I guess you talk about Geneva, Switzerland.
If so, this site should help you:
http://fahrplan.sbb.ch/bin/query.exe/en
Just type the names in English is OK.
I see times between 13 and 17 hours.
If you meant an other town, or just want a different rail planner, here is a different one that should work:
http://www.raileurope.com/us/rail/fares_schedules/index.htm
And if you find the train too expensive, here is a link to a site for the different bus lines:
http://eurolines.com/
2007-09-09 03:16:07
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answer #1
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answered by Willeke 7
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If you do not have a rail pass my suggestion is to go via Germany. Get to the Czech-German border (Bayrisch-Eisenstein) with a czech national ticket and use a special discount ticket across Germany. You can buy a "Bayern-Ticket" and get to Friedrichshafen and cross Lake Constance by ferry and board the train again at Romanshorn or use a "Schoene-Wochenende-Ticket" to get to the Swiss border at Basel SBB.
You best use www.bahn.de to plan your trip, they have the best international search engine. YMMV.
Note that with Bayern Ticket or "Schoene-Wochenende-Ticket" you can use only regional trains in Germany. "Schoene-Wochenende-Ticket" is valid only on a Saturday or Sunday, Bayern-Ticket is valid after 9 am during the weekdays and all day on the weekend. Regional trains are slower, but with the above tickets a lot cheaper.
But if you have a rail pass, use the direct connection from Prague to Zurich with the R 207, D 207, EN 466 routed car. It leaves 17:14 from Praha hl.n. and arrives in Geneve at 9:15. Be aware that you need to reserve for this routed car a few days in advance.
Also bahn.de gives me many connections using completely different routes, so you best ask at the train station in Prague for the best/cheapest way to get to Geneve. It might be that you need to go to Slovakia and buy a City-Star ticket there in order to get the best deal on the ticket.
2007-09-09 10:54:07
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answer #2
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answered by t_maia2000 6
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