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Author: JohannesJohannes Date: Aug 15, 2008 03:48
Sorry for my question being mostly off-topic, but maybe you can help
me anyway ...
Next week I'll be travelling from London to Paris by Eurostar. Maybe
someone on this group who uses this route frequently could give me an
impression whether the trains on this route arrive fairly on time at
Paris-Nord.
I have to catch a connection in Paris at Gare de l'Est, which is only
a short distance to walk, but I wonder if one can make it in the 45-
minute gap between arrival and departure if my train was delayed.
Thanks,
Johannes
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Author: RichardRichard Date: Aug 15, 2008 05:12
On Fri, 15 Aug 2008 03:48:52 -0700 (PDT), Johannes
gmx.net> wrote:
>I have to catch a connection in Paris at Gare de l'Est, which is only
>a short distance to walk, but I wonder if one can make it in the 45-
>minute gap between arrival and departure if my train was delayed.
I would say it's just about OK. 45 minutes is the least I would
allow, though. Other people here may well be less optimistic than I
am, I tend to do things at the last minute!
I've had two late arrivals that I can remember, but all the others
have been perfect. My worst journey was the other way, from Est to
Nord, after a sleeper arrived very late from Zurich.
You could be 20-25 minutes late and still get there anyway. There's
not much to admire on a slow walk!
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Author: eastendereastender Date: Aug 15, 2008 05:46
Richard wrote:
> - do I have a ticket for the whole journey - might help if things go
> wrong?
Yes- whatever you do make sure you have a Eurostar ticket in advance.
Last year I went from Gard du Nord from Gare de Lyon to catch the last
London train and got there with an hour to spare but they had no
dedicated counter to sell economy class tickets for that train and
several of us had to queue behind people buying complicated advanced
stuff. Eventually, about five fo us were forced to buy business class
tickets (over 300 euros) as there were of course about three people
sitting at those desks doing nothing. I emailed Eurostar to complain
later and they did send me a free open first class return.
However, I do realise that even a single economy Eurostar fare can be
costly - much more often than a return.
E.
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Author: BoltarBoltar Date: Aug 15, 2008 05:40
On Aug 15, 11:48 am, Johannes gmx.net> wrote:
> Sorry for my question being mostly off-topic, but maybe you can help
> me anyway ...
>
> Next week I'll be travelling from London to Paris by Eurostar. Maybe
> someone on this group who uses this route frequently could give me an
> impression whether the trains on this route arrive fairly on time at
> Paris-Nord.
Its always been on time when I've used it but it would be unwise to
rely on it. Sods law says it'll be late just when you're running to a
tight schedule. Could you not get the previous eurostar?
B2003
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Author: Arthur FiggisArthur Figgis Date: Aug 15, 2008 14:21
eastender wrote:
> Richard wrote:
>
>> - do I have a ticket for the whole journey - might help if things go
>> wrong?
>
> Yes- whatever you do make sure you have a Eurostar ticket in advance.
> Last year I went from Gard du Nord from Gare de Lyon to catch the last
> London train and got there with an hour to spare but they had no
> dedicated counter to sell economy class tickets for that train and
> several of us had to queue behind people buying complicated advanced
> stuff. Eventually, about five fo us were forced to buy business class
> tickets (over 300 euros) as there were of course about three people
> sitting at those desks doing nothing. I emailed Eurostar to complain
> later and they did send me a free open first class return.
Killing time by playing with a ticket machine in Lille Flanders (not the
Eurostar station) station a few months ago, I found that it appeared to
offer tickets to London.
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Author: Phil RichardsPhil Richards Date: Aug 16, 2008 03:18
Arthur Figgis wrote:
> eastender wrote:
>> However, I do realise that even a single economy Eurostar fare can be
>> costly - much more often than a return.
>
> At least from the UK, it is in my experience usually (always?) cheaper
> to buy a return and throw half away.
There are some one way promotional fares starting at £44 which have been
around for some while now.
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Author: JohannesJohannes Date: Aug 17, 2008 02:40
Thanks to all of you for your replies. I finally bought a return
ticket for the connection (as I would have to leave a full hour
earlier, which I probably can't), so I hope it will work out. For the
return journey I noticed that all suggested connections include longer
interchange times for the check-in.
Regards,
Johannes
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Author: PhilGPhilG Date: Aug 24, 2008 09:31
The 3 times I've used it since the British high speed line was opened,
it's always
arrived exactly on time.
And anyway, if it's late and you miss an ongoing connection to
somewhere else, then
you simply need to ask the train manager to endorse your ticket and
then you can use
your onward ticket on the next available train... even if it it
theoretically restricted to
a specific one. (You'd need to get the ticket office at Gare de l'Est
to print you out a new
ticket, but they will provided the E* one his been endorsed to prove
the delay was their
fault). The only time you're stuffed is if you need to catch the
last
train of the day and you miss it... coz they won't pay out for a
hotel.
phil
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