Tweed
2022-12-09 08:43:18 UTC
I’ve had to go to The Netherlands for work. Usually I take the plane from
Birmingham. This time I experimented with Eurostar. Happily I was booked on
business class, as this allowed me to avoid much of the chaos at St
Pancras. Train was 80 minutes late owing to the late arrival inbound to
StP. The departure area for non business class passengers was filled to
bursting. It’s just not big enough to cope with two train loads of
passengers. What with that and the security scanning they are really trying
hard to emulate the airport experience. Chap at French passports was
efficient enough, though his throughput was limited by the time it takes to
scan each passport. That interface is really too slow.
The train is pretty slow rumbling through the Brussels - Antwerp area but
picks up speed in NL. Had to get a local train for an onward connection
within NL. Joy to use. Despite it being just before 1750 in rush hour there
were plenty of seats in the double deck train. Around 10 Euro for a 40
minute trip. Announcements, live from the guard, both in Dutch and English.
Door to door 11 hours instead of around 6 if going by plane. The insistence
of turning up early for the Eurostar is certainly taking a lot away from
any high speed nature of the train itself.
Even in the posh seats they start to feel a bit hard after 4 hours.
Birmingham. This time I experimented with Eurostar. Happily I was booked on
business class, as this allowed me to avoid much of the chaos at St
Pancras. Train was 80 minutes late owing to the late arrival inbound to
StP. The departure area for non business class passengers was filled to
bursting. It’s just not big enough to cope with two train loads of
passengers. What with that and the security scanning they are really trying
hard to emulate the airport experience. Chap at French passports was
efficient enough, though his throughput was limited by the time it takes to
scan each passport. That interface is really too slow.
The train is pretty slow rumbling through the Brussels - Antwerp area but
picks up speed in NL. Had to get a local train for an onward connection
within NL. Joy to use. Despite it being just before 1750 in rush hour there
were plenty of seats in the double deck train. Around 10 Euro for a 40
minute trip. Announcements, live from the guard, both in Dutch and English.
Door to door 11 hours instead of around 6 if going by plane. The insistence
of turning up early for the Eurostar is certainly taking a lot away from
any high speed nature of the train itself.
Even in the posh seats they start to feel a bit hard after 4 hours.