Traffic was very heavy. We had originally planned to head to the Burlington area, but there was a layer of clouds approaching from the south and west, so we changed our destination to northeastern Vermont. We were a bit behind the biggest crowds, arriving at our destination about 2:45, after the eclipse was already started; even so, both northbound lanes of I-91 had a steady stream of traffic from White River Junction (where we got on) northward. North of Fairlee the speed slowed to about 20 mph, so we got off and took the parallel US-5, which was moving at about 40 mph but also had a constant stream of traffic.fdaley - How was traffic? I had originally considered driving up that way from NJ but figured the traffic might be a problem. I ended up going to Montreal and am actually sitting at the border right now on the Adirondack coming home. It was a phenomenal show in Montreal… glad I did it.
Kudos to Amtrak for their handling of this. Perhaps there might be some new riders as a result of a good train experience by those who otherwise might not have considered going by train.I guess I could mention that I was on the 391/392 combo from Chicago to Carbondale and back on the day of the eclipse. That's how I knew of the schedule adjustment the day the change was made.
Going down, a crew from CBS 2 Chicago was roaming about the boarding line and platform at Chicago Union Station, getting video of eclipse watchers about to board the train. The Charger locomotive had SPECIAL written out on its display. I was seated in the last car, one of the three cars that otherwise would have been along for the ride to maintain CN's axle-count requirement had Amtrak not announced several days beforehand that they would open up an extra car to increase capacity on this trip. As the Trains article about the increased capacity predicted, the additional car was a coach-café. It was spotlessly clean and in great shape from what I could tell.
The train, as noted, was fully sold out. The conductors filled up three cars just with people going from Chicago to Carbondale. The remaining two operational cars were used either for "shorts" or people headed to Carbondale from stations beyond Chicago. Homewood and Champaign seemed to be the only places where we took on sizeable numbers of people. There were also a fair number of people traveling to Champaign, unfussed about the eclipse, I guess.
The train was essentially on time until we got to Laclede, where we had to stop for a while to let a slow CN freight train ahead of us get in between the switches at Tonti so we could run around them there. That whole process set us back about 30 minutes, a delay that couldn't be made up by Carbondale. Nevertheless, thanks to the adjusted schedule, we still arrived in Carbondale with plenty of time to spare before totality.
Arriving in Carbondale was fun. There were a lot of people with chairs or beach blankets set up to watch the eclipse from the open space just north of the station. Many were waving to us as the train slowed down on arrival. At the station, there were Amtrak personnel welcoming us to Carbondale. They also had complimentary eclipse glasses and bottles of water available. Local businesses and the Carbondale Chamber of Commerce had turned the street surrounding the station into a festive atmosphere.
In the evening, the soon-to-be-replaced, undersized Carbondale Amtrak station was packed inside and out with people waiting to board train 392. An Amtrak VP for, I believe, Midwest operations was there. He made an announcement over the speaker thanking us for traveling to the eclipse via Amtrak. The station agent was welcoming people to come grab the remaining complimentary bottles of water. In spite of all the people, Amtrak employees loaded everyone on the train in an efficient manner and we departed on time.
Riders going to Chicago or Homewood were placed into one of three cars. Many people who had taken the train down earlier in the day were doing what I was and taking the train back the same day, though there were also a good number of people who had stayed a night or two in Carbondale beforehand.
We took on big groups of presumptive eclipse watchers at Du Quoin and Centralia, both of which were also in the path of totality. By Centralia, people traveling as a group were being told they could sit in the SSL at the front of the train that was there for the axle-count. Past Effingham, which was right on the edge of totality, there appeared to be few or no people boarding at any of the stations except for perhaps Champaign, but there were people exiting the train along most of the route.
Anyone familiar with this route may know that the tracks parallel Interstate 57 rather closely for roughly 200 miles from north of Centralia to the outer suburbs of Chicago. I had heard numerous times that roads heading to Chicago were jam packed with traffic following the 2017 eclipse, during which the path of totality also happened to pass through southern Illinois. I would occasionally glance out the windows to see if I could see traffic conditions on the interstate. Most of the time, what I could see was that the northbound lanes, while not bumper-to-bumper, did indeed have a heavy number of vehicles. Additionally, we were traveling notably faster than they were, not just slightly faster as might be expected by the 79 mph rail limit vs. 70 mph interstate limit.
Some minor freight train interference and a few longer-than-scheduled station stops due to the number of people leaving the train put us about 30 minutes behind schedule after Kankakee. Nonetheless, with no major delays past that point, and about 20 minutes of padding in 392’s scheduled Chicago arrival, we arrived at Chicago Union Station only about 10 minutes late.
All in all, the Saluki and Illini proved to be quite an enjoyable, comfortable, and useful means to view the total solar eclipse.
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