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European Sleeper experience

GW43125

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P.s @GW43125 do you know if this is a one off or if it will be a regular occurrence thought the summer?
27, 29, 30 June & 2nd July are the dates I've been given by email.

Unfortunately ended up abandoning Euro sleeper in favour of the NJ direct to Vienna as it looks like there are no trains across the Dresden-Prague border at all on those dates.
 
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nwales58

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29 June to 04 July is the bus period Dresden-Usti nad Labem.
Early and late RJ257 and EC179 still run in that period but I would expect them to be packed.
 

GW43125

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29 June to 04 July is the bus period Dresden-Usti nad Labem.
Early and late RJ257 and EC179 still run in that period but I would expect them to be packed.
Thanks for confirming, would've been nice to have been told and save myself the small fortune I've just coughed up to Eurostar and ÖBB!
 

StephenHunter

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27, 29, 30 June & 2nd July are the dates I've been given by email.

Unfortunately ended up abandoning Euro sleeper in favour of the NJ direct to Vienna as it looks like there are no trains across the Dresden-Prague border at all on those dates.
Big problem is that the Dresden route is the only route across the German-Czech border with two tracks or wires. The Cheb route is your main alternative.
 

rvdborgt

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Thanks for confirming, would've been nice to have been told and save myself the small fortune I've just coughed up to Eurostar and ÖBB!
I think I wrote earlier not to rebook yourself, since European Sleeper would have been obliged to get you to your booked destination at no additional costs.
 

GW43125

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I think I wrote earlier not to rebook yourself, since European Sleeper would have been obliged to get you to your booked destination at no additional costs.
I appreciate that, had Prague been my final destination and/or there had been other trains I'd have agreed with you, unfortunately the timings wouldn't have worked out.
 

Krokodil

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I travelled from Berlin to Brussels on Thursday night. Overall I was satisfied. The coach was tired but clean, the bunks were comfortable (I thought that I'd booked in a six berth compartment but ended up in a five), having an opening window meant that we got ventilation (I've had sleepless nights before in compartments where the aircon wasn't up to the job), several toilets were out of action so I did have to walk a coach and a half before finding one that worked. It arrived at Berlin Hbf an hour late (mercifully as my train from Poland was late too) but seemed to make up time by the Dutch border. In the Netherlands it did have quite an abrupt stop at some point, and the rest of the journey was signal-to-signal (presumably due to lost path) so it arrived in Brussels 39 minutes late. Not too late by sleeper standards, particularly for anything which goes near Germany. I didn't mind the late arrival because it reduced the time festering in Brussels before my Eurostar.

Most importantly I had a good night's sleep, something I haven't had on some of the Nightjets I've taken, nor on a Caledonian Sleeper Mk3 (right at the end of service), never mind the lumpy middle berths in a Romanian couchette (the bunk folds around the headrest wings on those). A youth spent at sea has got me used to a rocking motion and white noise which probably helps. I certainly slept better than I did the following night in my own bed, where the cat kept pestering me.
 

danchester

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(I thought that I'd booked in a six berth compartment but ended up in a five)
They're phasing out the six berth compartments, if you book one more often than not you'll find yourself getting a free upgrade. The five berths are often even used as seating cars with the bunks folded up.

Sounds like you had a good trip!
 

AdamWW

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They're phasing out the six berth compartments, if you book one more often than not you'll find yourself getting a free upgrade. The five berths are often even used as seating cars with the bunks folded up.

Yes I booked a place in a 6 berth comparment (I think it was cheaper than the 5 berth ones, but I also fancied the opening window) and ended up in a 5 berth.

Then it turned out that the windows open anyway (if you apply enough force!)

Worked out very well - had the top one on the two berth side which meant I had a view out of the window from in bed and also access to the storage area above the door to put things on.

I don't know what happened to the 6th person booked into it though, if there was one.
 

Krokodil

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Sounds like you had a good trip!
Yes, the €90 fare wasn't much more than I'd have paid Nightjet (FIP rate) if that had been available (I assume that it didn't run due to engineering work as I couldn't find any tickets available). The matching days of the week did mean booking an extra day's leave as I would otherwise have departed on the Wednesday.

So pretty good value for money. I presume that the economics of it compare favourably with other sleeper operations as they appear to be able to fill a long train without the trouble and expense involved with portion working.
 

danchester

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So pretty good value for money. I presume that the economics of it compare favourably with other sleeper operations as they appear to be able to fill a long train without the trouble and expense involved with portion working.
Yes it's a great choice of route, covers multiple major destinations at both ends with no portion working. (The 6am arrival in Berlin/Amsterdam is too early for me but doesn't seem to be putting off others!)

That said, some people were murmuring about the donation link they added to this morning's newsletter potentially being a sign of trouble ("Exciting news in the works. Support us to get the night train to Barcelona on track. https://www.europeansleeper.eu/donate"). Asking for donations - after three sharefunding rounds and four loans - certainly doesn't project confidence and profitability! But I've heard positive noises about their plans for Barcelona recently and the fact that they're still talking about expansion in the first place is surely a good sign, hopefully it's just a question of acquiring capital to make the expansion work.
 

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