The Scotsman

Staycation­s could change the shape of rail travel in the UK

Bespoke private train operations could cream off the tourist trade, says Keith Fenwick

- Internatio­nal rail expert Keith Fenwick for CILT

In Britain we are more used to tourists being expected to support service-trains whose functional appearance makes them seem unassuming compared with the scenery that they explore, with catering if any on hand from nothing better than a trolley. Some dedicated operators provide notable exceptions, but the top-of-the-range Royal Scotsman is beyond the price range of all but a few visitors to these shores.

Tourist destinatio­ns elsewhere in the world offer an experience that lies somewhere in between. Public transport users in sparsely-populated New Zealand outwith the two biggest cities long ago forsook trains for coaches and planes, but sufficient­ly many tourists board the Tranzalpin­e route across the South Island to have justified investment in attractive new rolling-stock. Australia is a mixture, with quality long-distance trains out of melbourne, Sydney and Brisbane for both locals and visitors, while The Indian Pacific and The Ghan which cross the continent once-weekly offer high-end accommodat­ion and off-train experience­s but no longer convey economy carriages.

Post-war investment in long-distance North American rail soon gave way to mass desertion by travellers attracted by the speed of flying, the economy of Greyhound coaches and the convenienc­e of the freeway. Away from the inter-city routes of the north-east, Amtrak provides a basic network focused on Chicago to serve people with an aversion to air travel, locals bound for intermedia­te places and tourists curious to see the country at ground level, but recent econo

mies in catering may have diminished its appeal, while stumps of some closed routes offer tourist-only products. canada' s two transconti­nental routes are sharply differenti­ated, The Canadian purveying faded glory in 1950 s carriage s with a variety of overnight accommodat­ion, while The Rocky Mountainee­r is a modern glass-roofed tourist train with quality catering, off-train excursions and all overnight stays in hotels. Mexico has only one surviving long-distance route, through the Copper Canyon, where a daily local train shares the track with another offering ex-us dome cars for tourists.

For most inhabitant­s of these countries,long-distance rail is an unfamiliar experience which must be packaged to enter their comfort zone – in the way that before the pandemic cruise operators had succeeded in re packaging sea travel. marketing thus becomes key, and between the lockdowns last year in Britain there were two notable developmen­ts – The Staycation Express offering journey opportunit­ies for tourists in upmarket carriages on the scenic settle& carlisle line, and the launch by Locomotive Services Limitedof two luxury trains for hire, including the Blue Pull man recreation of an iconic 1960s design – while the steamhaule­d Jacobite went from strength to strength, offering twice-daily service through up to half of the year. with a summer of holidaying at home in prospect, further developmen­t of these ideas is in prospect. But if bespoke private operations are going to cream off the tourists, will it be left to the likes of Community Rail Partnershi­ps to promote the service trains on which visitors and public transport-users have hitherto coexisted?

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