funandtrains said:The Mount Washington Railway is a must and there are at least two preserved standard gauge lines not far from it in New Hampshire.
There is a 2' gauge narrow gauge museum in Maine.
It is also well worth a trip up to Montreal just to see the city but there is a railway museum there as well.
vsmith said:When your in Boston I can recommend a couple good places to eat, Barking Crab restaurant near downtown next to the Tea Party reenactment site, and Upper Crust pizza in Back Bay (best thin crust on the planet). Not trains but I HIGHLY recommend the USS Constitution and the adjacent Navy Museum, also do the Freedom trail, very informative.
I recently took that SAME TRAIN from Boston to LA, so I can give you some tips, the train from Chicago to LA, the Southwest Chief, was top notch, I can highly recommend the dining car, everything we had was very good.
Sadly I cannot say that for the Boston to Chicago leg, the Lake Shore Limited is very much more of a commuter type train vibe, most of the trip we only had partial access to the cafe car, which was all microwave specials. but the scenery should be great as fall has begun.
If your going both ways by sleeper its shouldnt be so rough. Your meals in the dining car (yes there will be one on the Limited) are included in the sleeping car fee so thats a good deal, we went coach. Sit on the south facing side of the train (left side leaving Boston) and you can see the Erie Canal locks and dams, you will have about a hour layover in Albany, dont wander away from the station, and you will have a much longer 6 hour layover in Chicago, so depending what day your there will effect what your options are downtown, there are lockers for rent at the station so you dont have to shlep your luggage with you everywhere, downtown Chicago is an amazing place, recommend eating at Giordino's Pizza downtown (best deep dish on the planet) or if you really want a first class splash try Frontera Grill in the north loop, this is the mexican restaurant of Rick Bayless who has a popular cooking show over here, but you have to get there about an hour before the place opens at 5pm or you wont get a table before the train leaves. One of the best meals I've had, but $$$ so make a note.
One more tip, make sure you at the station at least a full half hour before boarding call, there will be a line up and we were only assigned seats leaving LA, every other time it was first come. Chances are you will be getting off in AZ (Flagstaff I assume) very early in AM, like 4am. I assume you are going to be met as its a heckova long walk from Flagstaff to Tucson![]()
Overall, Its a very very nice trip, nothing gives you a true scale of the breadth and diversity of the USA while being able to relax doing so like a train trip.
vsmith said:Sorry Bob never made it one that route yet, other than the general comments about getting to the station early and be prepared for a commuter trip, I know that the NY-Boston route was very busy. Leaving Boston we had a very big lineup, but most went to the NY bound cars.
If you want a good view of Manhattan when travelling over Hell Gate bridge (+ the Sunnyside yard complex) en route from NY Penn station to Boston, sit on the left hand side of the train in the direction of travel.bobg said:[Any tips for NY -Boston train?
I don't expect any of the steam lines will be running in November other than for specials in New England.bobg said:funandtrains said:The Mount Washington Railway is a must and there are at least two preserved standard gauge lines not far from it in New Hampshire.
There is a 2' gauge narrow gauge museum in Maine.
It is also well worth a trip up to Montreal just to see the city but there is a railway museum there as well.
Do you mean the Sandy River and Rangely Lakes R.R.? It's at Portland, Maine. From their website they don't appear to be running in Nov, last trains on 14th Oct.
http://www.srrl-rr.org/sched_2012.htm
Can certainly reccommend the USS Constitution and the adjacent Museum, though it may pay to get there early as the queues can get very long to get onboard the ship - though less so at the time of year you are going, at a guess.vsmith said:. Not trains but I HIGHLY recommend the USS Constitution and the adjacent Navy Museum, also do the Freedom trail, very informative.
vsmith said:When you're in Boston I can recommend a couple good places to eat, Barking Crab restaurant near downtown next to the Tea Party reenactment site, and Upper Crust pizza in Back Bay (best thin crust on the planet). Not trains, but I HIGHLY recommend the USS Constitution and the adjacent Navy Museum, also do the Freedom trail, very informative.
Which trains will you be taking?
Will definately try some more of the Boston trams/trolleybus. Thanks.Miamigo259 said:Boston has a very interesting public transport network and still operates 1946 era PCC cars on the Red line "high speed" extension from Ashmont to Mattapan. North of Boston is the industrial town of Lowell which has a number of National Park Service operated sites including a large Cotton Mill. These sites are all linked by a heritage tramway run by replica tramcars, which I think run all year round.
Nothing to do with transport, but the Boston area is also a good one for the "Craft" beer scene if you want something decent to drink!! (as opposed to the Multinational combine stuff...)
A couple of the Breweries in Boston - Sam Adams & Harpoon - do tours which are very cheap ($3-5 from memory) and include samples of the beer at the end!gregh said:Will definately try some more of the Boston trams/trolleybus. Thanks.
Have been to Lowell in heavy snow, so might try again and see if tramway is running this time.
And will try some craft beers - I didn't know about that even after 5 visits to Boston - there's
always someone with some good info here!!
Again, Thanks to everyone for your suggestions.