Wednesday, January 16, 2008

It's the wave of the future -- maybe we should get used to it

Fellow blogger and artiste extraordinaire Andrea mentioned in her comment on my last blog that she was pleasantly surprised that there was a train running from Courtenay to Victoria on Vancouver Island. Indeed there is, and has been since 1914. I wrote an earlier blog (Feb. 5, 2007) on how I loved that little old train.

I am a rail romantic. I love that clickety-clack and watching the world whisk by via the backdoors of people’s houses. Casey Jones is my hero, and the only ‘other’ Gordon Lightfoot song I like (other than If You Could Read My Mind) is Canadian Railroad Trilogy.

When I lived in England 25 years ago I used the train all the time. It was costly, and was rarely on time, but I still loved it.

I like the freedom and relative comfort of trains. You can get up, walk around, grab something to eat or drink and do whatever you wish to fill in the time. A highlight of my travel experiences was getting a bedroom and traveling across Canada by train. I have also traveled around Europe on a Eurorail Pass (even went on the Orient Express – no spies or murders, by the way), and passed through the Simplon Tunnel. I have been on the crack new French trains (which are amazing), and took the delightful coastal trip on Amtrak from San Diego to LA. I heartily recommend that one.

Oh, I could go on and on. And I must suggest that one area in which the Europeans put us to shame is in their embracing of rail transport. And why not? If we are really serious about our so-called carbon footprint, that is where the government should be dumping its (our) money, rather than enhancing intercoursing freeways. If you want to get people out of their cars, then let them take to the rails. The rails on main lines, commuter lines, and street railways.

Grenoble France has a wonderful and modern street railway system (see picture). We used it all the time when we were living there in 2006. Never once did we feel the lack of a car in terms of our ability to get around quickly and comfortably.

I write this because it was just announced that the feds are dumping a gazillion dollars on local governments to upgrade their transportation systems. What is moronic Victoria doing? It’s establishing special ‘bus’ lanes? Don’t be suggesting light rail transit. Not in the cards. No, hydrocarbon spewing buses will have their own lanes and that will allegedly answer the problems and get folk out of their cars. Regular old diesel engine (not even electric) buses will be the wave of Victoria’s future until at least 2030 says the good minister of all that stuff.
You sir, are an ass if you don’t see the logical flaws in this. Those buses will still use the product of our diminishing oil reserves, will still be adding their crud to the atmosphere, and will not discourage people from using their cars. After all, buses are buses – buses are the only form of transit even more execrable than commercial aircraft.

Light rail runs on electricity. Is silent. Does not pollute. Does not interfere with street traffic. Offers a pleasing alternative to the private vehicle. I will ask of the governments, both civic and provincial the same question a fellow counsellor used to ask of addicts and alcoholics in denial: “What don’t you get?”

British Columbians and those who live in other places in which their governments at all levels embrace freeways and petroleum guzzling private vehicles and buses should use their lobbying power to let the brass know: We're mad as hell about this, so get with the program!

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16 Comments:

Blogger Casdok said...

Our trains in the UK are still costly and dont run on time.

10:38 AM  
Blogger Liz Dwyer said...

And why isn't there a train between LA and Vegas yet? Only one highway there and the road trip is a nightmare on a Friday night!

I always sense that bus riding is a class thing here in LA. It's sort of seen that you only ride the bus if you're poor and no one wants to be seen as being poor if they don't have to be.

12:11 PM  
Blogger Jazz said...

I love riding the trains in Europe, whether commuter trains or those lightening fast bullet trains they're great plentiful and run on time.

Taking the train between Montreal and Quebec city takes way longer than driving and costs around $150. I can't afford to take the train. And as you say, unfortunately, the governments aren't doing anything to encourage people to take trains.

They are idiots. But then we knew that.

12:44 PM  
Blogger Dreaming again said...

My husband and I were going to take a train ride for our 20th Anniversary.

From no where to no where. Just ride on a train through an area of the country that appealed to us.

It became too complicated with his health issues/equipment ...so we dropped the idea ...but oh how fun it would have been!

12:54 PM  
Blogger dinahmow said...

"The tram! The trolley! The train! Oh! Bring them back again..."

If I do get to BC this summer I want to ride that old railway!

1:11 PM  
Blogger heartinsanfrancisco said...

I love trains, too. Nearly all of them hold for me the mystique and romance of the Orient Express.

I have traveled around Europe on trains, and also from New York to Miami as well as the Amtrak San Diego to L.A. run and back several times which is a delightful clean ride alone the coast, practically touching the beach at some points.

While I also love airplanes, I miss the leisure and distant intimacy of strangers' backyards viewed from a train. I love the clack of metal wheels and the heartbreaking sound of a distant train whistle in the night, whispering all the losses my soul has ever known.

1:25 PM  
Blogger Big Brother said...

I'm with you here Ian. I've always said that our benevolent leaders should put as much money into trains as they put on the highways. (Either that or force trucks to pay the real cost they inflict on our roads and infrastructure.) They should then force trucks off the roads and onto rail cars. The only trucks allowed would be those for local delivery within 50 km. That would certainly clean up the air, reduce traffic jams and accidents as well as lowering the cost of maintaining the roads.

3:10 PM  
Blogger andrea said...

I am a rail fan, too, in spite of my gaping great caverns of missing knowledge! :) Not only did I love it in Europe (and loved that dogs could travel half fare on main line trains in the UK) but my great grandfather was the designer of the archetypal western Canadian railway station. The Train Doesn't Stop Here Anymore: An Illustrated History of Railway Stations in Canada by Ron Brown is on my shelf and a great read for those interested in the old stations.

4:21 PM  
Blogger Spider Girl said...

I'd love for cities like Vancouver and Victoria to use proper metro systems like they use in European cities like London and Paris.

I HATE to drive, and I love to use trains, so I'm all for that idea.

This past spring Tai and I went all over Italy using the trains and not only was it fairly inexpensive and through beautiful scenery, but we also mostly avoided the bazillions of crazy drivers on the roads.

Although we DID take a couple insane taxi rides...

7:13 PM  
Blogger thailandchani said...

I wish we had a good train system here. It's really a preferable way to get around. The bus system sucks.

Not the most intelligent or well-written comment I've ever made.. but.. ya know :)

7:30 PM  
Blogger geewits said...

I am really jealous of your railway experiences. North by Northwest is one of my favorite movies and it made train travel look SO sexy! My train experiences are: 1)the Santa Claus train when I was about 8. It was a short ride and Santa walked down the aisle passing out candy canes, and 2)the commuter train from near my house to Dallas to go to the State Fair. That train was NOT sexy at all.

11:09 PM  
Blogger jmb said...

I just love train travel and also wrote a post about it early on my blog. I too travelled across Canada by train from Vancouver to Ottawa in the sixties, in a little compartment with the four of us. It was a wonderful experience.
I love travelling in Europe on the trains too. There is an air of excitement as people bustle about, hurrying here and there.
On the post I wrote, one of my blog friends, a radiologist in India, wrote that I wouldn't be so happy to travel on the train in India. I guess he's right about that.

11:32 PM  
Blogger laughingwolf said...

i'm in your corner, ian... the 'sky train' in the gvrd was great, if overcrowded at peak periods... but not always convenient

subways and trolley buses are efficient as well, but our glorious 'leaders' continue with the heads up their asses....

6:26 AM  
Blogger meggie said...

It has long been a dream of mine to travel on some of the trains you mention Ian. The Orient Express, for one.
We have a fairly good rail system, but the trains are not always reliable. I would love to travel on the Ghan & the Indian Pacific here in Aus. Price is rather prohibitive.

11:39 AM  
Blogger Eastcoastdweller said...

I've loved it, the few times in my life that I've ever had the opportunity to ride a train.

The bus? I really, really hate the bus. I could tell you some hair-raising stories about riding buses ...

4:44 PM  
Blogger Eastcoastdweller said...

Nadir and zenith of my bus trips.

Nadir: On a Greyhound bus near Pendleton, Oregon, many years ago, we picked up two hard-looking men who lived up to their looks.

The clinking bottles in their luggages weren't ginger ale.

They spent the next two hundred miles or so getting soused and talking about how, now that they were out of prison, they were going to rescucitate their prostitution ring.

The zenith -- another trip, another year, stopping for a moment in the middle of scenic, but absolute, nowhere and being treated to the sight of the most delicate smoke rings rising to the sky from the lips of a golden-haired girl.

5:13 PM  

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