
We are travelling to Germany in July. We will have 7 people in our group including our German friend. She lives west of Stuttgart. We plan on taking a trip to Dachau/Munich then to Salzburg, and Berchtesgaden. From there we will head west to Fussen to tour Neuschwanstein and the Zugspitze. From there we will head home. I have looked the train routes up and if we go the train route it will add more time to our trip. I realize in Munich asia bangkok hotel standard and Salzburg that we will leave the car outside the city and take the train. The train pass and car rental is similar in cost. I guess for me it makes more sense to make a loop with a car than taking the train. What am I missing.
Since you are traveling from Salzburg to Fuessen via Berchtesgaden IMO you are MUCH better off using a car/van since there is little, if any east-west train service; asia bangkok hotel standard you would, in some cases, end up going all the way back to Munich.
If using trains, it might be wiser to reschedule F ssen and Garmisch since the train trip is close to 5 hours. Keep your Munich lodgings longer prior to Salzburg and just do daytrips to F ssen and Garmisch. Garmisch is just 1.5 hours from Munich. I don't personally think the 30-minute asia bangkok hotel standard tour you get of N'stein is worth the trip, for a number of reasons. If you're interested in castles, you'll find several real castles in/near Salzburg, including one with a free-flight falconry show. And you can see one of Ludwig's palaces (Herrenchiemsee) half way between Munich and Salzburg asia bangkok hotel standard in Prien, on an island in Chiemsee Lake. The Prien station has lockers to stow bags.
Russ, I had looked at getting the railpasses. The reason being is I liked the flexibility of the pass versus buying individual tickets. We would buy two twin tickets for the adults and two youth tickets. The Twins are $478.00 each and the youth tickets are $222.00 each for a total of $1400.00. That was for 10 day passes.
I had not originally thought of staying long in Munich asia bangkok hotel standard as the only thing on our itinerary there was Dachau and Marienplatz. I guess by basing there and daytripping out from there we could eliminate some of the moving and extra time. I would assume for the Salzburg asia bangkok hotel standard trip that I should figure on leaving Munich and renting a hotel in Salzburg and leave for the trip back to Stuttgart from there.
Secondly, using the trains is more adventurous and gives more of a European flavor to your travel. You can take a road trip practically anywhere, but using the trains is becoming more and more rare and unique. As you say, it's a foreign mode of transportation, and that will give you more fun and adventure asia bangkok hotel standard as you travel!
Third, using the trains is just a whole lot of fun. You get to mingle with locals and other travellers instead of being shut up inside a private bubble. It's prime people-watching: you can see how folks relate asia bangkok hotel standard to each other, how they dress, how they spend free time, how they travel, etc. You'll be watching grandmoms returning from a visit to the city to see grandkids, a group of matrons returning from a visit to a museum or a long hike, a few fashionistas with their shopping bags returning from a major shopping trip, schoolkids on a day-trip, elderly couples with their hiking poles going out for a day in the country . . . it's a wonderful way to spend your time.
More fun on the train -- buy a gourmet picnic (fresh breads asia bangkok hotel standard and pastries, local smoked ham, local cheeses, some yogurt, water, even wine or beer if you want), and share a fun meal as you enjoy the pretty scenery slipping by.
Oh, and the "passes" that Russ mentioned above are not (I think) asia bangkok hotel standard the Raileurope passes. I think he is talking about the German rail products asia bangkok hotel standard where groups of folks can travel on regional trains for one day for a set price, such as 33 or 38 Euro -- these are called L nder tickets. Here's an overview of them:
Rail passes don't make sense if you're travelling in one German state mostly (Bavaria). As Russ stated (and swandav realised) the day passes for regional transportation are much cheaper. Please have a closer look at the link swandav gave above! The Bavaria (L nder) ticket gives you full flexibility for the day, is valid on regional trains, and buses also. You don't have to pre-purchase, they do not sell out.
At most, it seems you have only 5 or 6 travel days. Although asia bangkok hotel standard you'll be there 10 days, a 10-day railpass is overkill. And the price is exorbitant given the alternatives (group daypasses) asia bangkok hotel standard which should come in at under $600 total for everyone, I'm pretty sure.
Group Daypasses: The one L nder Ticket that concerns you is the Bayern (Bavaria) Ticket; see swandav2000's link. It covers you on all your travel days after Day 1 (I'm assuming you are flying home from Munich, right?)
You can buy all these daypasses asia bangkok hotel standard on the spot at a station ticket machine using a credit card. They do not sell out. No reservations are required or needed. You have complete flexibility to change your travel plans as you go - stay longer somewhere asia bangkok hotel standard and just hop on the next train. The only hours restriction is on weekdays - the passes are good starting at 9 am and can be used until the wee hours of the next morning (2 or 3 am.)
The railpasses would save you a small amount of travel time on some of the legs since they permit travel on the fastest trains (the daypasses put you on the regional trains) but trips to Berchtesgaden, Garmisch and F ssen are only possible by regional train anyway. To find your precise travel connections on the regional trains, specify "only local transport" under "means of transport" at the DB itinerary page:
Thanks for the help everyone. I looked up the Laender tickets and found that it is cheaper than the rail passes I was looking at. I skyped this morning with our exchange student we are going to visit. She said the train is the better way and she looked up the tickets this morning and double checked what I had researched. She told me that we didn't want to drive that far. We will just stay another day in Munich and do the Zugspitze before going to Salzburg. Today is D-30. Kind of excited and at the same time realizing I only have 30 days to get everything done.
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