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5 days within 2 Months
6 days within 2 Months
8 days within 2 Months
10 days within 2 Months

what do these mean?
I dont understand, can someone please explain it?
6 days within 2 months, 10 days within 2 months 10 days what?

2007-06-09 14:13:49 · 2 answers · asked by changchih 7 in Travel Europe (Continental) Other - Europe

actually, i'd like to know how the "10days within 2 months" works

2007-06-09 14:17:53 · update #1

2 answers

so basically it just means the amount of travel days....so if you look at 5 days within 2 months it means that you get 5 travel days within a 2 month period from the date of validation. It works by day right so you can have more than one trip per day. For example you can take two trains in one day...which still only counts as one day, and not 2. If you are still confused you should check out statravel.com or go find a travel agency like sta travel. they are very useful for this kind of stuff.

2007-06-09 17:59:12 · answer #1 · answered by ...a.... 1 · 0 0

The 10 days within 2 months pass means any 10 days within 2 months. If you like to linger for a few days at various places, this is the right choice for you. You can sprinkle these travel days throughout your trip or use them all in a row. You can take as many separate trips as you like within each travel day. A travel day runs from midnight to midnight, but luckily, an overnight train or boat ride uses only one travel day.

If you plan to travel nearly daily and cover a lot of ground, a consecutive-day pass is the right choice for you. You get unlimited train travel for the duration of the pass
If you have a 15-day pass, you can travel 15 consecutive days, hopping on and off trains many times each day. If you have a one-month pass, you can travel, for example, from April 26 through May 25. One-month passes last longer when started in a 31-day month

Remember to substract your fly in and fly out destinations.
For instance, I'll be travelling in Europe for one month.
But I won't be spending one month on the train.
I'll fly into into Paris first, and spend 5 days there. I will only use my rail pass to connect between Paris, Brussels, Amsterdam, Hamburg, Munich. But then I will spend my last 5 days in London and fly out from there.
So my actual travel days are 20. Hence, the right pass for me is a 20 consecutive days pass. Bear in mind, that a consecutive day pass (20 consecutive days) is cheaper than a flexipass (20 days in 2 months)

If you want, tell me about your plan, and I'll tell you which rail pass suits you best. You can mail me if you need more information. mesopotamianguy@yahoo.com

2007-06-09 20:09:10 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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