Sunday Times

ITALY BY RAIL

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We are going to Italy in September. We will first fly to Rome and immediatel­y take a train to Milan. Next destinatio­n is Naples followed by Sorrento and then back to Rome. We want to travel by train. What train system is the best? Is it Eurail or should we book a train ticket for each trip. Please advise. — Athol Weiderman

Firstly I must commend you for wanting to travel by rail on your trip to Italy. Trains offer superior travel in every way, especially in Europe with its efficient network of high-speed rail links. Railway stations are usually in the centres of the cities and you don’t have to worry about traffic or finding parking — or the unsettling experience of driving on the other side of the road. Budget flights may be cheap but, after factoring in travel to the airport, check-in, the flight and then travel from the airport at the other end, a one-hour flight can be a four- or five-hour torture-fest.

And you can take you own food and drink on the trains.

Now, the money. While a Eurail pass allows flexibilit­y to vary travel dates and routes, it may be overkill for the trains you wish to take.

Eurail (eurail.com) is running special offers on single-country passes for Italy, but it’s likely that buying single advance-purchase tickets will be cheaper. The cheapest Eurail passes allow fewer days of travel in any given month while the most expensive pass — currently à245 (R3 965) — allows eight days of rail travel.

The 570km trip to Milan is usually a straightfo­rward three-hour journey aboard a high-speed Frecciaros­sa train — one of 80 such trains operated by Trenitalia between Rome and Milan daily (note that there are two stations in Rome — Roma Termini and Roma Tiburtina — and two in Milan, and that this can complicate fares and timings).

A test booking for early September on the booking website Rail Europe (raileurope-world.com) turned up standard fares at à44.90 and à55.90, as well as a cheap fare of à36.30 but which involves an eight-hour journey and a change of trains.

On the Milan to Naples leg, Rail Europe turned up direct trains taking a little over four hours, with the lowest standard fare at à42.90 and an average fare of à54.90.

For the last leg from Naples to Rome, Rail Europe showed fares of around à19 to à46, with most fares at à24.90 for the one-hour journey. At standard fares, the three train rides will cost about à112, significan­tly less than the special-offer Eurail pass.

You can book these trains through Rail Europe or through Trenitalia — the state rail operator — itself. However, I found the Trenitalia website (trenitalia.com) clunky and almost impossible to use. You could also try booking directly through ItaliaRail

(italiarail.com), a clean and userfriend­ly website which offers competitiv­e fares.

From Naples to Sorrento, you have two options: the everyday narrowgaug­e electric Circumvesu­viana suburban train to Sorrento or the Campania Express (eavsrl.it/web)

— a tourist train run by the same operator as the Circumvesu­viana and which stops at places such as Herculaneu­m and Pompeii on its way to Sorrento.

The Circumvesu­viana is the more “real” experience. It’s cheaper too — about à3.60 compared to à8(à15 return) on the Campania Express.

The pickpocket­s on the “real” train come free of charge.

The Circumvesu­viana trains run from Naples’ Garibaldi station but it’s probably better to catch them from the Porta Nolana terminus, where you’ll get on before the crowds.

Trains run roughly every 20 minutes — there’s a timetable at eavsrl.it

(click on the “translate” button when you open the web page) — while the Campania Express runs six times daily in each direction.

You can buy Circumvesu­viana tickets at the station ticket offices but many travellers suggest buying tickets from local newsagents, where you won’t have to queue. Trains get crowded at rush hour — this is a commuter service after all. The 47km journey takes just over an hour.

There are also ferries between Naples and Sorrento. If you’re travelling with lots of luggage, this may be a more civilised option. The fast boat — a hydrofoil — is operated by Alilauro

(alilauro.it) and costs à13.10 per person, one way.

 ?? Picture: 123rf.com/polifoto ?? QUICK STOP A high-speed train waits for passengers at the Garibaldi station in Naples, Italy.
Picture: 123rf.com/polifoto QUICK STOP A high-speed train waits for passengers at the Garibaldi station in Naples, Italy.
 ??  ?? PAUL ASH ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS
PAUL ASH ANSWERS YOUR QUESTIONS

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