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Drive through small towns or train through cities?
On a 5 day trip through Germany and to try and get the feel of the country in this short time, should one hire a car and drive to smaller towns or train to cities such as frankfurt, Munich etc.
Has anyone had experience at either or both? |
I've done both, and I prefer driving, but I'd stay in a pretty circumscribed area because 5 days is a very short time. I think I'd pick just a couple of small cities or towns and explore them. I personally prefer Bavaria, as the scenery is really beautiful.
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It depends on where you're going, but as a general rule, with 6,000 or so train stations in Germany, you should have no trouble visiting some interesting smaller places by train. If you do as Peg suggests, explore a region, you can usually get around on a daypass ("Laender Ticket", 25 Euros or so for up to 5 people traveling together on regional trains.) Northern Bavaria, Southern Bavaria, the Rhine/Mosel Valley region, and Lower Saxony are just a few of the possibilities.
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If you're sitting in a car, you learn nothing about the country you're visiting. The inside of a car looks much the same whichever in any country.
Germany has a very advanced public transport system, and all schedules are on www.bahn.de - it covers trains, buses and boats, and will tell you how to get to any village or hamlet in Germany, as well as almost any railway station elsewhere in Europe. |
For just 5 days, a train is probably best as you won't want to visit more than 1 or 2 places.
For a longer trip, train, car, or a combination of train and car can work depending on where you want to go and what you want to see. |
I suppose it may somewhat depend on your own definition of "get a feel for the country." Driving would give you one sort of perspective; using public transport a different one.
You seem to be assuming that to get to those "smaller towns" the only or best way is by car and i would disagree with that. You'd have more flexibility with a car but you'd also have the additional costs to include gasoline, and in some cases, parking. I would agree with picking one area or a few towns and sticking to those regardless of what your transport mode turns out to be. |
In the US Army we lived in Germany for 6 years and had our own car. We loved the freedom to travel through the countryside and stay at small bed & breakfast homes. But, the car was a bother the minute you entered even small cities.
We also traveled by train a few times and found it quite a joy. We are going back for 10 days this spring and intend to rely upon the train to visit several towns in Franconia (Wurzburg, Rothenburg, Nurnburg, Bamburg & Regensburg). We will stay at a few locations and make day trips with the inexpensive Bayern Ticket. (the Laender Ticket that someone mentioned). Regards, Gary |
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