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rkkwan
i can't get the bahn.de site to work on my computer so i ask you the Q? my understanding is that only 5- and 10-day German passes are sold at major rail stations in Germany - is it the same online or can you buy the 4- 5- 6- 7- 8- 9- or 10- day pass of your choice? only bother to respond if you remember off hand. thanks |
PalenQ - I remember that my dad bought the 5-day pass, and www.bahn.de doesn't sell the 4-day one.
But that trip was in April. Now, I don't even see them selling the passes on www.bahn.de. |
thanks rk - i always wondered why only a 5- and 10- day German Pass was sold at stations, major stations i think but perhaps all, and why the other 4-day 5,6,7,8,9, weren't also sold.
seemed weird - thanks for the info. Though bahn.de may have taken the passes off i understand that they are indeed, 5- and 10-day passes being sold at major stations, such as at Frankfurt Airport. Still the 4-day pass is often better it seems and can't see why they don't sell that. thanks |
I'm in the minority on Fodors, but I like a rail pass. I like the flexibility - just jump on and off especially for short trips.
Reservations weren't a hard thing to do, nor expensive. I always used first class because I figured I'd always find a seat somewhere. If I had a second class pass, well, then I was limited. In my case, the passes more than paid for themselves. That, with the convenience of just hopping on a train was what sold me. But you do have to use them a fair amount to get your money's worth. |
In Germany and Holland it's still true that you can just hop on practically any train, including, rare in Europe, high-speed ones so that aspect of a pass is great
Unfortunately countries like France, Spain and Italy are making reservations mandatory on most fast trains, negating that once super great aspect of the pass - just showing up and hopping on |
PalenQ wrote, <i>Unfortunately countries like France, Spain and Italy are making reservations mandatory on most fast trains, negating that once super great aspect of the pass - just showing up and hopping on.</i> Unfortunately you are so right. And to make it worse some routes are exclusively premium grade, e.g. Brussels<->Paris requiring reservations AND supplements for pass holders. I guess that Thayls gave a bunch of euros to the right, or left, politicians. |
Yes indeed hops
Italian Eurostar trains charge passholders a 15 euro fee to ride - one reason the Italian railpass often is not economic given the usual several extra charges and it's overpriced to begin with Thalys charges about $40 in first class but at least then you get a fairly decent meal with booze 2nd cl Thalys however you get nothing except a reserved seat for your $12 or so I'm still not throwing the baby out with the bathwater and love having a pass but it's taking a lot more hassle - you have to go to ticket windows to make the reservations, etc. |
In Germany, austria, switzerland, belgium, denmark and holland and u.k. there are still no or practically no trains that require reservations so using a pass there still offers the great aspect of sponteneity and just hopping on any ole train.
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