The 5.30 alarm on Friday morning was pretty unwelcome but we had no option to get up and get on it – and itโs a jolly good thing we did โฆโฆ.. (that building on the left is Milan Centrale station so we really couldnโt have been closer!).
It transpired (when we got to the station) that the 07:20 train from Milan to Basel was actually leaving at 07:05 ๐ฑ and we got on board at 07:03 ๐ฐ. What would have happened had we missed it doesnโt bear thinking about!
There was no WiFi so I read and tried to take some photographs (difficult with the glare and reflections from the windows):
At the Italian/Swiss border the Police arrived to check passports and left with a lady sitting opposite us who didnโt appear to have a passport (shades of our crossing from Slovenia to Italy last summer).
In due course we arrived in Basel station which (perhaps unsurprisingly) is clean and well organised and has excellent free WiFi and toilets!
For anyone wondering why we went via Basel (surely thereโs a direct Milan-Paris train?) – yes, there is normally a direct Milan-Paris train but there was a landslide in southern France at the tail end of last year which has taken out the tracks. The quickest (but probably not cheapest) route for now is via Basel. From Basel there is an excellent TGV service to Paris Gare de Lyon (from where I am writing this). We are on the upper deck and the WiFi is superb and itโs very, very fast and very comfortable. Seriously, these European trains put the UK ones to shame:
If itโs any consolation northern France is looking very wet as well:
We successfully navigated the Paris metro (mode of transport number 309) after getting help from a lovely guy at the ridiculously complicated ticket machine (old farts really shouldnโt be left alone with them – the French behind us were tutting loudly):
and then the utter chaos of Eurostar emigration and security where our lack of stamp into France
โ โฆ.. but when did you arrive in France?โ
โThis morningโ
caused much confusion along with the large metal lumps in the rucksack
โ โฆ. but what are these?โ
โbatteries for les velosโ
After which ludicrously expensive vin rouge was gratefully quaffed:
So, is it possible to get from Milan to London in one day? Yes, it is!
Itโs exhausting and you definitely donโt want to miss the first train from Milan (for Godโs sake, do check the departure time!) but it can be done.
Had we known when we planned this bonkers itinerary that there was going to be another ๐คฌ๐คฌ๐คฌ train strike on Saturday we might have been able to get straight onto the sleeper to Penzance (I havenโt actually checked if it was running but it would have been a grand finale) but weโd already booked ourselves into a hotel and had a jolly (if rather late) supper with Tom. And so the grand finale turned into an 8.5 hour coach journey from London Victoria ๐ซ which started, somewhat inauspiciously, delayed by half an hour:
The weather in London wasnโt too bad – the weather in Cornwall was absolutely classic:
and there were screaming babies (I felt desperately sorry for their mothers) and some vomit (not me, Iโm glad to report).
There was really only one sensible thing to do for supper:
I get very tired of people who are really โdownโ on the UK at the moment but it has to be said that our two long journeys here were not great – on the way up the train just didnโt stop at our station in an effort to make up time and on the way back we had a long, delayed bus journey because of the train strike. After some really superb train journeys in Europe (and an on time journey from the south to the north of Albania, albeit in a quite uncomfortable bus) I canโt help feeling that we have a LOT to learn from European public transport.
Despite some long travelling days our step count has actually been quite impressive:
although todayโs count (22,700) was me on my own as Mattโs knee is the size of a small football. Which segues nicely into my next challenge – which Iโll probably blog about in May – when I am walking the London MoonWalk (a mere 26.2 miles through the night) in memory of my lovely friend Alison who died of secondary breast cancer in October. Some of you may remember that I walked the MoonWalk with her back in 2019 so Iโm under no illusions as to how hard itโs going to be.
If anyone feels like sponsoring me, Iโd be extremely grateful. Iโm not aiming to raise gazillions but every donation will be very gratefully received:
For now, thank you for following our bonkers adventure – it really is amazing what you can do in one week – and, hey, Mission Accomplished! And, incredibly, the battery which Matt uses for his CPAP machine was still 95% charged after 6 months in a box – now thatโs impressive!