Sleep in Berlin, Wake up in Vienna!

 A Nighjet train from Vienna (Austria) to Hamburg (Germany) of the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) before the departure of the train at the main station in Vienna on February 27, 2019. | Alex Halada/AFP via Getty Images
A Nighjet train from Vienna (Austria) to Hamburg (Germany) of the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) before the departure of the train at the main station in Vienna on February 27, 2019. | Alex Halada/AFP via Getty Images
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Sleep in Berlin, Wake up in Vienna!

 A Nighjet train from Vienna (Austria) to Hamburg (Germany) of the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) before the departure of the train at the main station in Vienna on February 27, 2019. | Alex Halada/AFP via Getty Images
A Nighjet train from Vienna (Austria) to Hamburg (Germany) of the Austrian Federal Railways (ÖBB) before the departure of the train at the main station in Vienna on February 27, 2019. | Alex Halada/AFP via Getty Images

Is it not more romantic and elegant to fall asleep on a train and wake up in a new city? Night trains crisscrossing the European continent make it happen – and they don't cost as much as you think.

Some train lines offer car trains as well as night trains in many large cities, including Hamburg, Basel, Vienna and Verona. Tickets are priced based on occupancy, but can start at around $120.

For first-timers, you can't get more classic than the Austrian railway's Nightjet, which offers sleeping cars and couchette cars on a variety of lines across much of Western Europe. It's easier than ever to fall asleep in Berlin and wake up in Vienna or to board in Munich and travel through the Alps into Rome, Milan or Venice, according to the German News Agency (dpa).

The Nightjet route network is available online as a map and is expected to grow in the coming years, expanding farther west.

From the North Sea to the Alps: Taking a train is a slower, better way of getting to know a country than flying in and out of its major hubs.

The privately run Alpen-Sylt Nachtexpress, lets passengers really get to know Germany. It starts from the North Sea and goes straight down the middle to the Alps in the south, with a stopover in Austria's Salzburg. Timetables and the complete network maps are available online.

Take your car along. Some train lines, such as Train4you, let passengers bring their vehicles along for the ride, saving on mileage and allowing travelers more freedom once they arrive at their destination.



Volcano in Philippines Spews Ash Over a Mile into the Sky 

Kanlaon is one of 24 active volcanoes in the Philippines. (AFP)
Kanlaon is one of 24 active volcanoes in the Philippines. (AFP)
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Volcano in Philippines Spews Ash Over a Mile into the Sky 

Kanlaon is one of 24 active volcanoes in the Philippines. (AFP)
Kanlaon is one of 24 active volcanoes in the Philippines. (AFP)

A volcano in the central Philippines erupted early Tuesday morning, sending a massive grey plume of ash up about three kilometers (1.8 miles) into the sky and launching ballistic projectiles.

Kanlaon Volcano, one of 24 active volcanoes in the Southeast Asian nation, has had several eruptions in the past century -- the most recent of which happened last month.

A level three alert -- out of a scale of five -- put in place during an eruption in December remained unchanged Tuesday, as officials highlighted an existing six-kilometer (four-mile) evacuation radius.

"A moderately explosive eruption occurred at the summit crater of Kanlaon Volcano at 2:55 am today (1855 GMT Monday)," the Philippine Institute of Volcanology and Seismology said in a statement, adding that it lasted five minutes.

"The eruption generated a greyish voluminous plume that rose approximately 3 kilometers above the vent before drifting to the general west," it said.

"Large ballistic fragments were also observed to have been thrown around the crater within a few hundred meters and caused burning of vegetation near the volcano summit."

Stating the continued level three alert, the agency warned there were "increased chances of short-lived moderately explosive eruptions that could generate life-threatening volcanic hazards."

In August 1996, Kanlaon Volcano erupted, sending a spray of heated rocks that killed three hikers who were near the summit at the time.

The Philippines is on the seismically active region of the Pacific known as the "Ring of Fire," where more than half the world's volcanoes are located.

The most powerful volcanic explosion in the Philippines in recent years was the 1991 eruption of Pinatubo, about 100 kilometers (62 miles) from Manila, which killed more than 800 people.