Friday, December 6, 2013

America 2013: Day Eleven - December 2 | Chicago Willis Tower Amtrak California Zephyr



It’s a high school prom, it’s a Springsteen song, it’s a ride in a Chevrolet. It’s a man on the moon and fireflies in June, and kids sellin’ lemonade. It’s cities and farms, it’s open arms, one nation under god. It’s America.
- Rodney Atkins

This entry comes from the outer reaches of Burlington, Iowa. We’ve been on Amtrak’s California Zephyr for nearly six hours, and are now crossing our second state, having left Illinois a few minutes ago. We’ve also crossed the mighty Mississippi River and are tracking ever westward, bound, sometime tonight, for Lincoln, Nebraska and on into Colorado by the morning. We are just about on schedule, even after a longer-than-expected stop at Galesburg, Illinois where Trev and I were the last folks back onto the train.

Leaving Chicago wasn’t easy. We got to see Brian one more time when he dropped Lauryn and her suitcase around to our hotel this morning. If nothing else, it was another chance to thank him for such wonderful hospitality over the last week. He suggested last night that we come back during the warmer months next time, maybe over the Memorial Day weekend in May or Independence Day in July. That may be the go next time.

After dropping our car back to O’Hare International Airport, we took a Blue Line train back to downtown Chicago – about 45 minutes – and walked two blocks south from the Metra station to Union Station, which actually looks more like a museum than a train station. It’s an ultra-impressive building, a holdover from the old days when train travel was the only mode of transport if you wanted to get somewhere in this vast country. 

The good thing about having sleeper accommodation is access to the Metropolitan Lounge with it’s free WiFi and luggage storage. We checked our big suitcases in – they’re travelling in the hold beneath us – and left our carry-on stuff in a luggage room so we could walk a couple blocks across the Chicago River to Willis Tower and the SkyDeck. 

Chicago’s most famous building also happens to be the world’s tallest, rising a mammoth 103 storeys over the middle of the cityscape, and is better known as Sears Tower. There’s nothing quite like walking out of the elevators and over to the floor-to-ceiling windows, peering down to street level to watch locals go about their business. 

Chicago from the Willis Tower SkyDeck

As impressive as the incredible architectural attention to detail on every building and tracing the path of the Chicago River, is Lake Michigan, a giant body of whose waters come right to the edge of the city. One of the famed Great Lakes, Michigan is the only one lying entirely within United States territory. It’s big enough that it that touches five states: Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana, Michigan and Minnesota. Really, it looks more like the coastline of a country than a mere lake.

The coolest feature of the SkyDeck is a recent addition: architects added four boxes of clear glass which jut out from the tower’s superstructure. There’s literally nothing between you and a fall of 103 storeys but a few inches of – thankfully, very solid – glass. I’m not scared of heights, per se, but it was a little nerve-wracking just because you’re so high up and the city below is so enormous. We got a professional photo taken there, and bought it as a souvenir of our touring crew.

After fitting in some souvenir shopping and a quick lunch, we went back to Union Station in time for boarding. We’re in what is called a Superliner Roomette, which is basically two large seats facing each other with a table in the middle and a long window. It’s a little close, but we’re dealing with it pretty well. Lucky Lauryn and I are family. The good thing is, we’re on the upper deck of this huge train so we should get good views through the Rocky Mountains west of the Mile High City, Denver, Colorado, tomorrow morning. 
 

The toilet, just next door, is interesting. Not only do we get the added bonus of hearing a lot of the activity that goes on there when our glass door isn’t pulled shut, but it’s hard to activate the lock that stops other people from barging in whilst we’re in the middle of…yeah, I’m sure you get the idea. A magnet for unusual – remember the onion ring burns? – Lauryn managed to get pushed in through the open door when the train rocked, and the door closed neatly behind her.

At night, the two seats pull forward into one bed, and a second comes down from the roof. Lauryn’s going to try her luck up top tonight, but I could well be up there tomorrow night if she doesn’t go so well. Nathan and Trevor are two rooms down on the other side of the train. Also on this train is a domed sightseeing car, a full service dining car – and the food is pretty good, considering we’re on a fast-moving train – and a lounge car, as well as a number of carriages of people sitting up, like on an aeroplane. That’s a long haul if you’re going 51 hours out to California like we are – about 4 times as long as the flight from Sydney to Los Angeles.

The route we’re on – Illinois, Iowa, Nebraska, Colorado, Utah, Nevada and California – is one of the oldest in America, and one of the most picturesque. Aside from the plains of Illinois, Iowa and Nebraska, we’ll see the Colorado Rockies, the Salt Flats of Utah, the Nevada desert, the Sierra Nevada mountains and, finally, the San Francisco Bay Area on the run into Emeryville, which is a suburb of Oakland. We’re really covering some miles on this journey!



They’re calling our dinner reservation. Gotta go eat!

No comments:

Post a Comment