I noticed the Rail Delivery Group were about to withdraw from Interrail, but have now scrapped the idea.
I say keep it. I've travelled twice on youthful Interrail cards and can say that both trips are still packed with memories.
I started one of them in London, and the other in Germany (where I was living, at the time). And yes, I still have that small orange tent. The map shows approximately trip one. Entirely made up as we went along. The Alps and Greek Islands.
I know that people go on gap years now, to Australia, South America and India, but there's something densely packed about the experiences when one can simply write a new destination into a little book, hop a train, and go there.
Some examples, notwithstanding the changes in security, currency and correctness.
- sitting outside a smoky sunlit cafe in Brussels, with a copy of the Thomas Cook timetable, planning a route. The whole of Europe beckons.
- arriving in any European train station and looking for the lockers to stash backpacks.
- staying in German youth hostels and marvelling at their hotel-like quality.
- sleeping rough on park benches, under silver space blankets and with just enough local currency to buy a coffee and croissant in the morning.
- arriving in Venice on the day of the Historical Regatta.
- climbing the Acropolis in the midday sun.
- listening to other tourists marvelling as they do just one of our sightseeing trips
- Buying those little flat Greek leather sandals that I still wear.
- Being asked by the gun-toting Caribineri, to move from the steps of the train station in Rome
- Running, breathless, to catch the deck class ship from Patras to Brindisi
- Being offered packs of 200 cigarettes by 8-year-old boys in Naples
- Marvelling at how the train's formation would keep changing, and the coffee would reflect the local culture.
- Being offered a lift by Swiss baker to the local camp site.
- Seeing the frenzy of white goods like fridges being loaded onto the train in Serbia.
- Saying "See you in Rome," as our group divided, from the grassy slopes of Grindelwald.
- Planning a longer route in order to sleep overnight on the train.
- Triumphantly getting a couchette carriage.
- Pitching a tent on the beach in Greece.
- The cliche of meeting someone we knew, in the sea, on the shores of the Mediterranean
- Finding the Diana the Huntress Club in Athens, leaving all our bags and then getting stranded overnight on Aegina when we missed the last catamaran.
- Heading up the Jungfraujoch to the Ice Station and the Glacier, in the Swiss Alps, fresh from the sun of Greece.
- Eating beautiful red Rhone grapes as we flashed through the French countryside on a quiet express.
- Turning up at the Montreux jazz festival.
- Getting picked from the platform by a 'little old lady' to stay in her rental room in Salzburg.
- Stopping off in Belgrade because we'd been on the same train for 24 hours.
- Finding the Prater (Harry Lime) and the Blue Danube (not the big wide brown one) in Vienna.
- Walking through Pompeii
I've been back to many of the places, on a combination of business and car-based road trips, but there's a certain magical thrill to arriving all low-carbon-footprint with one's belongings on one's back, in the main train station.
Hmmm. I'm still tempted...