Some tricks by my own experience with polish trains:
Well, mainly they are 3 types of Selling points, 1)the ones with the blue and green line which says "Arriva" and "Przewozy Regionalne" and the ticket machines are to buy ONLY tickets for the "ranchero trains" -the osobowy and the REs- which go from point A to point B stopping in every single possible place and sometimes also in the middle of nowhere (when the railroad between two places has only a single pair of tracks the ranchero trains are forced to wait for a better class train to pass, and in some points can take till half an hour). They are cheap tickets which are super to buy when one has not a hurry to be in his destination. And now with the football championship for 2012 in Poland and Ukraine they repaired, repainted, releathered and re-do all the possible things to the old trains for looking nice (and they did it well in my opinnion). And even before that they were much more comfortable than german ones (in polish trains one has place for the legs and sometimes even to lay). Are also ideal to travel with bulky bags (polish people has the use of traveling carriying with them -plus the normal baggage- an extra bag of sandwiches, bacon, sausagges, "tuppers" with salat and their beloved pickles, so if you want to really get polish this is just your kind of train, specially if your´e a student). 2)In the "Przewozy Regionalne" windows you CAN buy tickets for TLK trains too but YOU CANNOT BUY FOR THE ICCs. 3)For all the ICC trains tickets one needs to go to the other "kasa billetowa" which has orange letters ICC on it. There the ticket will be cheaper than buying it from the ticket checker inside the train. In some stations there can be long lines for buying tickets so drink a cup of patience (polish grannies many times don´t catch that the tickets simply are as they are and cost what they cost and not what they wish, so the woman behind the glass usually is in bad mood during the rush hour and makes the line to go slower). If your trip is long and your´e wishing to spend some more money better take a real ICC if possible instead of going for the TLKs, as this TLK ones have the kind of wagons with a side corridor and many little rooms for 8 people, so if your´e traveling in crowded and long lines like to Poznan, Crakow, Warszawa, Gdynia and so on it will be really difficult to find a seat place, and is not nice to pay a bigger price to finish traveling like 3 hours standing in a narrow place like a horse in a trailer (if the horses had suitcases). Or spend more money and go to the reataurant wagon and drink a cofee, eat a "prince polo" and stay sitting at a table for the rest of the trip haha. ICC lines although some expensive are really comfortable, again more spacious than german ones and for sure better smelling. They don´t see obviously like top technology but they look good, they smell good and are reaching their destination mostly without delays.
Generally traveling in Polish trains is actually a very ilustrative and "pintoresque" experience no matter if you have to do ir for one or, like me, for 7 hours one learns at least the most basic polish as most of the ladies in the selling points are from the comunistic era and don´t speak english. More even: When they notice that Polish is not your native language they ussually are really friendly and talk slowler for you to catch what they say, make signs with the hands and/or show you the display of the cashier machine. Also is a good tiime (during the changes) to experience the whole color if the polish train station kitchen ^_^ And i´m not talking about McDoof of KFC, they have for example Piekarnias (polish bakeries) which offers many kinds of sweet breads, cakes, buns with some cheese, salat and sausagge, mini-pizzas and rogale (Kind of a polish croissant). Also cheap restaurants with both pizzas and hamburguers as well as polish things like flaczki (a soup made of all the inside things of pig -i mean it, it really tastes super- ), chicken soup (in poland they make it some different), Zapiekanka (kind of baguette with cheese and polish mushrums from the forest, also very good), kabab (ok, kebab is turkish/german, but also the poles have "polished" with their own traditional salads instead of the normal ones) and so on. In most of the big stations there is also (sometimes inside sometimes ouside) a supermarket called Biedronka (ladybug) where one can buy all the needed things to chew and chomp during the way, plus socs, tools, makeup, and toys; or at least there is SAM or Monopolowy (beer, cigarets, cookies and chips). Now: There may be times in which you simply have no time to go to the cashiers and make the whole pilgrimage to the information point and/or you just don´t speak good polish enough for catching a whole byblical explanation about how should you go to your destination. For that moments one has to look/ask for the "tablica" which is the time table, and is made of two big posters behind a glass frame. It has a yellow poster which is the list of departures and a white poster which is the list of incommings. Then in the yellow you will see in the first column the hour of departure and class (IC, TLK, RE) , then the next column is the way it goes trough and in this column the final destination is written in capitol letters with the expected time of arrival. The third column is called "peron" and indicates the platform and side of it in which you should wait for the train. the TLK and ICC trains are written in RED letters while the ranchero (osobowy) are written in black letters. Once you know which train is your one is good to look at the screen if the number of plattform matches with the one on the time table (sometimes the capacity of the stations and the delays of some trains causes that some trains have to come to a diferent plattform than the one previously announced). A good rule to recognize trains is the color and look. The regio trains usually are red or red and black, they are bulky and look like "made in rusia", locomotive and 1st wagon are one piece and the wagon self is higher than the platform so one sees that the doors are higher than the floor outside. Osobowy trains are yellow with blue or blue with grey, are low first floor wagons with two floors so the entrance doors are at the level of the floor outside and they are not at the very end of the wagon, locomotive of those trains is also bulky but is not part of the 1st wagon so one recognizes it very well. TLK trains are green or yellow with green and high floored, so one sees also high doors and from ourside notices the side corridor and the 8 people rooms. Locomotive is also not part of the wagon and in some cases they mix one or two wagons of IC trains which are kind of dirty white. And the ICC trains are also high floored but one recognizes them by their white color, dark blue signs (wagon mumber and class) and the orange letters IC or ICC on the sides, also they look some thinner and more stilyzed. The doors are opened automaticly so one sees mostly no handle. Well, at least for me was the first and still a good way to recognize the trains fast. Hope somehow this will help somehow to you or to someone else triying to travel there with trains, as is for escence not a really easy thing to catch when one is new there.
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