Bus. Feet. Bus. Train. Bus. Plane. Bus. Train.
Finished drying my laundry from the night before. Shower. Start packing. Finish packing. Out the door just after
Found one.
Opens at
Scheiße.
Arrived at Marktplatz. Spotted an internet café with open doors.
Kann ich hier Sachen vom Internet ausdrücken?
:: Ja.
OK. Gut.
:: Nummer fünf bitte.
Printed off my online tickets for Ryanair. Decided to also print off the confirmation email for my train in Norway, even though the email said it wasn’t a valid ticket, and all you needed was the confirmation number and phone number, both of which I’d stored in my Handy, to print the necessary ticket from a machine at the station.
Good decision.
6 minutes, 2 printed pages: €1,10.
Walked outside. Saw none of the buses I could take to the Bahnhof had arrived at Marktplatz yet. Headed for a bakery with a walk-up service counter. I needed breakfast.
Waited behind a lady apparently buying bread to feed the five-thousand. Saw one of my potential buses pull up. Sometimes buses sit for as long as five minutes at Marktplatz to adjust their schedules. Is this one of those buses, or should I ditch this bakery and hurry for that bus? I decided to play it safe and jogged across Marktplatz to catch the bus. Good decision. The bus took off as soon as I was on board.
Got to the Bahnhof with about 20 minutes to spare. My train to
I caught my free 42-minute train to Frankfurt Hbf. Free with my student ID. …well, “free” courtesy of €70-80 of the €180,95 student fee I paid upon my arrival here in Gießen. And Hbf: that’s Hauptbahnhof. As in: main train station. As in: not the airport. I wasn’t trying to get to Frankfurt International. My €37 Ryanair flight departs from Frankfurt Hahn, which really isn’t in
After twenty minutes, two trips outside, and asking the service desk where the heck I’m supposed to find this bus, I finally found it. I had just under ten minutes to spare. And then it was an hour and a half bus ride to Frankfurt Hahn.
I checked in online before I even left Gießen. With my printed online ticket, I attempted to make my way thru security. The first guy manning the entrance to the queue let me right though. But the second security guard standing at the metal detector looked at my ticket and shook his head. He knew the rule is dumb, but played by it anyway. With “Check and Go” (online check in), you have to be from the EU or one of the other Schengen countries (which explains why I initially couldn’t select “
So because I had a
…Which isn’t Olso at all. Sandefjord, actually. Just over an hour south of
There’s a free shuttle bus to take passengers from the airport to the train station. …I’m gonna stop calling it that though. It wasn’t a station. In fact, there wasn’t even a building there. There was just a covered bench. A single bench. Like a bus stop.
…So there’s a free bus to take passengers to the train stop. But there’re two different buses. One for the northbound side and one for the southbound side. At
The southbound shuttle bus.
After a short conversation with the bus driver (in perfect English mind you – it seems most Norwegians are more fluent in English than I am), I found out the bus for the northbound side leaves at
Norwegian refusing money: there’s no place to print off a ticket. It’s a small station in the middle of no where. There’s nothing there. You’ll make the train in time. That’s why they have the buses – it works perfectly.
So it does. I hopped on the bus once it showed up at
Just under two hours after leaving the bench (I really wish I’d snapped a picture, but the perfect Norwegian scheduling doesn’t account for dumb American tourist photographers), the train passed the real Oslo airport (50 km north of Olso), and I thought to myself, “It would have only been 3.5 hours to Tim’s if I’d flown in here…”
One stop, or 50 minutes, after
Just over 5 hours since leaving the bench, and a mere 13 hours after leaving my front door.
2 comments:
You have to work on saying "Mist!" instead of "Scheisse" or it will stick with you your whole life (as "scheisse" did for me) and offend every German you meet for the rest of your life (as I did. But for me it's too late to change).
TP
aber alle Deutschen (die ich getroffen habe) sagen immer Scheisse. Eben in der alltagssprache und auch in Geschäften. Obwohl es mehr bedeutet, benutzten sie es so unbendenklich wie "crap"...
Aber ok, Ich versuche. ...obwohl ich werde das wahrscheinlich nicht schaffen..
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