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GERMANY: Trains today

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After booking trains and hotels , I discovered I needed to be in Darmstadt on a day I was scheduled to be at the bottom of Germany, in Konstanz. Rebooking resulted in the convoluted itinerary of Trip 2024

For years, my plan was to spend a couple of weeks or a month each fall in some part of Germany. Unpack once, pick a cafe, become a “regular.” Post in “chapters,” sharing parts of the city you don’t read about in the travel blogs. 

This time, memories or personal connections led me to half a dozen cities from Frankfurt in middle Germany to Konstanz on the big lake at the bottom of the country. 

Regional train

The backbone of the itinerary was the train.

Alas, I probably picked the wrong year for train trips. This year, the national train operator, Deutsche Bahn (German Rail), started a nationwide rebuilding project that added construction woes to the sad performance it’s trying to correct. 

The official German rule is any train that arrives six minutes or more behind schedule is “late”

Missed timetables in Germany have exploded the myth of trains so punctual you could set your watch by them. In 2023, about one-third of trains were late. By June this year, it was half.  

Everybody seems to agree that the real train problem is years of short-term profit-pursuit that has resulted in aging infrastructure — cars, tracks, switches, signal boxes, power lines, communications, etc. — that now seems to be breaking down faster than it can be fixed. 

I asked one German whether six minutes really bothered her. She said train timetables are the data people have to go on when they make plans. The impact was felt most when she was commuting to work, where punctuality was expected, or when she making a journey with multiple train transfers.

I knew what she meant about transfers. On three of my eight trips, I needed to get off one train, find the platform where my next train was departing and haul my bag aboard in 5 minutes flat. Or less.

My first delay cut my “interchange” (time to switch trains) from 5 minutes to 4. My second delay left me with one minute to switch trains. I made it only because my next train was even later. Rail-crossing repair. 

The drivers apologized for the delays at every stop. But in truth, much of the ride reminded me of why people used to love the train. 

The rides, especially in the intercity expresses, were smooth, clean and quiet. Announcements in the cars and on the platforms were crisp and clear. Wi-fi worked reliably for email, train information, maps, look-ups, etc.

DB App

The best defense against delays and cancellations was DB App, the train company’s own tool. It showed each stop on a journey with two sets of times. One was scheduled; the other actual. And the actual was behind in red most of the time. At least, you knew.

This summer, the train company began work on — read that: “shut down” — the tracks between some large cities. The first project involved the stretch between Frankfurt, where I landed, and Mannheim. That’s the route to Heidelberg, where I was going. 

In the stations, passengers often were left to navigate around construction by lines painted on the floors

They canceled Frankfurt-Heidelberg twice, forcing me to find a substitute each time. Didn’t cost me anything but frustration. In Germany, if you miss your train and it’s the train company’s fault, your ticket normally is good on the trains you use to get to your destination. If it’s your fault and you don’t have a flexible ticket, you often have to buy a new one.

That stretch between Frankfurt and Mannheim carries about 30,000 passengers a day and is said to be the most traveled in Germany. Officials say that nationwide the project will upgrade 40 lines to be part of a high-performance network by 2030.

That’s a dozen upgrades involving 80 miles of overhead lines, 150 switches, 265,000 cars and more than 70 miles of track. Between now and Christmas.

NEXT: Scene on the street


Comments

7 responses to “GERMANY: Trains today”

  1. Ken Avatar
    Ken

    Sorry to hear about your German train woes, Clint. German trains are obviously superior to those in Portugal, which use older rolling stock and simpler technology. Still, trains here usually get the job done on time except … for labor disputes. And do we have those here! Public sector workers — transit, doctors, nurses and teachers — are always calling temporary, rolling strikes. So, whenever you’re looking to do a train trip, you’d better check the news to see if they’ve called a strike for that day. I will say the situation has improved a bit since April, when a new government was elected; the unions seem to be giving them some breathing room. French rail is just as bad with its “temporary” strikes, by the way. Have run into that problem on several trips over the years. You’ve got to wonder if there’s a better way to run a railroad!

  2. Steve nichols Avatar
    Steve nichols

    Great pictures Clint. How about worker strikes ….do they affect all train lines. Are the lines regionally or nationally funded?

    1. Clint Swift Avatar

      Yes, strikes definitely play a role. It’s all announced in advance, as if people really can make alternate arrangements for commutes, etc. And there’s a season, too. At a certain point in negotiations. But there’s a sense of civic responsibility or something, as well. An announced strike might be suspended if there’s a huge football (soccer) match or other holiday or something. Kind of makes you smile. Neither side can afford to anger people or press, I guess. I just plain lucked out. No strikes looming over me while I was there.

      Germany is only about the size of a couple of our states, so the lines between cities and from the suburbs into the cities (S-Bahn) are run by a nationally funded corporation, Deutsche Bahn. Those are mostly high-speed, limited-stop, sort of expensive. But nice. Supplementing are the regional lines that are different in areas or cities.

  3. J B Weilepp Avatar
    J B Weilepp

    Last fall my partner and I traveled to six cities in five countries on four different rail systems. We had booked our travel in the US before departing for Europe. We booked first class ticketing to ensure that we would have seats on our journey.

    Overall, we were a little disappointed in the level and quality of service on all four rail carriers (Austrian, Dutch, Danish, and German). For example, the Dutch train from Amsterdam to Berlin ran out of food, the Danish train had a first-class car that was closed and locked on the round trip between Hamburg and Copenhagen, causing us to find seating in the crowded second-class coach cars, and the Austrian train did not have wi-fi in first or second-class coaches. By comparison, the DB ICE (InnerCity Express) trains were superior in all aspects except when having to quickly change trains in major train terminals such as in Hamburg and Muenchen (Munich). I was also surprised at the overall lack of express trains to and from Hamburg to Copenhagen, and from and from Munich to Venice.

    Overall, it was evident that DB has allowed the quality of service and rail infrastructure to decline in the dozen or so years since it was privatized. With the exception of the modern Haupt Bahnhof in Berlin and the Bahnhof at the Frankfurt International Airport, passenger rail stations are dated and in need of upgrades.

    Aside from the inconsistent quality of service, the enjoyable part of our train travel was meeting and talking with our fellow passengers. By in large, they spoke English and were very helpful to assisting us find seating in a crowded second-class coach.

    1. Clint Swift Avatar

      Great supplement to my German experience, JB. Thanks for widening the conversation.

  4. IVY Avatar
    IVY

    Certainly enjoyed your experience with the trains in Germany. Living in Texas, it makes me wonder why we can’t have a decent train system here. Trains on the east coast are fast, safe and a wonderful way to travel. My grandkids live in Japan and take their bullet trains everywhere. Given the severe traffic problems in Texas (and I suspect everywhere) wouldn’t it be terrific to be able to travel from San Antonio, Austin, Dallas and Houston by train.

    1. Clint Swift Avatar

      Agree! I’ll never know what it means to be German. But it wouldn’t surprise me if they would find life incredibly strange without trains, just as many Texans can’t seem to imagine life not based on cars and trucks.

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