crfriend wrote:Far more spectacular than the Rockies is the trip through the Sierra Nevada range. That is an absolutely breathtaking run where for parts of it you look to one side of the train and it's a sheer vertical wall of rock and looking out the other way there's nothing but open space looking out over valleys. I've done that twice, and it largely still follows the route of the original Transcontinental Railroad. Headed eastbound on that route is also very nice on the long sweeping descent into Denver where one gets to look out across the plains from a couple thousand feet above.Kirbstone wrote:A trip through the Rockies aboard a domecar would be one of my dream holidays.
My trip was on the Zephyr and the Lake Shore Limited a.k.a. Late for Sure Limited. The Zephyr is Amtrak's most scenic train because you get TWO spectacular days, one in the Sierra Nevadas and one in the Rockies. They're both awesome, and one of the few times that the word "awesome" is actually the right word to use.skirted_in_SF wrote:Ah, Chicago by train. I love it. I've done it twice in my pre-skirt days. Once round trip (California Zephyr/Empire Builder/Coast Starlight) and once CS to Portland, Cascade to Seattle and EB to Chicago.
Other top scenic Amtrak runs are: along the Hudson River from New York City to Albany; along the Columbia River, through the Cascades east of Everett WA, and through the Rockies on the Empire Builder; along the Pacific shore from San Juan Capistrano to San Diego and Oxnard to San Luis Obispo, CA; and through the less spectacular but still impressive Rockies in New Mexico on the Southwest Chief. But there is ample beauty and scenic interest along every route, even on the Northeast Corridor. Riding crosscountry by rail lets you observe not only the changing landscape but various aspects of human endeavor such as architecture, cityscapes, bridges and other engineering, and the railroad system itself. I've loved it since I was 5.
Last year I had the special treat of taking the Coast Starlight over the freight-only route from Burbank CA to Stockton, including the Tehachapi mountains and famous Tehachapi Loop. It then followed the Altamonte Commuter Express line down into Oakland. I try to take trains on mileage I've not ridden before, so when I heard about the Amtrak detour I jumped at the chance.
Please pardon me for breaking this subject out into its own thread... it seemed that several of our group enjoy trains, but that the Out and About discussion was straying (getting off track?) from the skirting focus.