This is a quick thread about the one behaviour that, over and over, has saved me on my rail trips

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Proactively finding the train manager before they find you
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If you *ever* have some sort of grey area or absence of clarity, do this. *Always* do this

Due to the total chaos trying to get to Bourgogne this morning, yesterday I made an error

It was not me, but my partner, who managed to secure literally the last ticket available on the TGV Paris-Montbard

So it is her name on the ticket, not mine

There was no way to change the name, and cancelling the ticket was too risky - because there was no guarantee I would then get the spot freed up

I have seen fines dished out on SNCF trains to people doing this in the past - but when the train manager found *them*

But I proactively went to find them, BEFORE THEY FOUND ME

I had all the documents on my laptop - the ticket, my reduction card, my partner's reduction card (both are the same, so the price she paid would have been the price I would have paid) and explained the situation

Strictly speaking, the train manager said, this is not allowed (and he is correct), but you came and found me and I accept your explanation

Now whether this should be the rule is itself questionable. Whether indeed a train should be compulsory reservation is also questionable (and despite it being "sold out" on ticket portals, there are a few seats - presumably no shows)

But to simply get yourself to your destination in situations where you're not strictly in the right, but there is a reason, speaking to the train manager before they find you ALWAYS HELPS

@jon On interrail trips I proactively went to the train personnel when having any doubts, it always helped. I remember one situation in France, where we discussed everything on the platform with the train team, while everyone was waiting. It was when SNCF introduced a reservation for certain slower trains and it suddenly showed up in the app after we started the trip & we realized whilst waiting for the train.

Edit: certain "regional" trains

@cielodenoche I will normally board first, and *then* ask.

Today I am getting off at the first stop, so once it is rolling I will know I will get there 🙂

But generally, yes.

(BTW how compulsory reservation TERs show in Grand Est is not always 100% correct in the Interrail app. In Normandie I don't know, not tried those)

@jon Good point, I have taken a mental note 😀

Our situation was with a TER in Occitanie, from Nice to Marseille last summer. The reservation suddenly showed up, and the opinion within the train team about it was 50/50. In the end, the "boss" decided that we are going to ignore it, because he didn't know about a reservation obligation.