I am giving a moment of respect for the workers who sacrificed their lives to build railway tracks on such dangerous conditions like the Rocky Mountains about 100+ years ago.
No lives were sacrificed to build railway tracks. There is no exchange for trading humans for tracks and no martyrs of railroading. Lives were occasionally lost in industrial accidents just as they are every day.
I’ve never traveled by train. I just booked this trip with a bedroom for my wife and I in 2024 because of this video and the work you do. Thanks for all the hard work.
❤Psalms 115:16 As for the heavens, they belong to Jehovah, But the earth he has given to the sons of men. ❤Psalms 37:29 The righteous will possess the earth, And they will live forever on it. ❤Psalms 37:34 Hope in Jehovah and follow his way, And he will exalt you to take possession of the earth. When the wicked are done away with, you will see it. 우와 ❤시편 115:16 하늘은 여호와의 것이나 땅은 사람의 아들들에게 주셨다. ❤시편 37:29,34 의로운 자들은 땅을 차지하고 거기서 영원히 살 것이다. [...] 34 여호와께 희망을 두고 그분의 길을 따라라. 그러면 그분이 너를 높여 땅을 차지하게 하시리니, 악한 자가 없어질 때에 네가 그것을 볼 것이다.
Fun. Just like it looks. Food was good and as long as you realize it isn't luxury accommodations it's comfortable enough. Worst night sleep in my life was night one but night 2 was better. Steak and patty melt were my favorite foods.
@@toddkowalcyk5119so when you get there, what do you do,?? I'd love to take this trip with my husband and I heard you can buy round trip accomodations, but I'm lost at once you get there and when you go back. We live outside of Chicago.
Several years my wheelchair-bound wife and I took the Zephyr from Chicago to Emeryville. We had a handicap sleeper room and it was GREAT! The attendants were all very accommodating and the food was good. When we got into the Rockys and moved through Donner Pass, an historian got on board and narrated the journey, it was wonderful.
I had the same experience, in November 2009, with my wife who had mobility issues, attendant brought all meals to room as she could not negotiate the stairs.
@@PetsNPatients I don't remember the exact cost but it wasn't that expensive. Of course my wife got a real discount because of her disability as did I, being considered her caregiver. Amtrak offered a lot of discounts for handicap travel.
@@technicholls That’s really good to know about the discounts. When I have looked into the wheelchair rooms, the prices have been stratospheric, way above regular fares. I’ll have to check it out again.
Good job, my Uncle and I took this adventure together last September for his 75th Birthday. He lived in KY and I live in So Cal. We met in Chicago seeing each other for the first time in 33 years. Then we flew together back to S Cal, and unfortunately he died before making back home to KY, completely unexpected. So glad we took this wonderful adventure together!
My condolences to you🙏🏽. Sounds as if he was happy in his last days💙🤍🙏🏽 That says so much 💙🤍🙏🏽 I often dream of people at train stations right before they pages on....so your story really hits 💙🤍🙏🏽 Remember him always 💙🤍🙏🏽
I am so sorry for your loss. I hope that having spent his last hours in your company on such a wonderful trip brings you some solace. Again, my condolences to you.
@@sandrahazeltine8720 Thank you so much! My Uncle coincidentally said several times on the trip, he thought he had died and gone to Heaven, cause it was so beautiful!
I took this train when I was a kid leaving from Chicago with a final destination of Albuquerque. One of the best trips of my life. My mom and I didn't have a sleeper car so we had to sleep in the chairs both nights. Totally worth it. Some day I want to relive the experience with my wife and kids.
I told my husband I wanted to take the Amtrak Crescent from Wilmington, DE to New Orleans. As a kid, I took the train with my family every summer until high school to visit my family in Lafayette.
I smiled when I came across your comment, well that's wonderful but how are you doing and where are you from?, Please don't mind me asking you how are you doing but I know that's not bad question, will be happy to receive your reply, thanks.
Hi, I am from Bangladesh. Inspired by your video, I took this train and travelled for 52 hours from Chicago to San Francisco (and created memories of a lifetime). Thank You!
My son and I were on this trip with you! You can clearly see us in the observation car several times during the trip through the Rockies (we are in the window reflection at 16:40). It was such a fantastic adventure and we enjoyed meeting you. Going to take the same route with my daughter soon and I'm super stoked to show her the gorgeous views as well.
We appreciate your videos of our trains!! I have worked at the maintenance facility in Beech Grove Indiana for 25 years!! Our facility is huge,with some of the most talented train mechanics in the world!! Really enjoyed you guys showcasing what we work on every day!! Thanks for the video!!
I just found this. You brought me back to 1995 when my mom and I (both nurses) brought my sister home on Hospice from out West on this line from Salt Lake City to DC with a layover over in Chicago. We got the large 3 person sleeping room. I realized later that I was only charged for myself. The booking agent did it. I could write a book about that trip. I remember the attendants were so helpful especially after I told him his job was to make sure my mom and remembered to eat. Our job was to take care of my sister. She had a brain tumor. I warned our neighbors that if they heard her yell we would take care of it. They were so understanding. She was only in pain going over the mountains. The dock crew at Chicago were these big burly men helping us get her from one train to the other. I had a wheelchair but needed help getting her down a 6-ft hallway. They were so kind. So many bittersweet memories and a final thing I was able to do for my sister. One of these days, I want to take a trip on it for pleasure.
I cannot stand people talking to me with a diaper on their face. It is obscene. Thumbs down. Also, in an age that most advanced countries have high speed railways travelling at 300+ km/h, American railways are 3rd world.
Ex-Amtrak Engineer here, I have run the Empire builder and the Coast Starlight thru the Cascades, was unique experience for me. Both trains had two P-42's on the head end also. Lots of good power.
My wife passed away suddenly November 2008. I decided in January to go visit my brother in Santa Cruz California to clear my head. I jumped on the train in Exton PA and went out to Chicago where I got on the Zephyr. What a fantastic, therapeutic ride it was. I would urge everyone to take the Zephy as I doubt there's a more scenic route on Amtrak' map. Doing the journey in the middle of January was just an added bonus. Met a lot of nice people and the staff were awesome!
How much was the cost for trip? Was it as nice as this gentleman says? My wife and i live in Pottstown and want somthing like this to do for a vacation
@@donalddobson7568 The one way price from Exton to Emeryville was about $500, that was for a roomette. I had a sleeper from Pittsburgh to CA. The price included 3 meals a day, and the food was pretty darn good! I would highly recommend it going out. IIt was actually rather boring from Ohio to Denver as the topography is flat as a pancake. I think winter is the best time to go as the Rockies are really beautiful covered in snow! I would definitely go for the bigger sleeper compartment if I went with someone else!
I am not from the USA, but have taken 17 vacation trips to the USA. My favourite trip was an Amtrak trip from Chicago to Seattle and back to Chicago. We stopped off in Whitefish Montana for 2 weeks of snow skiing (early January 2008). I want to go back to the USA and do more Amtrak travel. Love that you can stop off anywhere on route, and get on the next Amtrak train that passes.
@@ws6705 No, I had an Amtrack pass. It allowed me to get off the train and take a later train. If I remember correctly, the Amtrak pass allowed me to change trains 5 or 6 times, as long as I used the same route (same final destination)
Speaking as an Australian who lived in California for over four years, I was in awe of the geography/topography and variation of landscapes across the United States. My conclusion, and I think what you’ve demonstrated in this vlog Jeb, is that the very nature of American culture/character is so influenced by the majesty and wonder of the land itself. Great to see your passion shine through in this enjoyable vlog. I hope one day I can travel the section as suggested to Denver. Cheers👍
@@michaelhurley3171 As a Brit who’s been to all three countries I must admit the USA has the most variety, amazing country and the people I’ve met have been great.
You can’t beat nature in the states. Every state is so unique. A country in itself. The greatest thing ever conceived I think here in the states are the national parks. As a nature lover, I do feel blessed.
As airplane travel becomes even more unbearable (unruly passengers, squeezing ourselves into smaller and smaller seats), and remote work becoming more common, train travel in The United States could see a resurgence. I hope so!!! I love traveling by train. So relaxing and comfortable. There’s room to spread out and the view is more interesting than the view from an airplane. I am crossing my fingers that Americans will support a more robust train system in this country.
I swear we take this country for granted sometimes, I’ve been to many places around the world, but nothing will ever come close to home. We may have our differences but when watching videos like this, it makes me realize just how close we are as well. I wish we could stop all this ridiculous in-fighting and come together as a country again🇺🇸💐
@@honkhonk8009 I’ve been to many parts of Europe and trust me when I say this; I’d rather be in places like Utah or Montana than Poland or parts of Germany like Berlin. We don’t hear about how bad it is over there because most of the attention is on the US, but it’s pretty bad, and I’m not just talking about Eastern Europe.
I'm recently retired and you made this video so fascinating. I am planning a trip like this for next year. I really enjoyed this tour. Thank you guys!!
Tips. Consider lenght of trip/time, most ar comfortable 48hr max. Like he mentioned. And the roomettes meet the need of two people just fine. Open seating has lots of leng room and recline far enough to sleep in.
Thanks Jeb (and to your wife as well) for all the amazing content you do! I’m Joe and I’m a Chicago native, and ironically I haven’t taken an Amtrak yet!! I love your videos! I’m almost up to date with your channel, and I’ve watched your California Zephyr review like 4-5 times already. 😂 I want to take this trip so badly. I’m leaning towards this or a New Orleans trip round trip from Chicago. Your content is so much fun to watch, it’s very comforting, and your commentary is always so informative and fun. I also am taking your prune advice as well. But yeah, once again thank you for all the work you do in exploring not just the US but also the world! You’re amazing! ❤
People called me odd for running to window just to see trains pass by in my town, but it's just something about them that hooks me. Really thank you for the video brother!
Took The Zephyr from Emeryville to Denver, and back, with my youngest daughter when she was 4. It was quite an adventure and the first time see saw big mountains and touched snow! That was 20 years ago so now she's 24 and we both really appreciate those memories and that trip. Thanks Amtrak!
@@stefaniemedina14 It was a great adventure. We had regular seats and enjoyed being around regular people. We were offered a discounted price room after boarding by the conductor but we kept it cheap and simple. The glass top car shows movies at night and offers great views during daytime so we spent quite a bit of time there. We met some interesting people and saw a lot of beautiful countryside while making memories that we'll never forget on that ride
Fun fact: Reno used to have an above-ground railway that would take you directly through downtown, but as the city grew it became too much of a hindrance to have trains running in the middle of the city. Like the rails would literally intersect the main roads at ground level, forcing people to wait for the trains to pass. So to bypass this problem, they dug a gigantic trench under the city and ran the trains through there. Not the best traveling experience but a lot more convenient for the people who lived/worked downtown. Source: Reno resident.
As a Reno native, I can also add that the trains had to blow their horns at each intersection, through a downtown filled with hotels/casinos full of (trying to) sleeping tourists. I strongly recommend you come back. Yes, you can enjoy casinos and such if you like, but there are restaurants, cool clubs, arty districts, art museum, music festivals, etc. that really give Reno its character. Not to mention surrounded by mountains and 40 min from Lake Tahoe, Donner Lake (yes, that Donner) and skiing galore. And 30 miles from Virginia City. If you recall the opening title of "Bonanza" and the map it showed, well that's us.
P.S. My mother used to take the California Zephyr from Naperville, IL to Reno, NV back in the 50's. She always talked about the "Vista Dome" back then, so it was great to finally see it in your video. Thank you!
I was just thinking about the Reno station. I remember it being above ground too and yes having to wait for passenger or freight trains to pass thru an intersection was at times daunting. Just out of curiosity is Greyhound still in the same spot across from that fantasy hotel?
Great video on the "Zephyr". I worked this train for many years as a Train Attendant, Lead Service Attendant (Bar & Diner), and finally as Chief-OBS. It as great to see the scenery again! You did a great job!!!
As a young child I rode this route when it was operated by the private companies before Amtrak was a thing. One thing I remember was the difference in the dining. It looks like the food now is pre-packaged and heated before serving. Back in the past, the food was prepared fresh, and everything looked much better than what I saw in the video. It was really amazing back then. I wish everyone could experience train travel as it was back in its heyday. You would love it!
I respectfully disagree, sir. Amtrak's dining services are MUCH more better than the airlines (peanuts and a soda [if you're lucky enough to get peanuts and a soda on an airplane!])!
@@mikewrasman5103 I haven't tried the Amtrak food, but I suspect it isn't any better than the food served on airplanes. From the video I think I would rather take my chances on the airlines. I am not talking about the peanuts served on short domestic flights, rather what is served on long haul flights. I have no trouble flying a couple hours without a meal. On the trans-pac flights I have flown on it is long enough that you do want a meal and they do a decent job of feeding you from my experience. It isn't haute cuisine but it is a decent meal considering the limiting circumstances of serving a meal on an airplane. None of it can compare to the food service that was offered on the trains back when they were run by private rail companies.
@@badgermoon9229 I agree. Amtrak is comparable to airline food, but neither of them can hold a candle to the back-in-the-day streamliners. I was only born in 1989, so no personal experience, but back when train travel was commonplace instead of a novelty, railroads used very good food and food service as marketing to distinguish themselves. -The New York Central's advertisements informed the discriminating diner that the best restaurant in Manhattan left town every evening on the Twentieth Century Limited for Chicago -The Great Northern would serve Montana trout caught that day on its flagship the Empire Builder -The Northern Pacific's famous Big Baked Potato was literally the size of adult's lower arm. These are just the ones I can think of off the top of my head, but look up images of the railroad menus from that era and you'll get an idea. Also, every railroad who was anybody at all would (of course) use their own unique china (which is now very collectible).
@@badgermoon9229 Have to admit, I am jealous of you for having experienced that era in rail travel. Also, you may enjoy visiting a TH-cam channel called Periscope Films; they specialize in uploading videos from the 1940s - 1970s and there are several wonderful old rail travelogues from that era, among many others.
I took that exact train as a single lady several years ago and I LOVED every minute of it. I felt very comfortable all the way . Would love to do it again, and I hope to. There are people to visit with or keep to your self. I took roomette and was great. Took a sleeper to Seattle and I loved it to. I love train travel
I'll always love ❤️ what Amtrak's mode of travel, brings to the table literally. Smile. Lol. Excellent format of viewing the accomodations, the expertise itself, the professinalism, diligence, timely, even with delays. The respect and reputation the Amtrak crews, have shown duration of a sick passenger. Who had to be transported to, an area hospital. Commendable. Their patience was a virtue, at that time. Persevering the odds and being resilient as ever. I give Amtrak a 5-Star, Blue Ribbon, and a Placque. Well deserved! Amtrak and its entire fleet of rail cars. Superb logo their distinguished signature imprint. KUDOS!! Patience is a virtue. Time is of essence. Amtrak is outstanding.
From a fellow Greensboro resident, I would suggest tipping generously at the beginning of the trip and tip generously again at the end of the trip. Your car attendant can do a lot to make your trip more pleasant.
We never saw anyone,We had a HORRIBLE TRIP,NO FOOD except an overpriced soy burger,breakfast a near frozen muffin,Coffee only @ breakfast shut down after till next morn,we had roomette,We were starving the whole trip,NEVER AGAIN,You have been warned!.
@@MisterKewlz absolutely. So expensive now. Absolutely loved our couple trips out of zephyr out to California and back. Food was good, relaxing. Don't like flying. But now the prices are so high. A little bummed about that. It's probably been four years since I've done it
We took Amtrak from Chicago to New Orleans. Loved the experience; the bedroom is the way to go. We tipped our porter once we reached our destination; he deserved it and we felt was the right thing to do. Especially in these times where travel can be challenging for both the travelers and the people whose job it is to serve them.
I want to do this Zephyr trip from ORD to SFO with my fiance. Any advise? A sleeper car for only 2 people? What to pack, pillows, blankets, what does Amtrack provide and what don't they? Any info would be greatly appreciated. Thank you. \
As an Iowan, I love hearing someone mention how beautiful the state can be and also mentioning some points of interest. It really makes me miss living there. Also as an Iowan, I can't help but smile and chuckle to see you slept through Nebraska.
This brings back great memories!! I traveled to California on the CZ years ago to visit my brother. On my return trip, there was a snow storm and we ended up stopping for 12+ hours while waiting for snow to be cleared from the tracks -apparently the first attempt failed due to faulty equipment, so a replacement had to be retrieved. Some of the passengers were so irate and rude, but the conductor and crew remained professional and calm the entire time - reassuring we would be updated as new information came in. Everyone, no matter their riding status, was checked on and taken care of. Unfortunately, not the greatest time for some, but I had a blast - met some interesting people! Thank you for posting♥️
I grew up in the foothills of Colorado and recently moved I cannot tell you how bummed I am not to be in the rockies anymore. Wherever you live in U.S or frankly anywhere in the world we should all try to truly enjoy it. Whether you live in the Rocky Mountains like I did or the plains of Nebraska it is all beautiful. God bless everyone!
Last year, I visited the US for the first time. I'm from the Netherlands myself, but the US has always interested me because of how massive it is. I've watched some videos about this specific train now and its definitely near the top of my list of things to do in the US. somehow it just feels crazy to me that you can travel by train for 51 hours in one direction and still stay in the same country. It also just reminds me of traveling through a movie set or something, you see so many people, landmarks, towns, states etc. and its really cool to think that every single thing has its own stories and lives.
I rode it, it was an amazing trip. Mine was a bit delayed at the end, there was a massive storm in the bay area and a train derailed ahead of us. For me it was 55 hours total. For the meals if you eat in the dining car, they sit you with other people to fill all the tables, and I met several interesting people including a french couple from montreal. Talking about our countries was fascinating. That second day is incredible, with how much the sights change over the course of the day. Farmland before Denver, then straight into the rocky mountains before coming out into the desert. The sunrises and sunsets were beautiful. 55 hours on a train and I was never bored for a second. Can't recommend it enough. Just be flexible, Amtrak is not known for being reliable. It's also extremely expensive, a roomette was $1000 for the full trip. You just have to think of it as combined travel, hotel, views and meals all included.
This video made me take the Zephyr journey. It was transformative. Absolutely one of the most unique and gorgeous experiences I’ve ever had. Our train was delayed by 5 hours so we got a lot of extra time in our sleeper. I wasn’t complaining as I booked a day pad on each terminus. I suggest everyone do the same. Do not rely on this train being on time. Get there a day before departure and stay a day after disembarking so you have ample time to catch a flight home. Thank you for this video, Jeb! Would love to see you do the Coastal Starlight. I would really love to do that journey. I hear amazing things about it.
Just arrive a day before departing on the train and a day after scheduled return. Leave time for other travel on each end of your Amtrak journey bc you cannot depend on it being on time at either end.
Thank you Jeb for this amazing video! I took the trip in 2010, exactly 11 years ago during summertime after my stay in Chicago. I couldn't afford the sleeper so I just got a regular seat that could be flattened into a bed. But man it was the best experience I ever had in my life. The beautiful stations. The observation car. The meals...(and how limited choice there are, lol) I met so many friendly, interesting people. I met some strangers on the trip and actually got to know them and shared our stories. The view along the way, especially the grand canyon was mindblowing. I was so sad I lost the card that carries so many photos I shot along the way so everything has to stay in my mind. And your video feels like a recreation of my dream. So if Amtrak continues to run I hope one day I'll take my future wife there for the honeymoon for sure. When COVID is over, you can come to China and try out the high-speed train. We have some really good views too.
@@rhythmfield Hey Greg I think it depends. If you want less trouble communicating you definitely need a tour guide or a Chinese-speaking friend for your first time here. Big cities should be easy as there are bilingual signs everywhere and young people speak very good English. But when you go more rural and talk to older people it definitely gets difficult as people don't speak a lot of English and they even have dialects that's hard to understand for Mandarin speakers. But once you gets how people communicates here you'll be good on your own I think.
Took the Zephyr from Chicago to Granby, Colorado for a backpacking trip in September of 2019. Amazing experience! I come from a "railroad family" - my dad was a locomotive engineer, both grandfathers were rail car inspectors, an uncle was a yardmaster and an aunt was a crew dispatcher. Trains are in my blood. I absolutely love riding the rails on cross country trips. You can't beat the scenery, the sunsets and sunrises, the relaxed rhythm of the rails and most importantly, the people you meet during long days and nights aboard a train. Thanks for sharing!
I took this train with my wife, from Denver to Las Vegas, when we travelled across the USA after she became pregnant and we knew that the opportunity to travel would soon be limited. Professional staff, beautiful scenery and also had really decent fellow passengers. Still a better experience than most long distance trains here in Australia.
Greeting from Myanmar (Burma)! My parents and I did this route back in 2012 right after my college graduation. They were initially unimpressed with the big city side of America but were amazed by the scenaries they saw along this route. My favourite part of the route was stopping at a beautiful small town rainroad station in Buena Vista (or Glenwood Springs?), CO and snow started to fall in late May. This clip brought back so much memories.Thank you!
This was incredible! I work for United Airlines and been pass riding for 35 years, I’ve been all over the world & bless to work for a great company with all the benefits including flying for free and only paying taxes for international flights, but I must say this is on my bucket list’s to ride this Zephyr to California. I live in Chicago and definitely going to relax and have Amtrak take me there. I have friends who live in Sonoma Valley and will take extra days to plan this trip, the views were wonderful.thanks again peace!
Just took the ride from Denver to Emeryville. Some recommendations. 1)Get a bedroom and avoid the roomette. It's just too small. 2)Bring food from your favorite deli (assuming you have access to one). Suffice to say, the airlines are much better at serving reheated food than Amtrak. 3)Consider limiting your ride to the state of Colorado. To be honest, the beautiful scenery becomes numbing after a while. Perhaps I would have felt better about it if we had a bigger room. 4)Last, the train is often late (over two hours in our case), so, dont plan on anything based on your arrival time. Enjoy!
Thanks Jeb, having travelled basically the same route by car, I didn't realize how much of the country I was missing simply by the fact that I was forced to keep my eyes on the road with the occasional glance to see the sights. I see how train travel can provide a much better experience to see the country
The last time I was on the Zephyr was in December of 1950, or over 70 years ago. My mother and I had a roomette from Sacramento to Chicago. But the best part of the trip, which apparently no longer exists, is up the Feather River through the Feather River Gorge. Nothing I saw on your trip begins to compare with the scenery in the gorge. It is too bad they dropped that portion of the trip.
This brings back so many good memories. I took the California Zephyr with my son to Albuquerque for a bowling tournament. He was floored at the size of the train. He was also slightly terrified by how we moved between cars, but he caught on quickly. I want to take another train trip soon. Two bonus notes: (1) At the time, it was cheaper to drive from Detroit to Chicago, park the car, and take the train with luggage/bowling equipment than it was to fly. (2) When we were about to board, my son said “YOU MEAN TO TELL ME WE’RE GETTING ON THAT?!?!” 😂
When I can travel back to the USA (I'm from the UK) this is the first thing I will do. Thank you for uploading this in proper 4k. I've watched 27 seconds and can see it's a good un.
The variation in landscapes is a sight to see, but to be honest, the US should be embarrassed to send visitors on such a sightful trip with leaking showers and TV dinners. One would think we would have the best amenities to offer. Either way, I welcome you here and hope you enjoy what is here.
I've taken quite a few trips on Amtrak, and for the most part it's always been fun. Be aware though, that the "coach" and "sleeping cars" haven't been upgraded in 40 years. Except for the east coast, anything going west is all beat to hell. (Seats, curtains, floors, etc.) Bring lots of hand sanitizer, and wet wipes. I hope I haven't discouraged you. It is fun!
Also about tipping: I suggest at the beginning because of an experience I had. I was flying home from California and when we boarded the plane, a gentleman got up and walked over to the flight attendants and gave them a card. The guy said he really appreciated their work and the one attendant took something out of the card (presumably money). After that, the flight attendant said “take care of this guy, whatever he needs.” Ultimately, showing gratitude upfront may inspire the employees to take care of you.
In 1997 I Made that trip from Chicago to Emeryville. Emeryville is closer to Oakland than Frisco…( yea folks from the Sco call it Frisco. ) no sleeper car though. Had a quarter, a ball, Walkman, pen and paper. Unforgettable experience! Was awesome!
Thank you Jeb for an incredible chronicle of this trip! I am taking my first solo vacation of my entire life (55 years old) and I chose this trip. You have prepared me well for my adventure! I have subscribed. Amazing video!
I am so thankful to you for showing this amazing video as I recover post covid here at home in India. It may be a while before I can visit the US again. But this train journey showed and reminded me of the incredible diversity and beauty of the US landscape. Hope I have the good fortune to travel this route in the future.
if you're not in a rush and can afford it, the Amtrak experience is 100% more enjoyable than flying... I used to travel this line twice a year around Christmas to see family, from Denver to Chicago and back, with my own sleeping room for the overnight. if you're feeling social there's always interesting people to meet. if you're not, just enjoy the scenery through your personal window while stretched out and reclined in privacy with your shoes off. it was glorious.
@@blacknbougie8021 it's like 500 to 600 bucks for a sleeper room. haven't taken the trip in a few years now so the prices have probably changed since I last went.
It can be crazy expensive. My MIL used to go from Chicago to Houston because she is terrified of flying. She didn't get meals and no room, just the seat (yep, she slept upright in her seat) and her trip was about $200-250. This was a few years ago. A roomette is more expensive and only sleeps two people. Some day I want to go somewhere by train but just me. No way could I ever afford to bring my kids!
Awesome! I've done this Amtrak trip but I got on in Denver. The train looked so clean in your video. My trip was prior to Covid. At that time, our train seemed grubby. You did an excellent job of narrating the beautiful footage you took.
I really want to experience this. Living in Germany opened my eyes to the wonder of train travel and I hope that America can be more experienced in this incredible way.
My father worked for the Illinois Central RR for 40 years after returning from WWII. He was from Chicago (where I grew up) and my mom was from Florida. So every year when I was a kid, we took the City Of Miami to visit family in Florida. Talk about food! The ICRR Pullman cars had the best dining car food on the planet! Sadly, the City Of Miami (Chicago to Miami) no longer exists. But ever since then, train travel has always been a part of my life. You cannot grow up in Chicago without trains being in your face! I've done the California Zephyr, Empire Builder, City Of New Orleans, Coast Starlight, Illini and Saluki, the Illinois Zephyr and Carl Sandburg (a ton of times in college), Lincoln Service, and a few others that don't exist anymore. The Zephyr used to have a link at Salt Lake City that went up to Portland, Oregon via Boise, Idaho along the Columbia River, then met the Coast Starlight to go up to Seattle. I took that a few times when I was in the military, stationed in Tacoma, WA in the mid - 1980s. BTW - My favorite accommodation is the 1st Class Bedroom. I've done them all. I love your videos; both planes and trains. I am dying to do the Rocky Mountaineer! I've been to Glenwood Springs a couple of times, Moab, UT and all of those places way back in the 1970s. Hope to do that trip by train rather than car next time! Regards, Chris M
The longest trip I've ever taken on Amtrak has been twice NYC to DC. This one has always been the goal though. Thanks for posting. I love my gorgeous country!
Good morning, Jeb: My husband and I enjoy your travel blogs when you go AMTRAK. I'm taking him on his first train ride to Boston next year around Thanksgiving Time of 2023. We got a bedroom with our own bathroom!! We both enjoy your blogs so much! LOVE THE BLOOPERS!! We sure appreciate your blogs!! With Love and Sunshine, Rob and Ted Martin-Brookes,, San Diego, California!!
When I was a youngster, I took a similar trip with my family. From DC, we took the C&O to Chicago, then the Santa Fe Super Chief across the country to Los Angeles. It was an unbelievable venture and perhaps the best train trip I ever took, (and there were many, as my Dad worked for the Association of American Railroads).
I traveled 3 time from Chicago to SF, 1 time from SF to Chicago. I enjoyed the west trips better than the east trip. I think the scenery you see going west is better. I have also traveled the Empire Builder 3 times;once to Seattle and twice to Portland. I love the train.
Great video. I first made this trip on the "old" pre-Amtrak California Zephyr as a grammar school kid in the 1950's. We had a bedroom on the sleeper, "Silver Valley", and spent the day in one of the FIVE dome cars. It was this eastern kid's first trip to the mountains, canyons and deserts of the west, and it was awe-some. Fifty years later I made the trip on the Amtrak version. The scenery is still incredible. I was glad that your video documented many of the sights I remember. I'm going to keep coming back to this video.
I’ve recently been getting into learning about traveling with Amtrak and I’ve now watching this video from start to finish twice. Your channel is amazing and I wish I had found it sooner. Thanks for working so hard on this. It felt like I was a part of the journey!
Amtrak is amazing, I've even utilized their service to commute to work. My 30min ride on Amtrak cost me only $4 each way, driving that would have been twice the amount.
I took this amazing trip from Boston to San Francisco in 1986 and to this day it was the most amazing trip! Thank you for making this video. It brought back so many fond memories! My only complaint is that you didn't show coming in to Salt Lake City at night. It was incredible to see the bright lights of the Morman Temple in the darkness of the Utah wilderness. It was an amazing sight.
You perfectly captured the feelings I had but couldn't describe when I took the Transsiberian-Transmongolian back in 2015. The most beautiful sunsets I've ever seen.
I love the small towns. All these brings back memories. When I was 18 years. I used to talk to my first love every night for hours. I was in New York and he was In Colorado Spring Air Force Academy. He was also from Denver. I would call on weekends when he is at home in Denver. One day he broken my heart. It took me at least 32 years to heal. I even name my son after him. Thanks for the memories.
Jeb, thanks for the full California Zephyr tour. It just reinforces why I really like the slower way to travel. Although air travel does have it's place. I live in Kremmling Colorado, which is along the California Zephyr route. A couple of years ago, several people from my wife's company rode the Zephyr from Granby Colorado to Glenwood Springs and back. You forgot to describe the beauty of Byer's Canyon just outside of Granby as the Zephyr travels along the Colorado River. It is hard to imagine that the little stream seen below has carved out this amazing canyon through the rugged stone above the rails. After you leave the canyon, you will see a broad valley leading up to my little town. And possibly you will see Elk, Deer and even Pronghorn Antelope. And as you get closer to the Gore Range where the Blue River, Muddy Creek join the Colorado, you might even see some Moose. Then you enter the Gore Canyon and see one of the few Class 5 kayaking areas in the country. And like you, I am okay to leave it to those skilled or crazy enough to try it. And as for those who "Saluted" you and others on the train, they are not opposed to train travel. It is just a way for Kayakers, paddlers and other river user's to say hi to train travelers. After all, Colorado mountain people are a casual bunch and it is a fun way to say hi. Not that I am saying I have participated in the activity myself. And when we traveled on the train, at least from Granby to Glenwood, one of the Amtrak staff was in the observatory car narrating the trip and answering questions for people there. On our return trip, there wasn't anyone doing this so I stepped up and did the commentary and answered questions as well as I could. Although I am not sure that the applause at the end was due to my effort or my stopping the commentary. My wife and I are planning are taking the train from Denver to either Truckee or Salt Lake so that we can go skiing this winter and combine to of our favorite activities. Skiing and Rail Riding.
Jeb, Thank you! Loved it! We did this about 10 to 11 years ago. Everything you said about this trip was true. If you really want to see America and all its beauty, Amtrak is the way to do it. One of the best vacations that we and my wife ever had. We went from Sacramento to Delaware (round trip) during the summer months. Oh, and yes, we got the “mooning” also. We were told at the time that Amtrak takes you places in which the only way you can get there is by foot, horseback, or by train.
You have a gift for showing us the beauty of rail travel while being real about the pros and cons. If you have never been I recommend the Chama and Durango scenic rail trips. Different from Amtrak but so beautiful.
I took a train from Chicago to DC. I saw sooooo much. There were parts that were great and parts that were, quite frankly, a bit sad. Everyone is so friendly on the Amtrak, so you get to chat with so many people. As bad as the Amtrak might be, slow trains and a bit old, the experience still ends up being fantastic.
I took this trip by myself in 1999. You’re right, the views were completely awesome and I still tell the story of the trip today. Thank you so much for taking me down memory lane.
And that’s why people travel to have everlasting memories. Travel opens up the possibility to talk to anyone and they can draw into your experience and you do the same.
Hey Jeb: Thanks so much for doing this. It brought back a few memories from my childhood. When I was twelve years old (in 1964!!!) my family traveled with Union Pacific from Los Angler’s to Chicago. The route was different as back then UP trains typically went through Ogden Utah. That meant one traveled through Southern Wyoming where I recall seeing thousands (at least it seemed that way to me) of Pronghorn Antelope. As it was so long ago that is my most clear memory of the trip. The next year we traveled from LA to St. Louis. Both trips provide wonderful memories from my childhood. By the way, I would appreciate seeing a video of the different sleeping accommodations on Amtrak. I want to make a cross Country trip with my wife and a video like that would be a big help. Again, great job and thank you!
Full service dining on western trains is coming back later this summer. As for attendants, I tend to tip $10 plus an additional $10 per night. A bit more history about the California Zephyr: the original service was discontinued in 1970 when the Western Pacific ceased passenger service along their section of the route. The Burlington Northern ran a service between Chicago and Denver, while the Rio Grande ran the Rio Grande Zephyr as a daylight service between Salt Lake City and Denver. Upon the formation of Amtrak in 1971, the Rio Grande declined to join, so Amtrak's San Francisco Zephyr was routed via Cheyenne and Ogden, while using the Southern Pacific route over Donner Pass rather than the Western Pacific route through the Feather River Canyon. In 1983, the Rio Grande, still using original equipment from the 1950s California Zephyr from the locomotives to the observation car, joined Amtrak, ending privately run passenger service in the United States. With Amtrak returning to the Moffett Route, the California Zephyr name was brought back. A few of the old locomotives for the original Zephyr still exist from all three railroads, as do quite a few passenger cars. The only other reroute to the train took place in the wake of the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake when the Oakland Pier station was heavily damaged. A new station at Emeryville was built and the Zephyr currently terminates there. An extension back into Oakland Proper was explored, but the train would have to reverse through the middle of Jack London Square to reach the yard, so that option was nixed. Passengers can book all the way to San Francisco, and they will be transferred onto buses at Emeryville for the trip over the Bay Bridge.
Back sometime in the 1970's I fondly remember taking the trip from Denver to Glenwood Springs on the D & RGW. As stated, TOTALLY amazing scenery!!! Later, sometime in late 1980's/early 1990's, I did the route again, this time via Amtrak; I took the Zephyr from Denver to Salt Lake City, then took the (now discontinued) Desert Wind to Los Angeles. Editing 52 hours down to 34 minutes is a challenge; still it would have been fun to see video from Winter Park, when the train exits the Moffat Tunnel. And, as a trivia note, assuming they restart the ski train service from Denver to Winter Park, those train cars are (last I heard) the original D & RGW cars from back in the 1970's (or possibly even earlier).
This took me back to my childhood. My parents took me to Disney Land for my 12th birthday and went by Amtrak from Oakland to Anaheim on the Coast Starlight. 11 hour trip and back then the unique experience I remember was in the dining car. As a family of 3 the asked us if a solo traveler could dine with us since space was limited. He was a man in his late twenties going home to visit family and he had a beer with my Dad. Strange but definitely a cool experience as it opened up my eyes about interacting with strangers in a family setting. Great views of the Pacific and if you’re luck might see a whale or two.
Amen. Gratitude for Amtrak in having such staying power. 🙏🏻 I'm happy as a Jaybird and a Chessy Cat. ❤😊👍💯%🥰 Although I haven't gotten a chance, to ride Amtrak's long distance travel, aboard the Southwest Chief. Which leaves officially from Chicago's terminal. Amazing! When that time comes I'll be sure, to book a bedroom. Family status for 4 accommodations, in the sleeping car. A good thing in having an in- room bathroom. Enjoying the scenic views will be awesome. From those windows of pleasure. Love ❤️ the commute of Diesel train travel, not short lived. The everloving sounds of clanging bells. And horn signals along the tracks, the stretch of rails which Amtrak, itself glides so well. Amicably pleasurable to be a part of, great possibilities. Videos are a welcoming treasure to behold. And yess, I'm deeply appreciative to savor the moment, of train travel experience the best ever. ❤ I'm from the 50's throughout, so I'm loving this. KUDOS!! CHEERS!! CELEBRATION!! PERFECTO!! BRAVO!! Amtrak, you're a passenger's dream come true. Yayy!! Wahoo!! I'm ecstatic period. This moment right now, as Jeb and his friends collaborate, duration while in.transit. A hotel on wheels is everything. Nonstop!! Really enjoy this adventure provided as such. Thank yuu soo very much, Amtrak personnel, colleagues, Superiors, attendants, travel consultants, etc. You're the bestof the best, amongst the rest. Engineers, Conductors, Baggage handlers, Ticket agents, and all other who've made it, possible for us to board, depart, and arrive to our destinations.
I am giving a moment of respect for the workers who sacrificed their lives to build railway tracks on such dangerous conditions like the Rocky Mountains about 100+ years ago.
Big FACTS
Me too, such a meaningful thought.
virtue signaling time
No lives were sacrificed to build railway tracks. There is no exchange for trading humans for tracks and no martyrs of railroading. Lives were occasionally lost in industrial accidents just as they are every day.
@@mwilliamshs if people die due to unnecessary dangers cuz some big wig wanted to save a few cents, its much more than just “an accident”
I’ve never traveled by train. I just booked this trip with a bedroom for my wife and I in 2024 because of this video and the work you do. Thanks for all the hard work.
❤Psalms 115:16 As for the heavens, they belong to Jehovah, But the earth he has given to the sons of men. ❤Psalms 37:29 The righteous will possess the earth, And they will live forever on it. ❤Psalms 37:34 Hope in Jehovah and follow his way, And he will exalt you to take possession of the earth. When the wicked are done away with, you will see it.
우와 ❤시편 115:16 하늘은 여호와의 것이나 땅은 사람의 아들들에게 주셨다. ❤시편 37:29,34 의로운 자들은 땅을 차지하고 거기서 영원히 살 것이다. [...] 34 여호와께 희망을 두고 그분의 길을 따라라. 그러면 그분이 너를 높여 땅을 차지하게 하시리니, 악한 자가 없어질 때에 네가 그것을 볼 것이다.
Post a video of how it went!
how was your journey?
Fun. Just like it looks. Food was good and as long as you realize it isn't luxury accommodations it's comfortable enough. Worst night sleep in my life was night one but night 2 was better. Steak and patty melt were my favorite foods.
@@toddkowalcyk5119so when you get there, what do you do,?? I'd love to take this trip with my husband and I heard you can buy round trip accomodations, but I'm lost at once you get there and when you go back. We live outside of Chicago.
Several years my wheelchair-bound wife and I took the Zephyr from Chicago to Emeryville. We had a handicap sleeper room and it was GREAT! The attendants were all very accommodating and the food was good. When we got into the Rockys and moved through Donner Pass, an historian got on board and narrated the journey, it was wonderful.
I had the same experience, in November 2009, with my wife who had mobility issues, attendant brought all meals to room as she could not negotiate the stairs.
Was it expensive 🤔
@@PetsNPatients I don't remember the exact cost but it wasn't that expensive. Of course my wife got a real discount because of her disability as did I, being considered her caregiver. Amtrak offered a lot of discounts for handicap travel.
@@technicholls That’s really good to know about the discounts. When I have looked into the wheelchair rooms, the prices have been stratospheric, way above regular fares. I’ll have to check it out again.
@@wendyannh let us know how it turns out for you.
Good job, my Uncle and I took this adventure together last September for his 75th Birthday. He lived in KY and I live in So Cal. We met in Chicago seeing each other for the first time in 33 years. Then we flew together back to S Cal, and unfortunately he died before making back home to KY, completely unexpected. So glad we took this wonderful adventure together!
So sorry for your loss. I'm happy though for you that you got the opportunity to spend time with him before the end. Thanks for sharing your story.
My condolences to you🙏🏽. Sounds as if he was happy in his last days💙🤍🙏🏽 That says so much 💙🤍🙏🏽
I often dream of people at train stations right before they pages on....so your story really hits 💙🤍🙏🏽
Remember him always 💙🤍🙏🏽
I am so sorry for your loss. I hope that having spent his last hours in your company on such a wonderful trip brings you some solace. Again, my condolences to you.
@@sandrahazeltine8720 Thank you so much! My Uncle coincidentally said several times on the trip, he thought he had died and gone to Heaven, cause it was so beautiful!
Sorry to hear of your loss.
man, this guy is so wholesome. positive vibes all the way
That’s what I was thinking. I hate him for it. Hahahahah.
I took this train when I was a kid leaving from Chicago with a final destination of Albuquerque. One of the best trips of my life. My mom and I didn't have a sleeper car so we had to sleep in the chairs both nights. Totally worth it. Some day I want to relive the experience with my wife and kids.
that's the southwest chief, not the zephyr :)
I told my husband I wanted to take the Amtrak Crescent from Wilmington, DE to New Orleans. As a kid, I took the train with my family every summer until high school to visit my family in Lafayette.
Did you send anybody a postcard once you got there?
Is this a breaking bad refenrence?
did u see a dude named Walter in Albuquerque
In 1965 , My Nana took a train fron NYC to Los Angeles,CA as a single mother with 4 kids. Her strength and will-power was passed down to all of us
I smiled when I came across your comment, well that's wonderful but how are you doing and where are you from?, Please don't mind me asking you how are you doing but I know that's not bad question, will be happy to receive your reply, thanks.
Maybe you could do a trip in her honour as a special trip? Grandparents are so special!❤😢🕊❤
Hi, I am from Bangladesh. Inspired by your video, I took this train and travelled for 52 hours from Chicago to San Francisco (and created memories of a lifetime). Thank You!
That’s awesome!
How was it?
My son and I were on this trip with you! You can clearly see us in the observation car several times during the trip through the Rockies (we are in the window reflection at 16:40). It was such a fantastic adventure and we enjoyed meeting you. Going to take the same route with my daughter soon and I'm super stoked to show her the gorgeous views as well.
We appreciate your videos of our trains!! I have worked at the maintenance facility in Beech Grove Indiana for 25 years!! Our facility is huge,with some of the most talented train mechanics in the world!! Really enjoyed you guys showcasing what we work on every day!! Thanks for the video!!
How much is a trip from Chicago to San Fran and is it the same trip back?
Much appreciation for the work you guys do to keep the trains rolling safely down the tracks. Thank you guys!
grdhdrhrd
It's too bad the amtrak station in Indy is so atrocious. I won't use it -- I fly to Chicago and take trains from there. The Indy station is dangerous.
I'm 79yrs old and I thank you for this info. A trip like this is number one on my Bucket List
I just found this. You brought me back to 1995 when my mom and I (both nurses) brought my sister home on Hospice from out West on this line from Salt Lake City to DC with a layover over in Chicago. We got the large 3 person sleeping room. I realized later that I was only charged for myself. The booking agent did it. I could write a book about that trip. I remember the attendants were so helpful especially after I told him his job was to make sure my mom and remembered to eat. Our job was to take care of my sister. She had a brain tumor. I warned our neighbors that if they heard her yell we would take care of it. They were so understanding. She was only in pain going over the mountains. The dock crew at Chicago were these big burly men helping us get her from one train to the other. I had a wheelchair but needed help getting her down a 6-ft hallway. They were so kind. So many bittersweet memories and a final thing I was able to do for my sister. One of these days, I want to take a trip on it for pleasure.
This deserves to be on Netflix. Very well done!!
No
Wow!! Thanks so much!
Absolutely agree !! This was so amazing
Yes
I cannot stand people talking to me with a diaper on their face. It is obscene. Thumbs down. Also, in an age that most advanced countries have high speed railways travelling at 300+ km/h, American railways are 3rd world.
Ex-Amtrak Engineer here, I have run the Empire builder and the Coast Starlight thru the Cascades, was unique experience for me. Both trains had two P-42's on the head end also. Lots of good power.
Both of which rival the Zephyr for scenery.
Jiuui
@@kwameofosu8799 sorry, no savi
Actually there is no dash in the P42DC
@@DanTDMJace Right
My wife passed away suddenly November 2008. I decided in January to go visit my brother in Santa Cruz California to clear my head. I jumped on the train in Exton PA and went out to Chicago where I got on the Zephyr. What a fantastic, therapeutic ride it was. I would urge everyone to take the Zephy as I doubt there's a more scenic route on Amtrak' map. Doing the journey in the middle of January was just an added bonus. Met a lot of nice people and the staff were awesome!
How much was the cost for trip? Was it as nice as this gentleman says? My wife and i live in Pottstown and want somthing like this to do for a vacation
@@donalddobson7568 The one way price from Exton to Emeryville was about $500, that was for a roomette. I had a sleeper from Pittsburgh to CA. The price included 3 meals a day, and the food was pretty darn good!
I would highly recommend it going out. IIt was actually rather boring from Ohio to Denver as the topography is flat as a pancake.
I think winter is the best time to go as the Rockies are really beautiful covered in snow! I would definitely go for the bigger sleeper compartment if I went with someone else!
I think its fantastic you found some closure in such a beautiful adventure. I hope you’re doing well, brother.
@@The1jonnyz
Because the Earth is Flat.
Tipping the Attendant is definitely a must for all of their hard work.
My 6 year old daughter and I took this from Chicago to Davis over Christmas 2 years ago. We were both in awe of the scenery and no boredom.
I would want to do that so much as I am from Davis!
I am not from the USA, but have taken 17 vacation trips to the USA. My favourite trip was an Amtrak trip from Chicago to Seattle and back to Chicago. We stopped off in Whitefish Montana for 2 weeks of snow skiing (early January 2008). I want to go back to the USA and do more Amtrak travel. Love that you can stop off anywhere on route, and get on the next Amtrak train that passes.
i dont think the last part is true, you have to stay on the train that youre originally checked into.
@@ws6705 No, I had an Amtrack pass. It allowed me to get off the train and take a later train. If I remember correctly, the Amtrak pass allowed me to change trains 5 or 6 times, as long as I used the same route (same final destination)
17 trips? WOW
That is the Empire Builder. A really beautiful trip through some wonderful country
I also like trains, once every 10 or 20 years, but if you're vacationing a new country, simply rent a car. It gives you so much more flexibility.
Speaking as an Australian who lived in California for over four years, I was in awe of the geography/topography and variation of landscapes across the United States. My conclusion, and I think what you’ve demonstrated in this vlog Jeb, is that the very nature of American culture/character is so influenced by the majesty and wonder of the land itself. Great to see your passion shine through in this enjoyable vlog. I hope one day I can travel the section as suggested to Denver. Cheers👍
I hear Australia is beautiful too. And NZ. Would love to go sometime ❤️
@@michaelhurley3171 As a Brit who’s been to all three countries I must admit the USA has the most variety, amazing country and the people I’ve met have been great.
You can’t beat nature in the states. Every state is so unique. A country in itself. The greatest thing ever conceived I think here in the states are the national parks. As a nature lover, I do feel blessed.
@@marcgardner868 I took trains in England and loved them so much! The people were so friendly.
Australia, the US, and the UK are all amazing countries.
As airplane travel becomes even more unbearable (unruly passengers, squeezing ourselves into smaller and smaller seats), and remote work becoming more common, train travel in The United States could see a resurgence. I hope so!!! I love traveling by train. So relaxing and comfortable. There’s room to spread out and the view is more interesting than the view from an airplane. I am crossing my fingers that Americans will support a more robust train system in this country.
I agree, but it feels like that already
Booking the California Zephyr 4 Montgs in advance, and 80% was already booked out
@@franciscoungerlopez7360 Amtrak's booking is deceptive. It may say 80% booked, when in actuality it's 20% booked.
@@michaelbaxter1564 omg, really?
that's horrible. I did not know that
Oh I totally agree! More relaxing and dignified. I will be traveling by Train from now on, and loving it!!!
Me too!
I swear we take this country for granted sometimes, I’ve been to many places around the world, but nothing will ever come close to home. We may have our differences but when watching videos like this, it makes me realize just how close we are as well. I wish we could stop all this ridiculous in-fighting and come together as a country again🇺🇸💐
Well said my friend
If people put politics aside, it can be done, but right now it's impossible
Amen to that!
yep. People need to realize how good we have it here in America. While its marginallly worse than europe, its not brazil/africa level.
@@honkhonk8009 I’ve been to many parts of Europe and trust me when I say this; I’d rather be in places like Utah or Montana than Poland or parts of Germany like Berlin. We don’t hear about how bad it is over there because most of the attention is on the US, but it’s pretty bad, and I’m not just talking about Eastern Europe.
Not many people can make a 35 minute trip report exciting from the beginning to the end these days! Thank You for that! :) :)
Define, 'many'.
You kidding right? There tons of videos done by a single TH-camr. May be TH-cam algorithm never showed you one
I agree. It was wonderful.
@@MusicIsBestDrug Your point? They obviously liked this one. Doesn't mean they haven't watched others.
I'm recently retired and you made this video so fascinating. I am planning a trip like this for next year. I really enjoyed this tour. Thank you guys!!
Tips. Consider lenght of trip/time, most ar comfortable 48hr max. Like he mentioned.
And the roomettes meet the need of two people just fine. Open seating has lots of leng room and recline far enough to sleep in.
I have done it three times.. I recommend it.
Thanks Jeb (and to your wife as well) for all the amazing content you do! I’m Joe and I’m a Chicago native, and ironically I haven’t taken an Amtrak yet!! I love your videos! I’m almost up to date with your channel, and I’ve watched your California Zephyr review like 4-5 times already. 😂 I want to take this trip so badly. I’m leaning towards this or a New Orleans trip round trip from Chicago. Your content is so much fun to watch, it’s very comforting, and your commentary is always so informative and fun. I also am taking your prune advice as well. But yeah, once again thank you for all the work you do in exploring not just the US but also the world! You’re amazing! ❤
Wow! Thank you so much for your MASSIVE support, Joe! We so very much appreciate you!
People called me odd for running to window just to see trains pass by in my town, but it's just something about them that hooks me. Really thank you for the video brother!
When I was
Took The Zephyr from Emeryville to Denver, and back, with my youngest daughter when she was 4. It was quite an adventure and the first time see saw big mountains and touched snow! That was 20 years ago so now she's 24 and we both really appreciate those memories and that trip. Thanks Amtrak!
Wuo
How was taking the train with a toddler? We have 2 kids, 6 and 4.
@@stefaniemedina14 It was a great adventure. We had regular seats and enjoyed being around regular people. We were offered a discounted price room after boarding by the conductor but we kept it cheap and simple. The glass top car shows movies at night and offers great views during daytime so we spent quite a bit of time there. We met some interesting people and saw a lot of beautiful countryside while making memories that we'll never forget on that ride
You should be thanking the tax payers too, we paid for most of your trip. Amtrak gets huge subsidies to stay afloat.
@@mrsleep0000 Not as much as the interstate freeway system and air traffic control.
Fun fact: Reno used to have an above-ground railway that would take you directly through downtown, but as the city grew it became too much of a hindrance to have trains running in the middle of the city. Like the rails would literally intersect the main roads at ground level, forcing people to wait for the trains to pass. So to bypass this problem, they dug a gigantic trench under the city and ran the trains through there. Not the best traveling experience but a lot more convenient for the people who lived/worked downtown. Source: Reno resident.
It didn't only take you through downtown Reno, there was a station there as well.
As a Reno native, I can also add that the trains had to blow their horns at each intersection, through a downtown filled with hotels/casinos full of (trying to) sleeping tourists. I strongly recommend you come back. Yes, you can enjoy casinos and such if you like, but there are restaurants, cool clubs, arty districts, art museum, music festivals, etc. that really give Reno its character. Not to mention surrounded by mountains and 40 min from Lake Tahoe, Donner Lake (yes, that Donner) and skiing galore. And 30 miles from Virginia City. If you recall the opening title of "Bonanza" and the map it showed, well that's us.
P.S. My mother used to take the California Zephyr from Naperville, IL to Reno, NV back in the 50's. She always talked about the "Vista Dome" back then, so it was great to finally see it in your video. Thank you!
@@renodeeg
I was just thinking about the Reno station. I remember it being above ground too and yes having to wait for passenger or freight trains to pass thru an intersection was at times daunting. Just out of curiosity is Greyhound still in the same spot across from that fantasy hotel?
Great video on the "Zephyr". I worked this train for many years as a Train Attendant, Lead Service Attendant (Bar & Diner), and finally as Chief-OBS. It as great to see the scenery again! You did a great job!!!
As a young child I rode this route when it was operated by the private companies before Amtrak was a thing. One thing I remember was the difference in the dining. It looks like the food now is pre-packaged and heated before serving. Back in the past, the food was prepared fresh, and everything looked much better than what I saw in the video. It was really amazing back then. I wish everyone could experience train travel as it was back in its heyday. You would love it!
I respectfully disagree, sir. Amtrak's dining services are MUCH more better than the airlines (peanuts and a soda [if you're lucky enough to get peanuts and a soda on an airplane!])!
@@mikewrasman5103 I haven't tried the Amtrak food, but I suspect it isn't any better than the food served on airplanes. From the video I think I would rather take my chances on the airlines. I am not talking about the peanuts served on short domestic flights, rather what is served on long haul flights. I have no trouble flying a couple hours without a meal. On the trans-pac flights I have flown on it is long enough that you do want a meal and they do a decent job of feeding you from my experience. It isn't haute cuisine but it is a decent meal considering the limiting circumstances of serving a meal on an airplane. None of it can compare to the food service that was offered on the trains back when they were run by private rail companies.
@@badgermoon9229 I agree. Amtrak is comparable to airline food, but neither of them can hold a candle to the back-in-the-day streamliners. I was only born in 1989, so no personal experience, but back when train travel was commonplace instead of a novelty, railroads used very good food and food service as marketing to distinguish themselves.
-The New York Central's advertisements informed the discriminating diner that the best restaurant in Manhattan left town every evening on the Twentieth Century Limited for Chicago
-The Great Northern would serve Montana trout caught that day on its flagship the Empire Builder
-The Northern Pacific's famous Big Baked Potato was literally the size of adult's lower arm.
These are just the ones I can think of off the top of my head, but look up images of the railroad menus from that era and you'll get an idea. Also, every railroad who was anybody at all would (of course) use their own unique china (which is now very collectible).
@@sturmovik1274 Having been on trains in the fifties and early sixties I can confirm what you have posted.
@@badgermoon9229 Have to admit, I am jealous of you for having experienced that era in rail travel. Also, you may enjoy visiting a TH-cam channel called Periscope Films; they specialize in uploading videos from the 1940s - 1970s and there are several wonderful old rail travelogues from that era, among many others.
"as i slept we passed through nebraska." Perfect timing.
Nebraska is the most boring state in America.
@@fivestarpups7161 im from nebraska and i kinda agree with you but we’re not as boring as wyoming which is a plus
@@akoll6138 nah at least Wyoming is exciting with its world destroying volcano sitting underneath
"That John Denver was Full of Sh*t" Dumb & Dumber
@@akoll6138 wyoming has yellowstone, nebraska has what? runza? no thanks
I took that exact train as a single lady several years ago and I LOVED every minute of it. I felt very comfortable all the way . Would love to do it again, and I hope to. There are people to visit with or keep to your self. I took roomette and was great. Took a sleeper to Seattle and I loved it to. I love train travel
I'll always love ❤️ what Amtrak's mode of travel, brings to the table literally. Smile. Lol.
Excellent format of viewing the accomodations, the expertise itself, the professinalism, diligence, timely, even with delays. The respect and reputation the Amtrak crews,
have shown duration of a sick passenger. Who had to be transported to, an area hospital. Commendable.
Their patience was a virtue, at that time. Persevering the odds and being resilient as ever.
I give Amtrak a 5-Star,
Blue Ribbon, and a Placque.
Well deserved! Amtrak and its
entire fleet of rail cars.
Superb logo their distinguished signature imprint. KUDOS!!
Patience is a virtue. Time is of essence. Amtrak is outstanding.
"Boarding anything is exciting!" That is for sure, and I so miss it!
From a fellow Greensboro resident, I would suggest tipping generously at the beginning of the trip and tip generously again at the end of the trip. Your car attendant can do a lot to make your trip more pleasant.
88 seconds in Greensboro
We never saw anyone,We had a HORRIBLE TRIP,NO FOOD except an overpriced soy burger,breakfast a near frozen muffin,Coffee only @ breakfast shut down after till next morn,we had roomette,We were starving the whole trip,NEVER AGAIN,You have been warned!.
@@packingten Amtrack is extremely expensive and slow. There is no reason to use it whatsoever unless you are like allergic to planes and cars.
@@MisterKewlz absolutely. So expensive now. Absolutely loved our couple trips out of zephyr out to California and back. Food was good, relaxing. Don't like flying. But now the prices are so high. A little bummed about that. It's probably been four years since I've done it
@@MisterKewlz I love it , I hate planes .
We took Amtrak from Chicago to New Orleans. Loved the experience; the bedroom is the way to go. We tipped our porter once we reached our destination; he deserved it and we felt was the right thing to do. Especially in these times where travel can be challenging for both the travelers and the people whose job it is to serve them.
I want to do this Zephyr trip from ORD to SFO with my fiance. Any advise? A sleeper car for only 2 people? What to pack, pillows, blankets, what does Amtrack provide and what don't they? Any info would be greatly appreciated. Thank you.
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As an Iowan, I love hearing someone mention how beautiful the state can be and also mentioning some points of interest. It really makes me miss living there. Also as an Iowan, I can't help but smile and chuckle to see you slept through Nebraska.
I took this same train in 2018 when I graduated high school! This does a fantastic job of highlighting everything.
Yes please make a movie of the pros and cons of each bedroom options
Ditto!
Kansas
This brings back great memories!! I traveled to California on the CZ years ago to visit my brother. On my return trip, there was a snow storm and we ended up stopping for 12+ hours while waiting for snow to be cleared from the tracks -apparently the first attempt failed due to faulty equipment, so a replacement had to be retrieved. Some of the passengers were so irate and rude, but the conductor and crew remained professional and calm the entire time - reassuring we would be updated as new information came in. Everyone, no matter their riding status, was checked on and taken care of. Unfortunately, not the greatest time for some, but I had a blast - met some interesting people! Thank you for posting♥️
21:27 Just be glad you got a moon and not a sun dial
I've riden that train three times and intend to do it again, round trip. Fabulous scenery, wonderful food, and great folks.
I grew up in the foothills of Colorado and recently moved I cannot tell you how bummed I am not to be in the rockies anymore. Wherever you live in U.S or frankly anywhere in the world we should all try to truly enjoy it. Whether you live in the Rocky Mountains like I did or the plains of Nebraska it is all beautiful. God bless everyone!
I grew up in Littleton🌷
What a lovely comment, Molon
And God bless you too, friend.
I grew up in Bailey.
i miss hiking near denver, hated the city but if i drove 30 minutes west i would be in paradise
Last year, I visited the US for the first time.
I'm from the Netherlands myself, but the US has always interested me because of how massive it is.
I've watched some videos about this specific train now and its definitely near the top of my list of things to do in the US.
somehow it just feels crazy to me that you can travel by train for 51 hours in one direction and still stay in the same country.
It also just reminds me of traveling through a movie set or something, you see so many people, landmarks, towns, states etc.
and its really cool to think that every single thing has its own stories and lives.
Have a great journey. Let it be an everlasting memory of joy for you.
My goal is to travel to the Netherlands to follow the path of Operation Market Garden.
I rode it, it was an amazing trip. Mine was a bit delayed at the end, there was a massive storm in the bay area and a train derailed ahead of us. For me it was 55 hours total.
For the meals if you eat in the dining car, they sit you with other people to fill all the tables, and I met several interesting people including a french couple from montreal. Talking about our countries was fascinating. That second day is incredible, with how much the sights change over the course of the day. Farmland before Denver, then straight into the rocky mountains before coming out into the desert. The sunrises and sunsets were beautiful. 55 hours on a train and I was never bored for a second. Can't recommend it enough. Just be flexible, Amtrak is not known for being reliable. It's also extremely expensive, a roomette was $1000 for the full trip. You just have to think of it as combined travel, hotel, views and meals all included.
This video made me take the Zephyr journey. It was transformative. Absolutely one of the most unique and gorgeous experiences I’ve ever had. Our train was delayed by 5 hours so we got a lot of extra time in our sleeper. I wasn’t complaining as I booked a day pad on each terminus. I suggest everyone do the same. Do not rely on this train being on time. Get there a day before departure and stay a day after disembarking so you have ample time to catch a flight home. Thank you for this video, Jeb! Would love to see you do the Coastal Starlight. I would really love to do that journey. I hear amazing things about it.
I’m so glad you went and had a great time!
What's a day pad please?
@@VictoriaHannahStudio maybe an extra day to allow for delays? Probably not a room for a day...
Just arrive a day before departing on the train and a day after scheduled return. Leave time for other travel on each end of your Amtrak journey bc you cannot depend on it being on time at either end.
Thank you Jeb for this amazing video! I took the trip in 2010, exactly 11 years ago during summertime after my stay in Chicago. I couldn't afford the sleeper so I just got a regular seat that could be flattened into a bed. But man it was the best experience I ever had in my life. The beautiful stations. The observation car. The meals...(and how limited choice there are, lol) I met so many friendly, interesting people. I met some strangers on the trip and actually got to know them and shared our stories. The view along the way, especially the grand canyon was mindblowing. I was so sad I lost the card that carries so many photos I shot along the way so everything has to stay in my mind. And your video feels like a recreation of my dream. So if Amtrak continues to run I hope one day I'll take my future wife there for the honeymoon for sure. When COVID is over, you can come to China and try out the high-speed train. We have some really good views too.
Very interesting. We rarely hear about or see photos or scenery from China’s interior. I hope to see it someday.
@@rhythmfield when the world opens up you are more than welcome to come and have a look yourself :)
@@leoliu2826 is it difficult to get around in China, not knowing the language?
@@rhythmfield Hey Greg I think it depends. If you want less trouble communicating you definitely need a tour guide or a Chinese-speaking friend for your first time here. Big cities should be easy as there are bilingual signs everywhere and young people speak very good English. But when you go more rural and talk to older people it definitely gets difficult as people don't speak a lot of English and they even have dialects that's hard to understand for Mandarin speakers. But once you gets how people communicates here you'll be good on your own I think.
@@leoliu2826 Good to know, thank you very much!
Took the Zephyr from Chicago to Granby, Colorado for a backpacking trip in September of 2019. Amazing experience! I come from a "railroad family" - my dad was a locomotive engineer, both grandfathers were rail car inspectors, an uncle was a yardmaster and an aunt was a crew dispatcher. Trains are in my blood. I absolutely love riding the rails on cross country trips. You can't beat the scenery, the sunsets and sunrises, the relaxed rhythm of the rails and most importantly, the people you meet during long days and nights aboard a train. Thanks for sharing!
I took this train with my wife, from Denver to Las Vegas, when we travelled across the USA after she became pregnant and we knew that the opportunity to travel would soon be limited. Professional staff, beautiful scenery and also had really decent fellow passengers. Still a better experience than most long distance trains here in Australia.
Greeting from Myanmar (Burma)! My parents and I did this route back in 2012 right after my college graduation. They were initially unimpressed with the big city side of America but were amazed by the scenaries they saw along this route. My favourite part of the route was stopping at a beautiful small town rainroad station in Buena Vista (or Glenwood Springs?), CO and snow started to fall in late May. This clip brought back so much memories.Thank you!
This was incredible! I work for United Airlines and been pass riding for 35 years, I’ve been all over the world & bless to work for a great company with all the benefits including flying for free and only paying taxes for international flights, but I must say this is on my bucket list’s to ride this Zephyr to California. I live in Chicago and definitely going to relax and have Amtrak take me there. I have friends who live in Sonoma Valley and will take extra days to plan this trip, the views were wonderful.thanks again peace!
Heck ya! Former AA ramp agent here 👋 the benefits there were great and this ride looks amazing
I completely agree with you
Yes! I,want to do this for my 70th birthday in September!
That's great
So do I, I'm celebrating my 68 bday in Sept!!! Happy trails
Don't wait too long guys , something in trains smells like freedom :)
I’m doing it for my 65th birthday in September 🤓
I’m gonna do it for my 40th 😀
Just took the ride from Denver to Emeryville. Some recommendations. 1)Get a bedroom and avoid the roomette. It's just too small. 2)Bring food from your favorite deli (assuming you have access to one). Suffice to say, the airlines are much better at serving reheated food than Amtrak. 3)Consider limiting your ride to the state of Colorado. To be honest, the beautiful scenery becomes numbing after a while. Perhaps I would have felt better about it if we had a bigger room. 4)Last, the train is often late (over two hours in our case), so, dont plan on anything based on your arrival time. Enjoy!
Thanks Jeb, having travelled basically the same route by car, I didn't realize how much of the country I was missing simply by the fact that I was forced to keep my eyes on the road with the occasional glance to see the sights. I see how train travel can provide a much better experience to see the country
I’ m writing from Japan.
This video is amazing.
Thank you very much.
I wanna take Amtrack in the future.
The last time I was on the Zephyr was in December of 1950, or over 70 years ago. My mother and I had a roomette from Sacramento to Chicago. But the best part of the trip, which apparently no longer exists, is up the Feather River through the Feather River Gorge. Nothing I saw on your trip begins to compare with the scenery in the gorge. It is too bad they dropped that portion of the trip.
Last time I was on the train to Chicago was just before the 9-11attacks
What an experience
Tell me about it
@Repent!. who?
I live in Rifle, CO. The best part of that trip is 40 minutes from my house, heh.
@@thisisaname5589 I am looking forward to visiting Rifle, CO. Just to have a meal... ;-)
This brings back so many good memories. I took the California Zephyr with my son to Albuquerque for a bowling tournament. He was floored at the size of the train. He was also slightly terrified by how we moved between cars, but he caught on quickly. I want to take another train trip soon.
Two bonus notes: (1) At the time, it was cheaper to drive from Detroit to Chicago, park the car, and take the train with luggage/bowling equipment than it was to fly. (2) When we were about to board, my son said “YOU MEAN TO TELL ME WE’RE GETTING ON THAT?!?!” 😂
The Southwest Chief, not the Zephyr, runs through Albuquerque.
@@DanielNighteyes whoops, you’re right 😊
When I can travel back to the USA (I'm from the UK) this is the first thing I will do. Thank you for uploading this in proper 4k. I've watched 27 seconds and can see it's a good un.
The variation in landscapes is a sight to see, but to be honest, the US should be embarrassed to send visitors on such a sightful trip with leaking showers and TV dinners. One would think we would have the best amenities to offer. Either way, I welcome you here and hope you enjoy what is here.
@@dbsti3006 You were "Born Too Late".
So glad I ran across this video. I’ve always been curious about Amtrak accommodations and routes.
I've taken quite a few trips on Amtrak, and for the most part it's always been fun. Be aware though, that the "coach" and "sleeping cars" haven't been upgraded in 40 years. Except for the east coast, anything going west is all beat to hell. (Seats, curtains, floors, etc.) Bring lots of hand sanitizer, and wet wipes. I hope I haven't discouraged you. It is fun!
Also about tipping: I suggest at the beginning because of an experience I had. I was flying home from California and when we boarded the plane, a gentleman got up and walked over to the flight attendants and gave them a card. The guy said he really appreciated their work and the one attendant took something out of the card (presumably money). After that, the flight attendant said “take care of this guy, whatever he needs.” Ultimately, showing gratitude upfront may inspire the employees to take care of you.
I do that with cruise attendants
In 1997 I Made that trip from Chicago to Emeryville. Emeryville is closer to Oakland than Frisco…( yea folks from the Sco call it Frisco. ) no sleeper car though. Had a quarter, a ball, Walkman, pen and paper. Unforgettable experience! Was awesome!
Wonderful journey presentation, exotic scenery outside and a lotta activities inside, a dream to travel here some day !!
SA,,,
It's not wonderful
exotic scenery hahahahahaha!!!!!!!!!
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Thank you Jeb for an incredible chronicle of this trip! I am taking my first solo vacation of my entire life (55 years old) and I chose this trip. You have prepared me well for my adventure! I have subscribed. Amazing video!
Have a fantastic time!
👍👍
I am also planning this trip in October
Very cool. Gokd luck.
solo travel is fun, do whatever you want at any given time
I am so thankful to you for showing this amazing video as I recover post covid here at home in India. It may be a while before I can visit the US again. But this train journey showed and reminded me of the incredible diversity and beauty of the US landscape. Hope I have the good fortune to travel this route in the future.
Train travel with a few comforts is 'slow' travel at its best. The one positive with the pandemic is many of us can now appreciate a slower pace.
if you're not in a rush and can afford it, the Amtrak experience is 100% more enjoyable than flying... I used to travel this line twice a year around Christmas to see family, from Denver to Chicago and back, with my own sleeping room for the overnight. if you're feeling social there's always interesting people to meet. if you're not, just enjoy the scenery through your personal window while stretched out and reclined in privacy with your shoes off. it was glorious.
Is it expensive? I have 2 children so it'll be 3 of us.
@@blacknbougie8021 it's like 500 to 600 bucks for a sleeper room. haven't taken the trip in a few years now so the prices have probably changed since I last went.
It can be crazy expensive. My MIL used to go from Chicago to Houston because she is terrified of flying. She didn't get meals and no room, just the seat (yep, she slept upright in her seat) and her trip was about $200-250. This was a few years ago. A roomette is more expensive and only sleeps two people. Some day I want to go somewhere by train but just me. No way could I ever afford to bring my kids!
Awesome! I've done this Amtrak trip but I got on in Denver. The train looked so clean in your video. My trip was prior to Covid. At that time, our train seemed grubby. You did an excellent job of narrating the beautiful footage you took.
Flat Earth.
I would not appreciate the observation car with a mask on. Masks and I don't get along.
@@lorenschwiderski ok?
"mooning" the Zephyr is tradition! All in good fun :)
Man...The Rocky Mountains are something else. I've lived nearly my whole life here and I still tear up sometimes while traveling into them.
My girlfriend and I took the Empire Builder last week and I am happy to report that normal meal service is back in full swing! :)
Is your girlfriend single?
When the train began to ascend the Rockies, it felt like driving up the Pacific Coast Highway to Big Sur. Truly majestic.
I really want to experience this. Living in Germany opened my eyes to the wonder of train travel and I hope that America can be more experienced in this incredible way.
My father worked for the Illinois Central RR for 40 years after returning from WWII. He was from Chicago (where I grew up) and my mom was from Florida. So every year when I was a kid, we took the City Of Miami to visit family in Florida. Talk about food! The ICRR Pullman cars had the best dining car food on the planet! Sadly, the City Of Miami (Chicago to Miami) no longer exists. But ever since then, train travel has always been a part of my life. You cannot grow up in Chicago without trains being in your face! I've done the California Zephyr, Empire Builder, City Of New Orleans, Coast Starlight, Illini and Saluki, the Illinois Zephyr and Carl Sandburg (a ton of times in college), Lincoln Service, and a few others that don't exist anymore. The Zephyr used to have a link at Salt Lake City that went up to Portland, Oregon via Boise, Idaho along the Columbia River, then met the Coast Starlight to go up to Seattle. I took that a few times when I was in the military, stationed in Tacoma, WA in the mid - 1980s.
BTW - My favorite accommodation is the 1st Class Bedroom. I've done them all. I love your videos; both planes and trains. I am dying to do the Rocky Mountaineer! I've been to Glenwood Springs a couple of times, Moab, UT and all of those places way back in the 1970s. Hope to do that trip by train rather than car next time!
Regards, Chris M
That was amazing! i traveled the zephyr back in '65. Was so happy to see its still running! A wonderful trip. Thank you
The longest trip I've ever taken on Amtrak has been twice NYC to DC. This one has always been the goal though. Thanks for posting. I love my gorgeous country!
This made me emotional. In a good way of course! Makes you appreciate what’s around you a little more
Good morning, Jeb: My husband and I enjoy your travel blogs when you go AMTRAK. I'm taking him on his first train ride to Boston next year around Thanksgiving Time of 2023. We got a bedroom with our own bathroom!! We both enjoy your blogs so much! LOVE THE BLOOPERS!! We sure appreciate your blogs!! With Love and Sunshine, Rob and Ted Martin-Brookes,, San Diego, California!!
Well I'm hooked, I've definitely adding this to my bucket list
Hi @Steve Gibson
Umm this month October it derailed and crashed
@@Rexmas1235kool 😱😱😱😱😱😱
The fact you seem to tear up at the beauty makes me so happy.
When I was a youngster, I took a similar trip with my family. From DC, we took the C&O to Chicago, then the Santa Fe Super Chief across the country to Los Angeles. It was an unbelievable venture and perhaps the best train trip I ever took, (and there were many, as my Dad worked for the Association of American Railroads).
The Santa Fe had nice dining cars then didn’t they?
@@Hary1470
Indeed they did. Everything about dining there was top notch.
I traveled 3 time from Chicago to SF, 1 time from SF to Chicago. I enjoyed the west trips better than the east trip. I think the scenery you see going west is better. I have also traveled the Empire Builder 3 times;once to Seattle and twice to Portland. I love the train.
Great video. I first made this trip on the "old" pre-Amtrak California Zephyr as a grammar school kid in the 1950's. We had a bedroom on the sleeper, "Silver Valley", and spent the day in one of the FIVE dome cars. It was this eastern kid's first trip to the mountains, canyons and deserts of the west, and it was awe-some. Fifty years later I made the trip on the Amtrak version. The scenery is still incredible. I was glad that your video documented many of the sights I remember. I'm going to keep coming back to this video.
Death is knocking at your door
The Observation Car on my trip was “reserved” for those in “sleeper cars” simply because it was small. Loved it: it had snacks, juice and coffee!
I’ve recently been getting into learning about traveling with Amtrak and I’ve now watching this video from start to finish twice. Your channel is amazing and I wish I had found it sooner. Thanks for working so hard on this. It felt like I was a part of the journey!
Amtrak is amazing, I've even utilized their service to commute to work. My 30min ride on Amtrak cost me only $4 each way, driving that would have been twice the amount.
I took this amazing trip from Boston to San Francisco in 1986 and to this day it was the most amazing trip! Thank you for making this video. It brought back so many fond memories! My only complaint is that you didn't show coming in to Salt Lake City at night. It was incredible to see the bright lights of the Morman Temple in the darkness of the Utah wilderness. It was an amazing sight.
8:37 The power of the algorithm, I was on that exact train doing my own vlog and saw you filming. Now I get to see the final product.
You perfectly captured the feelings I had but couldn't describe when I took the Transsiberian-Transmongolian back in 2015. The most beautiful sunsets I've ever seen.
The view of the mountains and snow in CO was amazing.
I love the small towns. All these brings back memories. When I was 18 years. I used to talk to my first love every night for hours. I was in New York and he was In Colorado Spring Air Force Academy. He was also from Denver. I would call on weekends when he is at home in Denver. One day he broken my heart. It took me at least 32 years to heal. I even name my son after him. Thanks for the memories.
Jeb, thanks for the full California Zephyr tour. It just reinforces why I really like the slower way to travel. Although air travel does have it's place. I live in Kremmling Colorado, which is along the California Zephyr route. A couple of years ago, several people from my wife's company rode the Zephyr from Granby Colorado to Glenwood Springs and back.
You forgot to describe the beauty of Byer's Canyon just outside of Granby as the Zephyr travels along the Colorado River. It is hard to imagine that the little stream seen below has carved out this amazing canyon through the rugged stone above the rails.
After you leave the canyon, you will see a broad valley leading up to my little town. And possibly you will see Elk, Deer and even Pronghorn Antelope. And as you get closer to the Gore Range where the Blue River, Muddy Creek join the Colorado, you might even see some Moose. Then you enter the Gore Canyon and see one of the few Class 5 kayaking areas in the country. And like you, I am okay to leave it to those skilled or crazy enough to try it.
And as for those who "Saluted" you and others on the train, they are not opposed to train travel. It is just a way for Kayakers, paddlers and other river user's to say hi to train travelers. After all, Colorado mountain people are a casual bunch and it is a fun way to say hi. Not that I am saying I have participated in the activity myself.
And when we traveled on the train, at least from Granby to Glenwood, one of the Amtrak staff was in the observatory car narrating the trip and answering questions for people there. On our return trip, there wasn't anyone doing this so I stepped up and did the commentary and answered questions as well as I could. Although I am not sure that the applause at the end was due to my effort or my stopping the commentary.
My wife and I are planning are taking the train from Denver to either Truckee or Salt Lake so that we can go skiing this winter and combine to of our favorite activities. Skiing and Rail Riding.
Love your comments. COme to SLC for your ski trip. Best snow on earth! (We just got 30" of powder in the mountains to start the season. Cheers.
Jeb, Thank you! Loved it! We did this about 10 to 11 years ago. Everything you said about this trip was true. If you really want to see America and all its beauty, Amtrak is the way to do it. One of the best vacations that we and my wife ever had. We went from Sacramento to Delaware (round trip) during the summer months. Oh, and yes, we got the “mooning” also. We were told at the time that Amtrak takes you places in which the only way you can get there is by foot, horseback, or by train.
You have a gift for showing us the beauty of rail travel while being real about the pros and cons. If you have never been I recommend the Chama and Durango scenic rail trips. Different from Amtrak but so beautiful.
I took a train from Chicago to DC. I saw sooooo much. There were parts that were great and parts that were, quite frankly, a bit sad. Everyone is so friendly on the Amtrak, so you get to chat with so many people. As bad as the Amtrak might be, slow trains and a bit old, the experience still ends up being fantastic.
I took this trip by myself in 1999. You’re right, the views were completely awesome and I still tell the story of the trip today. Thank you so much for taking me down memory lane.
And that’s why people travel to have everlasting memories. Travel opens up the possibility to talk to anyone and they can draw into your experience and you do the same.
Tips, tips, tips, gotta love it! Tip both at the beginning and the end.
Oh travel in Japan perfectly on time impeccable service and hygiene Levels and no tips required of expected anywhere
Because they pay decent wages in Japan.
TH-cam woke up one day & decided to recommend your videos. I’m now hooked.
Hey Jeb:
Thanks so much for doing this. It brought back a few memories from my childhood. When I was twelve years old (in 1964!!!) my family traveled with Union Pacific from Los Angler’s to Chicago. The route was different as back then UP trains typically went through Ogden Utah. That meant one traveled through Southern Wyoming where I recall seeing thousands (at least it seemed that way to me) of Pronghorn Antelope. As it was so long ago that is my most clear memory of the trip. The next year we traveled from LA to St. Louis. Both trips provide wonderful memories from my childhood. By the way, I would appreciate seeing a video of the different sleeping accommodations on Amtrak. I want to make a cross Country trip with my wife and a video like that would be a big help. Again, great job and thank you!
Full service dining on western trains is coming back later this summer. As for attendants, I tend to tip $10 plus an additional $10 per night.
A bit more history about the California Zephyr: the original service was discontinued in 1970 when the Western Pacific ceased passenger service along their section of the route. The Burlington Northern ran a service between Chicago and Denver, while the Rio Grande ran the Rio Grande Zephyr as a daylight service between Salt Lake City and Denver. Upon the formation of Amtrak in 1971, the Rio Grande declined to join, so Amtrak's San Francisco Zephyr was routed via Cheyenne and Ogden, while using the Southern Pacific route over Donner Pass rather than the Western Pacific route through the Feather River Canyon. In 1983, the Rio Grande, still using original equipment from the 1950s California Zephyr from the locomotives to the observation car, joined Amtrak, ending privately run passenger service in the United States. With Amtrak returning to the Moffett Route, the California Zephyr name was brought back. A few of the old locomotives for the original Zephyr still exist from all three railroads, as do quite a few passenger cars. The only other reroute to the train took place in the wake of the 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake when the Oakland Pier station was heavily damaged. A new station at Emeryville was built and the Zephyr currently terminates there. An extension back into Oakland Proper was explored, but the train would have to reverse through the middle of Jack London Square to reach the yard, so that option was nixed. Passengers can book all the way to San Francisco, and they will be transferred onto buses at Emeryville for the trip over the Bay Bridge.
Back sometime in the 1970's I fondly remember taking the trip from Denver to Glenwood Springs on the D & RGW. As stated, TOTALLY amazing scenery!!!
Later, sometime in late 1980's/early 1990's, I did the route again, this time via Amtrak; I took the Zephyr from Denver to Salt Lake City, then took the (now discontinued) Desert Wind to Los Angeles.
Editing 52 hours down to 34 minutes is a challenge; still it would have been fun to see video from Winter Park, when the train exits the Moffat Tunnel.
And, as a trivia note, assuming they restart the ski train service from Denver to Winter Park, those train cars are (last I heard) the original D & RGW cars from back in the 1970's (or possibly even earlier).
I dont remember asking
Great ride & helpful history...these Amtrak tips are so wonderful !
This took me back to my childhood. My parents took me to Disney Land for my 12th birthday and went by Amtrak from Oakland to Anaheim on the Coast Starlight. 11 hour trip and back then the unique experience I remember was in the dining car. As a family of 3 the asked us if a solo traveler could dine with us since space was limited. He was a man in his late twenties going home to visit family and he had a beer with my Dad. Strange but definitely a cool experience as it opened up my eyes about interacting with strangers in a family setting. Great views of the Pacific and if you’re luck might see a whale or two.
Lovely memories, thanks for sharing with us.
Amen. Gratitude for Amtrak in having such staying power. 🙏🏻 I'm happy as a Jaybird and a Chessy Cat. ❤😊👍💯%🥰
Although I haven't gotten a chance, to ride Amtrak's long distance travel, aboard the Southwest Chief. Which leaves officially from Chicago's terminal. Amazing! When that time comes I'll be sure, to book a bedroom. Family status for 4 accommodations, in the sleeping car. A good thing in
having an in- room bathroom.
Enjoying the scenic views will be awesome. From those windows of pleasure. Love ❤️ the commute of Diesel train travel, not short lived. The everloving sounds of clanging bells. And horn signals along the tracks, the stretch of rails which Amtrak, itself glides so well. Amicably pleasurable to be a part of, great possibilities.
Videos are a welcoming treasure to behold. And yess, I'm deeply appreciative to savor the moment, of train travel experience the best ever. ❤
I'm from the 50's throughout, so I'm loving this. KUDOS!! CHEERS!! CELEBRATION!! PERFECTO!! BRAVO!! Amtrak, you're a passenger's dream come true. Yayy!! Wahoo!!
I'm ecstatic period. This moment right now, as Jeb and his friends collaborate, duration while in.transit. A hotel on wheels is everything. Nonstop!!
Really enjoy this adventure provided as such.
Thank yuu soo very much,
Amtrak personnel, colleagues, Superiors, attendants, travel consultants, etc. You're the bestof the best, amongst the rest. Engineers, Conductors, Baggage handlers, Ticket agents, and all other who've made it, possible for us to board, depart, and arrive to our destinations.
i rode this train twice back when i was 18. great train met some amazing people, even got lucky in a sleeper car :D best trip ever
Mind-boggling views along this gigantic route and by far one of the best ways to travel long distances. You have done an amazing job Jeb.