human is sad.
I am instead fascinated by the strength of emotion people manage to express for someone they have never met and did not know and - in comparison to the deaths of someone like Gorbachev or Thatcher - someone who probably had comparatively marginal direct impact on their lives.
2 days ago I spent the day at Frankfurt (Oder) and documented how German Bundespolizei are systematically checking passports of passengers on *every single train* arriving from Poland, a clear contravention of the #Schengen borders code 👇 jonworth.eu/illegal-and-sy…
Most of the reactions have been “but when I crossed [some other border] police were discriminatory towards ethnic minorities”
This is no doubt the case - we have masses of eyewitness reports! - but misses a key point
The way of stopping controls at Frankfurt (Oder) and indeed anywhere at the 🇩🇪 🇵🇱 or 🇩🇪 🇨🇿 borders probably ISN’T by proving discriminatory behaviour
Proving checks are systematic and hence illegal because contrary to Schengen borders code MIGHT work better
EVERY TRAIN arriving at Frankfurt (Oder) from Poland yesterday was controlled by the Bundespolizei
That meant EVERY one of these trains onwards towards Berlin was delayed
As Schengen is NOT suspended at the Germany-Poland border (see home-affairs.ec.europa.eu/policies/schen… ), and as these controls are clearly systematic (as every train is controlled), then this is obviously a contravention of Article 23 of the Schengen Borders Code (my emphasis)
Piece is so off in many places it’s getting a fisking here
Just because we want something is no excuse for bad reporting!
🧵
The title - “Train bragging” - what? Maybe the piece might explain that.
But I am really unconvinced by the “glorious resurgence of sleeper travel” - much of this is hype, and there is comparatively little practical action, other than from ÖBB
Also I’d not call a service that is cobbled together with ex-DB and ex-ÖBB carriages from the 1970s “glorious”, but hey ho
“Overnight carriages are coming out of mothballs” - errr, these carriages for this train have been in use on other services. Where did that come from?