Train: California Zephyr
Estimated Travel Duration: 18 hours, 15 minutes
Over 3,922km, the California Zephyr traverses farmland, desert, rivers, and mountains. I divided the journey of 51 hours and 20 minutes into four segments. The first was from Chicago, Illinois to Denver, Colorado. Like the Southwest Chief, the California Zephyr crossed the Mississippi river from Illinois into Iowa. We then passed through Mount Pleasant which my guide book described as a ‘typical Midwestern town’. As I watched the train roll by Iowa’s cornfields, my guide book directed me to keep an eye out for roving coyotes. In Nebraska, the train followed the Platte River. This river was once followed by the Mormons travelling west, and later by settlers on the Oregon Trail. About five hours after Mount Pleasant, the train stopped in Omaha, Nebraska, the birthplace of Fred Astaire. We arrived in Lincoln, Nebraska just after midnight. I alighted in Denver, Colorado around 7am the following morning. Overall, this first segment of the California Zephyr’s route was far from noteworthy. The scenery only really began to get interesting about 10 minutes prior to the train’s arrival in Denver, at which point the Rocky Mountains slowly started to come into view.







DENVER

I found Denver to be a pleasant city. It reminded me somewhat of Portland, but with more attractions to keep one occupied. Highlights included Larimer Square (a historic part of the city), and the State Capitol Building with its gold leaf dome. I took a guided tour of the latter and the elderly gentleman leading the tour was the most passionate guide I have ever encountered. He wept as he told us stories which had nothing to do with the Capitol Building, but which were interesting nonetheless. In addition to his old age, he was profoundly deaf and somehow came to be under the impression that I had travelled all the way to the USA just to take his tour of the Colorado State Capitol Building – a story which he excitedly repeated to the rest of the tour group three times. One of the women in the tour group tried her best to convince me that I was seriously ill, or would soon become so, because of Denver’s high altitude. The pictures below show the view from the Capitol Building’s dome observation deck which provided great views of the Rocky Mountains, as well as the steps leading up to the building where text marks the spot that is apparently exactly one mile above sea level. However, disagreement abounds in the Mile High City, with the gold markers in the picture below showing other spots that experts have claimed lie exactly one mile above sea level.









Dear Jackie
As always, your most recent blogpost proved a pleasant reading experience. I do, however, have some questions:
1. Did learn much about Colorado politics while visiting the State Capitol. I don’t need to remind you about the status of Colorado as a Swing State and as the starting ground for the 1984 and 1988 presidential campaigns of Democratic hopeful Gary Hart who was the State’s Senator for twelve years (It might also interest you that Hart like yourself earned a postgraduate education at Oxford besides undergraduate and law degrees from Bethany Nazarene College and Yale Law School respectively. And – also like yourself – he never shied away from studying jurisprudence.)
Best
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Dear Wolfi,
Thank you for your continued engagement with my train blog.
Unfortunately my guide seemed to have been confused about his job, so I learnt nothing about Colorado politics.
Best
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