Thursday/ another Cape Town airport pick-up

I was my turn today to pick up my brother and his family from California at Cape Town airport.   They arrived on Air France via Paris, on the Boeing 777 shown below.  Check out the international arrivals board – 1. showing only about a dozen scheduled arrivals for the day (so Cape Town is a small airport by international standards) and 2. arrivals from some interesting places such as Antarctica and Maun.   The flight from in from Antarctica is probably on an Ilyushin Il-76, a Russian-made transport plane. There was one on the tarmac when I came in on Wednesday.  And Maun is a small town of modern buildings and mud huts in the north of Botswana on the Okavango Delta.

This Air France Boeing 777 at Cape Town airport has just arrived from Paris.
The international arrivals board shows scheduled arrivals from Antarctica and from Maun in Botswana.

 

Wednesday/ arrival on the A380 ‘Johannesburg’

Our Lufthansa Airbus A380 from Frankfurt to Johannesburg was also namedthe ‘Johannesburg’.  It’s a big bird, and on take-off it feels too slow and sluggish to lift off from the runway, but then it actually does.  I sat upstairs on the wing.   That was a 10 hr flight, and then a ‘hop’ of 2 hours from Johannesburg to Cape Town on South African airways got me to my final destination.   Cape Town was at a sweltering 36°C (97°F) today, but the day temperatures are projected to go down somewhat for the rest of the week.

The Lufthansa A380 ‘Johannesburg’ after our arrival in Johannesburg on Wednesday morning.
Front view of the A380 at the gate at Oliver Tambo International Airport in Johannesburg.
Here is the view from our approach into Cape Town International Airport. That is the iconic Table Mountain straight ahead with Lion’s Head to its right, and Table Bay in front of it (the Atlantic Ocean).

 

 

Tuesday/ layover in Frankfurt

I came in at 7.30 am this morning and my flight out to Johannesburg is only at 10 pm. – so I checked into the Airport Sheraton for a day room.  It was not cheap (€150), but completely worth it.   As for my connection in Toronto –  I had to hustle to make it since I had to go through customs and come back in through security (not clear to me why, maybe because I planned to switch airlines in Frankfurt).  Here are pictures from Toronto and from Frankfurt, unfortunately all from indoors, but hey – best to stay inside since it’s pretty chilly outside in both these cities, this time of year.

The colored rings inside this giant skylight at Toronto’s Pearson International airport are mesmerizing.
Lots of turquoise Air Canada planes with the maple leaf on the tail. I arrived in an Embraer jet from Seattle, and we took a Boeing 777 across the Atlantic to Frankfurt.
This giant indoor artwork is at the boarding gate in E terminal in Toronto. Seattle has similar piece but as outdoor art, in Olympic Sculpture Park in downtown Seattle.
This is 7.30 am in the morning in Frankfurt. The airport is on my left and I am walking across the skybridge to the Airport Sheraton to catch forty winks (quite a bit more than forty winks, actually).  There is still snow on the ground from Monday, but it’s all clear for tonight, so there should not be any delays.
Hansel and Gretel (or the witch’s) gingerbread house in the lobby of the Sheraton.
This is early Tue evening and I am back in the terminal for the flight out to Johannesburg at Tue night at 10 pm.
I like these sharply dressed ‘birds’ on a billboard inside the airport .. even though it was not clear to me what they were advertising!
This is at the entrance of Z terminal where we will take off from. Looks the the theme for the decorations is ‘World Fairs’, since there a Shanghai Pearl Tower (2010), a Seattle Space Needle (1962) and the ‘Atomium’ from Brussels (1958).  Oh, and the Eiffel Tower which was the entrance arch to the 1889 World Fair in Paris.

 

Monday/ your yellow fever vaccination?

I am all re-assembled after the TSA security check – cell phone, watch, belt, shoes, jacket. A little earlier at the check-in counter I ran into a little obstacle.  The Air Canada agent said  ‘Your yellow fever vaccination documentation, please’ .. this after staring at her monitor for a few minutes (you just know something is up).  Of course I did not have one.  I was not even checked in yet – booked the ticket through United Airlines, and I found out last night that Air Canada allows on-line check-in from some US cities, but not from Seattle.  Anyway – I said ‘Well, I travel to South Africa every year and it’s never been a requirement’ before another agent came to my rescue and confirmed that it’s just a guideline and the traveler’s responsibility.

What is yellow fever anyway?  It’s a viral infection transmitted to humans by the bite of an infected mosquito.The majority of persons infected with yellow fever virus have no illness or only mild illness, but some 15% of cases progress to a severe form that can cause jaundice and bleeding and organ failure.   Darfur in Sudan has one of Africa’s worst epidemics in decades, with a total of 732 cases and 165 deaths.

Here is the Atlanta-based Centers for Disease Control’s map of yellow fever areas in sub-Saharan Africa. It says ‘No Risk’ for South Africa.

 

Sunday/ destination Cape Town

I am taking off for Frankfurt Monday morning for a Tuesday morning arrival there local time.  Then on Tuesday night I will continue south to Cape Town via Johannesburg.  Yes, it’s a lot of stops! but I managed to get a business class seat on most of the segments, courtesy of United Airlines miles. (Will I ever get myself to fly coach again all the way on these long international routes? I hope so).  The other thing to do to prepare these days is to load the smartphone apps for the airlines you will fly on, and even the airports you will visit, onto your phone before you leave. That way you have the updated flight information and airport information handy for the whole trip.  So for me it’s Air Canada to Toronto and Frankfurt, then Lufthansa to Johannesburg, and South African Airways to Cape Town.

Here are the gory details of the trip stops and flight times. I am breaking it in two with a little layover in Frankfurt, just enough to catch some sleep in a day hotel, and then I will continue to Cape Town.
A map of a new airport’s layout is always handy. I have connected through Frankfurt airport before, but I don’t have a photographic memory !
It’s winter time, and so there is always the possibility of snow to delay one’s departure and time. Frankfurt does not have snow in its forecast for the next few days, fortunately.

 

Saturday/ Elysian’s Bifrost Winter Ale

Winter does not stop the Seattle beer lovers from having one, and Friday night one of us (you know who you are!) had an Elysian Bifrost Winter Ale.  It weighs in at 7.5% alcohol by volume!  I thought ‘bifrost’ simply means doubly frosty or cold (which is certainly implied by the beer label picture).  But in Norse mythology Bifröst is a burning rainbow bridge that reaches between Midgard (earth) and Asgard, the realm of the gods.  So that explains the bridge that was shown in the movie Thor.

Friday/ the 2012 White House Christmas Card

Hey! This was in the mail when I came home last night : the 2012 Christmas Card from the President.  (Yes, I’m sure 30 million of these were sent out : no matter, I still think it’s pretty cool). That’s First Dog ‘Bo’ on on a snowy front lawn at the White House. It’s not a real picture but actually a painting by Des Moines, Iowa-based artist Larassa Kabel.

Thursday/ Seattle bound

The consultants have left the ‘salt mine’ in Salt Lake (City) for the week, so I am at the airport and about to board my 2 hr flight to Seattle.  It’s been a tough week with more all-day workshops, but we think we made a dent and in the words of the project manager ‘earned some respect’ from the workshop participants.  (Pictures were added Friday morning).

Krispy Kreme doughnuts for sale at the gate in Salt Lake City airport. We bought doughnuts from Walmart for Tuesday morning – not as good as the Krispy Kreme ones. Doughnuts are an American invention and have been around for more than a century!
And here is the flight path from Salt Lake City to Seattle (difficult to take a crisp picture with my cellphone!). The red lettering says Rocky Mountains (in Spanish).

 

Tuesday/ Wall Avenue

This is on the way in to work on Monday, a little later than usual so the sun was just up high enough to color the sky above the snow-capped mountains a beautiful blue.  We’re in Ogden on Wall Avenue (with a strange familiar tone to it because of Wall Street?), one of the main north-south avenues.

‘Avenue’ also makes me think of the ‘classic’ Electric Light Orchestra song ‘The Way Life’s Meant To Be’ :
Well, I came a long way to be here today
And I left you so long on this avenue
And here I stand in the strangest land
Not knowing what to say or do
As I gaze around at these strangers in town
I guess the only stranger is me
And I wonder (yes, I wonder)
Yes, I wonder (oh, I wonder)
Is this the way life’s meant to be?

Monday/ snow flake cheer

Salt Lake City is a small airport and it’s very convenient not to have to catch a shuttle bus to a rental car location away from the airport.  This picture is from Sunday night.  I had just exited from the baggage claim and the rental car counters and garage are on my left.   The snowflake decorations offer a little chilly cheeriness against the winter’s dark.

Sunday/ ‘animal style’

It’s 10 pm Mountain Time and I am at Salt Lake City airport waiting for my colleague to arrive from the East Coast so that we can share a rental car.   We may stop at the In-n-Out Burger with its ‘animal style’ burgers and others on from the not-so-secret menu. I think it refers to terms that the servers and customers started to make up – apart from the official items on the menu.   The In-n-Out is next to interstate I-15 on the way up to Ogden. I just had a banana and a piece of pumpkin loaf ‘bread’ (it’s actually cake!) from Starbucks – and I think that was dinner for me, though.

[From the Salt Lake City airport website] These LED Christmas ‘trees’ at the airport entrance are simple, but look very festive.
Here’s the In-n-Out Burger menu that shows the ‘animal style’ burger .. everything is sort of mashed up together instead of separated lettuce, pattie and cheese. It’s certainly a menu for carnivores !

 

Saturday/ The Life of Pi

The Life of Pi is showing in the USA and a group of us went to see it in 3-D here in Seattle. (For the mathematicians : yes, Pi as in the mathematical constant.  I loved the scene where the boy writes out Pi to hundreds of decimal places from memory. Maybe a nod to India’s proud history in contributing to mathematics?).  It’s a spectacular film, and I liked it a lot.  If one didn’t know, one would never say the tiger is almost all ultra high-tech computer graphics technology.  (In only a very few scenes – such as the tiger swimming in the water – was a real tiger used).  The Pacific Ocean is a terrifying tsunami-wave storm at times, and has a sheer mirror-pond surface at others. The story is full of metaphors and layers.  I would say it asks of the reader or the movie-goer ‘What is your story?’ ‘What do you believe?’ ‘What lets you survive?’.

[From Wikipedia] Life of Pi is a fantasy adventure novel by Yann Martel published in 2001. The protagonist, Piscine Molitor “Pi” Patel, an Indian boy from Pondicherry, explores issues of spirituality and practicality from an early age. He survives 227 days after a shipwreck while stranded on a boat in the Pacific Ocean with a Bengal tiger named Richard Parker. .. In 2012 it was adapted into a theatrical feature film.

 

Friday/ ‘How Airport Security is Killing Us’

I was reading this Bloomberg Businessweek article with the provocative headline at the airport on Thursday night.  Read it here !  http://www.businessweek.com/articles/2012-11-18/how-airport-security-is-killing-us   From the article – ‘To make flying as dangerous as using a car, a four-plane disaster on the scale of 9/11 would have to occur every month, according to analysis published in the American Scientist.  People switching from air to road transportation in the aftermath of the 9/11 attacks led to an increase of 242 driving fatalities per month – which means a lot more people died on the roads as an indirect result of 9/11 than died from being on the planes on that terrible day.

Thursday/ Week #1: Done

This sign of a Sinclair* gas station with the cure brontosaurus logo is at the Country Corner stop in Ogden.  My colleague and I were filling up the rental car with gas before heading to the airport.  So! We have Week#1 of the project behind us. It took a lot out of all of us. For three days in a row we had 6 hrs of workshops, starting at 7 am sharp – connecting with a slow wireless connection to our SAP system half a continent away, and representatives from other sites across the USA dialing in on the phone.

*Sinclair Oil Corporation is based in Salt Lake City, founded in 1916. It is a fully integrated oil and gas company – meaning that it engages in the exploration, production, refinement and distribution of oil and gas.  It operates two refineries (in Wyoming), about 1,000 miles of pipeline, and some 2,700 gas stations.

Wednesday/ what to do with $550m?

Yes, the USA Today’s front page showing the $500 million Powerball lottery prize is already up to $550 million before the drawing tonight.  (It is the second largest lottery jackpot in United States history. In March, the Mega Millions prize was $656 million).  Here’s how Powerball works.  5 numbers are drawn from one drum with 59 white balls.  A 6th number is drawn from a separate drum with 39 red balls.  So what are the odds of your lottery ticket winning?  Well – it is 1/[(59x58x57x56x55/5!)x39] = 1 in 195,249,054.    The sale of lottery tickets is banned in the state of Utah, so we cannot join the frenzy and buy tickets here. Aww. Still, it’s nice to fantasize about winning and what one would do with more than half a billion dollars.  (Well, if Uncle Sam will get say, 50% in taxes.  Then taking the lump sum might reduce the remaining $250 million to say, $100 million.  Even so – a fortune by any measure).

Tuesday/ state route UT-39

[Picture from Wikipedia]. State route UT-39 runs from Ogden out to the Great Salt Lake and back.
Here’s the scenery next to UT-39 as we go back to Ogden on Monday afternoon.  The snow caps on the mountains are smaller than normal for this time of year.  The ski resorts are all open now, but most only has limited runs and are running their snow-making machines to get by until there is more snow.

We take state route UT-39 from the hotel in Ogden to the factory next to the Great Salt Lake where we are doing our project.  Utah is nicknamed the ‘Beehive State’, hence the beehive on the road signs.  And the name Utah is derived from the name of the Ute tribe, which means ‘people of the mountains’.  Speaking of mountains, it has not snowed much since I first arrived at the Salt Lake City airport two weeks ago.

Monday/ all aboard

This is Sunday night at the gate in Seattle airport on the way to Salt Lake City.  I am sitting in the exit row right up front in the coach section of the Boeing 757.  My seat cost me $19 extra but it is completely worth it to me.  As the picture shows, we have the most legroom of anyone in the plane!  Are we willing and able to operate the door in an emergency? The stewardess asked.  Absolutely – we will be the first ones out the door, we assured her.

Sunday/ to Salt Lake City

Sasquatch (also known as Bigfoot) in the bookstore at Seattle-Tacoma airport’s South terminal, helping to market some merchandise. Sasquatch is a mythical man-ape creature that is said to roam the forests here in the Pacific Northwest.

I am at Seattle-Tacoma airport for my flight out to Salt Lake City.   I thought it would be busy here because of many Thanksgiving travelers that return home, but no : there are very few travelers out here and the airport is actually very quiet.  It’s only 4.30pm, so maybe the crush will come later.

Saturday/ animals on Piers Morgan Tonight

CNN’s Piers Morgan show presented quite a parade of animals tonight – brought right into the studio by Jack Hanna and his assistants.  Just for fun I snapped them with my phone camera, and here are some of them.

A ‘laughing’ kookaburra. These are terrestrial tree kingfishers native to Australia and New Guinea.
A beaver, of course. (Beavering away at its apple).
A fennec fox from Western Africa. The large ears dissipate body heat. The little fox lives on scorpions and insects from the desert and can live its whole life without drinking a drop of water.
This magnificent owl is an Eurasian eagle-owl (Bubo bubo). It can see (by echo location) and hunt in total darkness, with its very keen eyes and ears.
And here is the fastest land animal, from the African savannah, the cheetah.
My phone camera couldn’t handle the shade in this Malaysian bear-cat (binturon)’s inky black coat. It’s tail is very thick and strong.
This European lynx is now extinct in the wild.
This is one of the world’s largest lizards, sussing out Piers Morgan with its tongue. It’s a water monitor native to Southern Asia.
Finally, a boa constrictor that had Piers quite on edge (I didn’t remember the exact species). How does he know not to constrict the habdler? Pierce asked. Oh, the snakes senses the human (his handler) is too large an animal to constrict and eat. Hmm. I’m not so sure about that !

 

Black Friday/ buy nothing!

This is from the USA Today newspaper’s cover page on Friday. Used to be that the brick-and-mortar store sales were followed by on-line sales AFTER the Thxgiving weekend (‘Cyber Monday’), but that is no longer the case.
And this from the back page of the USA Today’s Friday issue. Hmm. I would have to look for this scene of Mount St. Helens on my trips to Salt Lake City.

With Black Friday* the silly shopping season has started here in the USA. I really did not feel the urge to join the stampede at the shopping mall, and besides : I had to work! And of course there is the option of buying stuff on-line. Amazon had a whole black Friday week with discounts.

*The retailers supposedly go from red to ‘black’ (meaning they show a profit for the year).