Logo Print
 

Copenhagen 2012: Travel In Style

by Claire Wiseman on April 12, 2012
Junior > Journalism and American Studies > Indiana University
I spent the past week traveling around Europe. Given the surreal craziness of my last couple months abroad, this is nothing new. What was new was my mode of transport: the train.

With the exception of a few short novelty trips as a child and the Adventurous Express at King’s Island, this was my first legitimate train travel adventure. As usual, I had extremely high expectations. When I met up with my travel buddy in Venice, he was fresh from a first-class sleeper car ride complete with a gregarious Australian bunkmate and some sort of car attendant who called him sir and gave him extra breakfast rolls.
 
I ask you: what could be better?
 
So needless to say, I was excited for my first night train ride. In the interest of putting a stop to the whining, I’ll just break some observations down into bullet form for you here:
  • Second class does not come with breakfast
  • You can’t drink the train bathroom water
  • Recycled air makes your nose hurt
While I am now proud of myself for “roughing it” (I consider showering with a baby wipe and not caring enough to apply mascara to be roughing it), I am not sure I will ever make train travel my chosen form of transportation.

But that realization got me thinking: what happened to America’s obsession with the steam engine? Wasn’t there a time when trains were just as popular in the U.S. as in Europe? It’s certainly cheaper than flying (it’s pretty obvious why), but I don’t think a train has ever been my first idea when I’m determining how to get from point A to point B.  Nowadays, we think roadtrip and automatically imagine a car.
 
And though I wouldn’t recommend overnight train travel to anyone with a taste for luxury, I do think there’s something of our Westward-ho, manifest destiny heritage lost now that we’ve elected, collectively, to travel by other more efficient (and possibly cleaner) means.
 
So if you want to get the full, grungy backpacking experience, I say go all the way and travel by train. I hate to say “you only live once,” but I think in this circumstance, it applies.
 
Photo: at http://www.bestraveltips.com/travel-tips-for-europe-train/
Gallery
Related Articles
Comments

What Is It About Missionary?

Find out the answer
1.

Hobbies to Heat Up Summer

With the summer season comes a huge spike in breakups. The truth is that many...

2.

10 Things You Can't Do in the Real World

College is an unusual time when society’s norms are put on hold. Late to...

3.

Why We're Worried About Kimye's Baby

  A couple months back, the world’s most narcissistic couple took...

Cosmopolitan (NY)

Cosmopolitan is seeking a smart, sassy, organized, independent intern with a lot...

College Survival Guide

Top video of the day
Look at all our videos!

For our most inappropriate articles, get our newsletter.