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Railway Travel Specialist
Denise D Smalls
Columbia, SC Travel Agent· 10 Years of Experience
Areas of expertise
Destinations:
Amsterdam, Italy, Venice, France, SpainInterests:
Rail, European Culture, Singles, Women's Travel, Family VacationsAbout Me
The first time I boarded a European train, I felt as if I’d stepped sideways into a slower, more deliberate version of the world. I remember standing on the platform in Amsterdam Central, the air smelling faintly of rain and diesel, watching the sleek blue-and-yellow carriages glide in with a kind of quiet confidence. Everything about it felt purposeful: the soft chime announcing boarding, the rhythmic clatter of suitcase wheels, the way travelers seemed to fall into an unspoken choreography. When I found my seat by the window, the city was still waking up. Cyclists zipped past the station entrance, scarves trailing behind them like small flags. Then the train lurched forward smoothly, and the canals began to slip by. I watched houseboats bobbing gently, their potted plants trembling in the wake of passing ferries.
It was the first time I understood why people romanticize rail travel. You don’t just go somewhere; you watch the world rearrange itself around you. Crossing into Germany felt like turning a page. The flat Dutch fields gave way to rolling hills, and the architecture shifted from narrow gabled houses to sturdier, more stoic buildings. I wandered to the dining car, where the clink of porcelain cups mixed with the low hum of conversation. A couple beside me debated the best beer in Munich; a student scribbled notes in a textbook; an older man stared out the window as if he’d seen this landscape a thousand times and still wasn’t finished with it. I sipped my coffee and felt, for a moment, like I belonged to all of them. By the time I reached Switzerland, the scenery had become almost theatrical. The train wound through valleys so green they looked unreal, then burst out of tunnels into sudden, staggering views of snow-dusted peaks. I pressed my forehead to the glass like a child. Every village we passed seemed arranged with painterly precision wooden chalets, red shutters, flower boxes overflowing with geraniums.
Italy brought a different energy entirely. As soon as I stepped off the train in Milan, the station buzzed with a kind of elegant chaos. On the high-speed train to Florence, I watched vineyards blur into olive groves, then into clusters of terracotta rooftops. The landscape felt warm, generous, and almost indulgent. My last stop was Venice. As I disembarked from the train, I could see the Grand Canal in the distance. The station was outfitted with many shops and restaurants; it was a grand sight! As I prepared for a ride on one of the many boat taxis parked nearby, I reminisced about the wonderful train voyage that I will never forget.
What surprised me most about traveling by train wasn’t the efficiency, though that was impressive, or the scenery, breathtaking as it was. It was the sense of being suspended between places, of having time to absorb the shift from one culture to another. On a train, transitions aren’t abrupt. They’re gradual, textured, and human. You see the way fields change shape, how languages shift on station signs, how people carry themselves differently from one region to the next. Traveling by train across Europe didn’t just show me the continent. It changed the way I moved through it. It taught me to pay attention, to savor transitions, to let the journey matter as much as the destination. And even now, whenever I hear the soft chime of a departing train, something in me stirs, ready to board again.
Areas of expertise
Destinations:
Amsterdam, Italy, Venice, France, SpainInterests:
Rail, European Culture, Singles, Women's Travel, Family VacationsREVIEWS
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