bellinghman: (Default)
bellinghman ([personal profile] bellinghman) wrote2007-01-07 05:40 pm

So much for trains

I was just attempting to get train fares for a journey from Sierre (Swiss Alps) to London.

Holy crap! How do they expect anyone to use trains? I can get from Sierre to Paris at a reasonable price - a very reasonable price for a direct TGV that takes 5:20. But that's no use whatsoever, if it then costs THREE TIMES AS MUCH for the Paris to London link, which is only 2:40.

</rant>

EDIT: Many thanks for the [livejournal.com profile] purpletigron/[livejournal.com profile] purplecthulhu's advice on getting round Eurostar.

EDIT: OK, I can do Sierre to Paris-Lyon for 113 CHF, if I buy it from the Swiss, and using the halbtax card. That's just under £48. And going via the "I am American" part of the Eurostar site allows me to buy the single/non-flexible fare at $89 each - which is roughly £45. That's compared to the insane £300+ it was trying to do me for originally for the Paris to London leg!

So, Swiss Alps to central London for £93 isn't too bad. I just wish it wasn't such an incredible hassle finding this all out. If I was a PA doing this, and factoring in the cost of my time, it'd be another matter.

EDIT: Ooops, forgot time zone differences. That was 2:40, not 1:40

[identity profile] bellinghman.livejournal.com 2007-01-08 06:07 pm (UTC)(link)
True - if the PA knows that there will be repeat trips, it makes sense to spend the time on the research.

I can quite imagine, though, that the first trip is the one that coins it for Eurostar. And those prices are what has deterred us from using Eurostar before: whereas we know there are flight bargains, train bargains are less obvious.

(Also, I grew up in an age when train bargains were getting rail cards, or season tickets, or off-peak returns.)