SUMMER 1997
AMTRAK TRAVELOGUE
PART IV OF
VII
THE CALIFORNIA ZEPHYR
by Carol Larsen
ka9hfa@arrl.net
SATURDAY, JUNE 28, 1997
The final activities of the National Railway Historical Society
convention ended just before dinner. I
planned to eat with Brad and Ruth, the only other Northwoods
Chapter members at the convention.
However, first I thought I would begin checking on the progress of the
westbound California Zephyr which was due into Salt Lake
City at 12:13 AM
and scheduled to depart at 1:05
AM. To my surprise, the agent at 1-800-USA-RAIL
told me the Zephyr was only 17 minutes late leaving Grand
Junction, CO. Based on that information, I made
arrangements with the Bell Captain for a 12:00
midnight shuttle ride to the depot,
with the possibility of changing that if the train would run later.
After dinner with my friends, I returned to my room to
pack. How I would miss being in the same
room for enough days to be able to settle in, and also the beautiful view of
the mountains. Well, Amtrak has an
advantage over that with the ever-changing views. At 11:15 PM
when the Zephyr should have been between Provo,
UT and Salt Lake City,
I decided to call again. This time I was
told it was 2-1/4 hours late at Helper, UT, which would mean that it had just
left Helper at 10:52! That was quite some time to lose in a short
distance, which made me suspicious of the information I received in one or both
calls. I verified with the agent that it
had been only 7 minutes late at Grand Junction. She said it was then 54 minutes late at Green
River, UT and lost the rest of
the time (1 hour and 21 minutes) in the 71 miles to
Helper. She said that would put the Zephyr into Salt
Lake City at about 2:30
AM if they didn't make up any time.
Salt Lake City is a
52-minute service stop, which could be cut shorter. She advised me to be at the station at 2:00 AM.
I pity any poor person who took that advice!
I checked in with the Bell Captain and cancelled my 12:00 midnight
shuttle trip, telling him I would check with Amtrak again in about an
hour. The train might have made up some
time by Provo or even arrived in Provo
by then (scheduled time 10:42 PM). I was still suspicious of the latest agent
advice.
SUNDAY, JUNE 29, 1997
When I called again at 12:15
AM, the agent seemed a little confused, but told me the Zephyr was
expected to arrive at Salt Lake City
at 12:47 AM! There appears to be some padding in the
schedule between Provo and Salt
Lake City, a distance of 44 miles which shouldn't take
an hour and 31 minutes. By then I really
wasn't sure which, if any, agent I should believe, but would rather be safe
than sorry. I told the Bell Captain I
wanted a 12:30 AM shuttle ride.
Another conventioneer was in the lobby, a man from New
York City who was also to catch the westbound
Zephyr. He, too, had been told to be at
the depot at 2:00 AM, but decided to
take my advice and go right away. We
brought our luggage to the lobby, hopped into the shuttle van, and were at the
depot by 12:35 AM. I asked the ticket agent when he expected the
train. He asked me when I would like the
train to be there. I said, "I'm
here, so any time now!" He then
said that it would be there "any time now--at 12:47 AM."
Good planning on my part! I saw a
few other conventioneers in the depot who had been
waiting awhile, having planned to be there before the scheduled 12:13 AM time.
Salt Lake City
is a crew change point as well as a service stop, so the new conductors were
there to take our tickets before the train arrived. About that time, we heard the train whistle;
it pulled in as we headed for the platform.
There was a large group of sleeping car passengers for all three
sleepers, so one of the conductors went down the platform to alert the
sleeper attendants. The sleepers were near the end of the
train. I've been accustomed to finding
the sleepers at the head of the train, except for those to be cut off with part
of a train going to a different destination.
My car attendant, Bill Woelfel,
was nowhere to be found, so the woman attendant from the next car came to help
his passengers board.
As I had expected, there were Superliner I sleepers
on the Zephyr. In my room I found a
silver-grey paper bag imprinted in teal green with a
zephyr logo and the words "Great Trains of the West" and "Room
No. ___." The color scheme reminded
me of the Superliner II room colors. In the bag were toiletries: lotion, shampoo,
talc, deodorant,
shave cream, disposable shaver, and shower cap.
With the servicing completed, the Zephyr departed Salt
Lake City at 1:27 AM,
only 22 minutes late. By 1:30 AM, I had settled into bed, staying awake
just long enough to see Great Salt Lake right outside my
window on the left side of the car. That
brings up another point. I had thought
my room, number 5, would be on the north (right) side of the train instead of the
south side. Either I was wrong or the
car was reversed. It doesn't really make
that much difference to me, especially on a short trip such as this.
During the night, I slept well and was only vaguely aware
of a radio transmission about a grain train trying to get ahead of Amtrak. I awoke around 5:30
AM somewhere in the Nevada
desert. Daylight was breaking but I fell
back asleep while hearing something on the radio about calling a cab for an
Elko, NV passenger. I guessed we were
running later again, probably because of the grain train. The next thing I knew, my travel clock said 7:35--time to be up and doing. By the time I was almost ready to go for
breakfast, it occurred to me that I should have set my watch and clock back an
hour for Pacific Daylight Time, so I slowed down a little and headed to
the diner at 7:45 PDT as they were calling numbers 1
through 4.
As I left my room, I caught my first glimpse of Bill at
the opposite end of the car. On my way
through the other two sleepers, I became aware of a lot of passengers having
English accents, maybe a tour group. How
wonderful for them to see our beautiful country on the California Zephyr, which
has the best and most dramatic scenery of any of the Amtrak routes I have traveled. I wished that I could have included the Rocky
Mountain portion of the Zephyr
route in my travels again this year, but it didn't fit in with my stops and
allotted time.
In the diner, Calvin, the steward, gave me number
26. I went on to the next car, a Superliner II lounge car, until my number was called. Calvin seated me with an older lady from Texas,
who was overdressed by modern travel standards in a paisley suit with a pearl
necklace. Also at our table were two
women from Florida who had
attended a floral convention in Salt Lake City. The conversation centered on previous
travel. Our waiter, Willey Loyd, announced they were out of the omelet which I would
have ordered, so I had pancakes instead.
After breakfast, I returned to the lounge until we
arrived in Sparks, NV,
a service stop where I could walk the platform and take photos. The man from New York
City who shared the hotel shuttle with me saw me
making notes and asked what the engine numbers were. He said those were the same two he had come
out with the previous week. Before
breakfast, I had heard an HBD axle
count of 64. The consist was as
follows:
P42 59
P42 11 (back to back)
MHC 1523
Baggage car 1166
Transition Sleeper 39019
Coach
34054
Coach
34033
Coach
34049
Coach
31519
Sightseer Lounge 33043
Diner
38036
Sleeper
32013
Sleeper
32028
Sleeper
32038
Coach
34101
Diner
38043
One of the coaches contained the smoking room on the
lower level. I don't recall which Amtrak
route was the original "smoke free" route where no smoking was
allowed anywhere on the train. It was nice
not having blue air in the lounge car, but the extended "smoking
stops" at certain cities made a late train run even later. The smoking rooms have solved this problem.
As I reboarded at my sleeper, I
spoke with Bill. He's still
familiarizing himself with this portion of the route, as he was displaced from
the Desert Wind in May. I asked him the
purpose of the extra diner and coach at the end of the train. They were empty cars being transferred from Chicago
to Oakland. We left Sparks at 10:45 AM, only 50 minutes
late.
I returned to the lounge car to be able to see scenery on
both sides of the train. I overheard
comments from several parties who were looking for the Mustang Ranch mentioned
in the Route Guide and didn't know it wasn't a ranch! Before I knew it, Calvin was announcing
lunch, but I decided to wait about another hour. The Chief of Onboard Services was giving a
commentary on the Donner Party as we approached the Donner Pass and Lake area.
As I began to feel hungry, I obtained number 11 from
Calvin. While waiting for my number to
be called, I went to the lower level of the lounge car with the intention of
buying a California Zephyr mug. Sue, the
attendant, was out of them by then. She
said she hadn't been issued her full complement of souvenir supplies and some
of her mugs were either broken or for the Lakeshore Ltd. There were no sweatshirts or caps at
all. I hadn't thought about a
sweatshirt; depending upon what they looked like, I might have wanted one. Well, it would have only caused another
suitcase overload problem. That's the
trouble with trying to travel light when you're going to be away from home
almost a month! Since I wouldn't be back
on the Zephyr this trip,
Sue very generously offered to mail one to me when she
returned to Chicago. I gave her my card and she noted "Zephyr
mug" and my date of return home on the back. She didn't want me to pay for it then, but if
it comes I'll be sure to send her an extra large check.
Back upstairs in the lounge car, I listened in on an
interesting conversation between a couple of other conventioneers about Amtrak
funding and passenger rail. If I hadn't
been in such a rush when Calvin called my number at 1:35, I might have been seated in the diner with them,
as their numbers were also called then.
Instead, I was seated with a lady from Virginia
traveling to Oakland and a man and
his son from Germany
coming from Chicago to San
Francisco, who were interesting table partners in
their own right.
At an adjacent table, I overheard a conversation from an
intelligent-looking young couple from Chicago. The wife asked their table companions if they
knew when we would be coming to the Sahara. What?!
Her husband corrected her by saying that it was the Sierras, but I had
the feeling that they were still expecting a desert. I couldn't hear their table companions'
response, but later I heard the young woman say she's a high school math
teacher. Good thing she doesn't teach
Geography!
With my attention returned to our table, I ordered the
chicken soup and salad. The lady ordered
soup and the burger and the man and his son ordered tortellini. While they were waiting for their tortellinis, another waiter brought tortellini to two coach
attendants who had just sat down at a table at the end of the diner. Shortly after that, Randolph, our waiter,
told the man and his son that they were out of tortellini and they would have
to order
something else. Mmmm! I was the only one to order dessert--a good
slice of warm apple pie.
Since the man and his son would also be taking the
Thruway bus into San Francisco, we
had a discussion of what stops were best for us. I had yet to decide, since the stops had been
changed since I last went into San Francisco
in 1994. Then, I still caught the
Thruway bus in Oakland at the old
SP station. The only stop in San
Francisco was the Ferry
Building, although the schedule
also showed a stop at the Caltrain station. Shortly thereafter, the transfer point was
changed to Emeryville.
At Sacramento,
we were 54 minutes behind schedule. It
was a relief to come into that city less than an hour late instead of 14 hours
late like the week before! I didn't
anticipate arriving on time into Emeryville because the schedule padding takes
place between there and Oakland.
At 4:55 PM when we left Suisun-Fairfield 1 hour and 6
minutes late, Bill announced that the Chief of Onboard Services was holding his
"Chief's Round-Up" in one end of the dining car for all sleeping car
passengers: complimentary cheese, melon, crackers, dip, etc. I wasn't hungry, but went down for some
snacks and photos. That end of the diner
was crowded, but most people were taking their goodies back to their rooms.
We arrived in Emeryville at 6:00
PM, and hour and 5 minutes late.
This was the first time I had detrained in Emeryville, so the station
was new to me. Unfortunately, when the
train stopped, the sleepers were far down the platform from the station. I had a long way to wheel my luggage down the
platform, through the station, and out to the front walk where the Thruway
buses were loading. There was a mob of people waiting to board, a
lot of whom were confused about which stop they wanted
in San Francisco. The bus I boarded wasn't stopping at Union
Square.
Although I had determined that stop was probably only a couple of blocks
from my hotel, I had chosen the Ferry
Building where I knew I could get a
cab most readily. By then, I wasn't up
for wheeling my luggage a couple of city blocks. Since I've been home, I received one of my
transportation bulletins describing the fact that in June the Union
Square stop was temporarily moved a few blocks
further and renamed to something about shopping district. That would have made it an even less
desirable option for me.
I shared the front seat with a man from northern Illinois
who was headed for a motel near the airport.
He was to pick up a rental car there the following morning. He had a change of plans from flying out or
he would have chosen a motel and rental car close to one of the Thruway bus
stops. He was hoping to find a
reasonably priced way from the Ferry Building
to his motel.
The Thruway buses pulled out at 6:25 PM and arrived at the Ferry
Building at 6:45, despite heavy traffic and streets that had been blocked
off for a Gay and Lesbian parade and festival.
The street adjacent to the Ferry
Building was littered unbelievably
with food and paper refuse from the festival food stands. Upon our arrival, I went inside the Amtrak
office and waiting room. Another
change--this had been moved into a larger section since the last time I was
here. Heading to the automated travel
information board, I selected the button for Taxi. The man who answered said he wouldn't be able
to send a cab there because of the parade/festival. I assured him that the traffic was coming
through, so he said he'd see what he could do.
Back outside, I told the Illinois
man about the airport shuttle button on the info board, but in the meantime the
bus driver had promised to work something out for him. As I waited in front of the Amtrak office, I
saw some people further down the curb grab an empty cab that had turned into
the driveway. Was that my cab? I decided to select a more advantageous
position and soon grabbed a cab that was discharging passengers there. I don't think we took the most direct route
to my hotel, but at least we didn't become trapped in all the crazy post-parade
downtown traffic. The cab fare from the Ferry
Building to the Westin St. Francis
was $7.20, about what I had previously paid for an equal distance in San
Francisco. By 7:45 PM, I was checked into my hotel from
which the Globus tour would depart at 8:15 the next morning.
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Copyright © 1997 by Carol Larsen