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Transit
My travels today have been mercifully uneventful.
Phx-Chicago: 3.5 hours. Slept most of the way. Very short layover. Didn't even bother to eat.
Chicago-Frankfurt am Main: 8.5 hours. My seatmate on the left was Ardi, a dentist of Persian descent who lives in Denver and both practices and teaches dentistry. Pleasant guy. My seatmate on the right was Jan, a teacher of Spanish, French and English. Liked her a lot. She was heading to Croatia for some vacation action which was to include a dinner with 13 paired wine samplings. I hope she remembers the experience. Ardi and Jan completely justified the traditional male-female distinction of non-talkers/talkers. Ardi answered only when prompted, the pleasant and polite, and Jan talked my ear off. This was also my first flight on a 747, which frankly didn't seem all that different from any other plane, except that the experience of the landing was somehow gentler than I expected.
Frankfurt airport: I have two pieces of check-in luggage because I'm hauling textbooks to Russia in the second one. Didn't want to carry them to Barcelona, so I stored one in the "left luggage" department. That will be cheaper than even a one-way extra-bag charge. Then grabbed lunch at one of the restaurants.
The salad was unremarkable, except that the carrot strings were very, very long. Kind of irked me at first. Had to use a knife to cut the salad up. Took extra time. And then I reminded myself that I wasn't at Whataburger. Not every meal in life is supposed to go by in seventeen bites and four minutes. Civilized people slow down and take pleasure in the eating event. Oh, yeah. I forgot about that civilization thing.
The main course was a veal and mushroom combination in a very tasty veal gravy, accompanied by a potato pancake. Regular pancakes I can live without, but potato pancakes are a thing of glory, especially when dripping in veal gravy or sour cream. Glorious!
I still had some major time to kill in the airport, so I walked the length of the A concourse several times, thus reminding myself of the lesson that you should never wear new shoes on vacation. Break your shoes in at home for a month before hand. I'm probably going to have some major blisters tomorrow.
The flight to Barcelona I half slept through. Damn, but those Germans are efficient. They manage to service the whole cabin twice in less than an hour. The other day on "The Big Bang Theory" Sheldon commented that the Germans are a comforting people. My immediate thought was, "That's because you're not a Jew, Sheldon." But Sheldon could have used today's amazing customer service to support his point.
As we approached Barcelona I was very excited as we flew briefly out over the Mediterranean, although at this point we should probably call it "The Sea of ...". I've never been on this body of water before. The airport was very nice and had great signage. I found my way to the Tourism Bureau, where they issued me the transportation and tour tickets I had purchased. Then made my way to the other terminal where I connected with the train to downtown. My hotel is perhaps a quarter block away from the main trainstation. Let me tell you, that 5-day Barcelona Card is worth it just to avoid two taxi fares. The taxi prices are ridiculous here. Weird thing, though. I don't think I have ever felt as stared at as I did on the train into town. Wonder what triggered that?
I established myself in the Torre Catalunya, allegedly a four-star hotel, although I expect they call it that because they have four stars on the outside... Anyway, I registered. Romina, the clerk, made a good impression on me. I got to my room and none of the lights worked. Hm. That's odd. I go back downstairs, and she mentions that she forgot to tell me that one of the switches next to the inner lock is actually a card-key reader. It won't allow any of the electrical outlets or lights to work unless the card is inserted. Hm. That's kind of clever. That way when I leave the room with my card-key, all the lights and AC go off, saving electricity.
Finally in my room with lights working, I discover I forgot my power cord adapter. Asked the desk where to buy one. They simply gave me one for the duration. Spiffy! Then I asked where to walk first in the city, and I was told to wander down Avinguda de Roma. Found a tapas bar where I tried two types of tapas. The jamón ibérico and the chorizo (not like Mexican chorizo) were very tasty. Tasty, but not enough meat and too much bread. Gary Taubes would not approve.
I decided to plug in my Russian cell phone to start the recharge. It's been sitting in my home for a year, so I figured it wouldn't have any juice left. So I turned it on... lo, it has about a two-thirds charge left. And it immediately knows I'm in Spain and sends me a text-message saying I could use roaming in Spain via Movistar, which is one of Spain's largest telecom companies. Wow. So I go to the website or my Russian phone company to double check how much money I have left on the account. I had topped it off before I left Russia last year so that I wouldn't have to re-establish service when I returned. I had assumed that the amount on the phone would be drained by now, but no. I have a bundle or rubles left on it. Cool! I guess I won't have to buy a new SIM card for my few days in Spain after all.
Not sure what I will do tomorrow, aside from eat till I burst. Sunday is a slow day in Barcelona, and as long as I get rested up, I will be happy. So I'll wrap this up with a glarey view through my window:
1 comment
Well, the joy in the 747 is upstairs, not down in Steerage.
I remembered looking backward from business class on our trip to London and though “Oh those poor people to the rear there; we should throw them some cake, all squished in like that!”
A strange white man with blond hair rides, the subway and you wonder why people stare? Really? :)
Nothing annoys me more than I haveing to buy a cord on a trip. I hate me self for forgetting the basics.