The trains have both heating systems for the winter and cooling systems for the summer. I have not ridden through the Rockies, but I have ridden in the Toronto-Ottawa-Montreal zone and never noticed temperature to be an issue. In the winter you will have your coat etc with you because you will need it for outside. You won’t need to layer on sweaters or bring a blanket. Your coat will doubtless be hung up or be in an overhead compartment, and your hat, gloves and scarf with it. (The brochure from Via says “You may want to bring a sweater as
temperatures on the train may vary” which is a useful disclaimer. Sweater. Not sweater, jacket, and blanket.)
It’s possible that if you were right by the door, you might feel a draft while the train was at a station. I always take Via 1 and there are no seats by the door, just baggage compartments and the galley, so I can’t speak to that. However the door isn’t open much because the stations are hours apart. It’s also possible that if the sun was really streaming in through a window that you would feel hot. You could close the blinds if that happened.
An ambiguous of sorts.
1) The temperature inside is going to fluctuate based on the outside temperature and whether it is day or night.
2) Define warm? For me, I can handle the cold a lot better than you apparently can. A comfortable warm cabin for me could be too chilly for you.
Your best option is to bring a sweater, a jacket, and a blanket and you can wrap yourself in layers depending on the indoor temperature and how long the doors stay open for.
I’ve always thought that planes/trains/etc keep a cooler temperature than most people would like. Reason being, it’s a lot easier for you individually to keep yourself warm than it is to keep yourself cool.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024