February 03, 2007

Animals and death

Nope, this is not a philosophical post.  This is instead a post wherein I throw a bone to all of the people who demanded that I post my travel photos.  Here's a small sample, then.  The theme is animals, either about to die or already dead or having profited from death.  Below the fold, then:

Continue reading "Animals and death" »

January 26, 2007

Airlines and airports - a review

(Yes, yes, I'll eventually get you your pictures.  Geez.  Can't you give a guy some time to even organize his hundreds of photos?)

So, as you can imagine, going to specific locations in South Asia from the You Knighted States can get pretty complicated indeed!  One generally doesn't have direct flights at that distance even between major locations, and even a convenient indirect route can be expensive.  I travelled between India and Pakistan as well, and while the two countries are technically next to each other, in travel terms, and Pakistanis watch a whole lotta Indian soap operas, they may as well be on different continents.

Consequently, I've had an opportunity to sample several combinations of airlines and airports in the "Old" World (hah!), and I have even been able to build up a thorough impression of some of them.  And I will briefly share with you some insights.

  • I took United Airlines to Munich on one leg of my voyage.  I fly United domestically quite often, and even once in first/business class, and, as expected, international economy (I'm not made of money!) was a little bit closer to domestic business class than to domestic economy.  The flight was uneventful, the entertainment selections adequate.  However, I had bulkhead seats.  Now, if I were so worried about legroom, I'd have been happy about this.  But I am not, shall we say, narrowly built.  Bulkhead seats,  because they are at the front, have the entertainment system and tray table built into the armrests of the seats, meaning that precious inches of, er, spread are lost.  The food is boring neutral-Americanish food, but it was acceptable.
  • Munich airport itself was a relatively acceptable experience.  American arrivals are in one terminal, and international departures are in another.  The terminals are not connected by a bridge, bus, or train system, and consequently it is not possible to make the sort of connection that we were making without immigrating to Germany on tourist visa status, which is trivial for Canadians to get right there at the passport control gates (this is the case for most of Europe).  The passport control guard was friendly and helpful, as were most of the airline staff, and stereotypically German Lufthansa employees. 
  • We had a few hours in Munich, and we window shopped at the exterior mall attached to the other terminal before entering.  We were curious about the grocery store there and explored it and confirmed that everything does cost twice as much in Germany.  We had to pass passport control again to exit Germany into the other international terminal---exit control is unfamiliar to most North Americans but seems to be the norm in the rest of the world.  Munich is a new and underutilized airport, and parts of this other terminal were built but completely abandoned.  Food choices were few beyond the security checkpoint (competent, helpful staff!), and we should have eaten in the mall food court outside.  The airport is connected to Munich via Munich's metro, and I regret not spending a couple of hours in the city, but the rest of our group thought it was a bad idea for their ersatz travel arranger to run off without them (and they were too tired to explore on their own).
  • Completely opposite to the Munich experience was the Frankfurt experience on another leg of our complicated journey.  Frankfurt is a massively overused, undercapacity airport that is cold and dirty and has little to recommend itself.  Whose big idea was it to let M. C. Escher design an airport?  Let's just say that while I've had bad airport experiences, I have never felt so maltreated by airline employees as there.  It was a very, very negative experience.
  • Lufthansa sucks.  Compared to the other airlines we took, Lufthansa's seats were very narrow, as though Germans were little people or something.  Leg room was OK, but even business class looked cramped.  The food was boring, and they didn't have individual entertainment systems like every other modern airline has even in economy class.  We all had to watch The Devil Wears Prada.  At least the flight attendants were polite.  I almost rather they had not been, so that I would have been prepared for the Frankfurt experience.  I won't fly Lufthansa again unless it's seriously cheaper, which it ought to be.
  • I had several flights on Emirates.  The experience is totally different from Lufthansa.  Seats were for the most part wide and comfortable.  The individual entertainment system was very comprehensive with more selection than you could really want.  Some of the planes allow you to play videogames with other seats.  The food was good and plentiful, and the service was friendly and prompt.  I'd definitely fly them again.  Emirates is supposed to be expensive, but I did a great deal of research on this trip, and it was the cheapest option to get to Karachi at that time.
  • Dubai airport is good, but it's still overrated.  People who travel more frequently than we were telling us how wonderful the airport was, but it didn't even have the same variety of restaurants that some of the major North American airports do...which is not saying much, of course.  If we wanted to check into an internal hotel, than it might have been wonderful.  The duty free stores were OK but I don't understand the fuss.   Nevertheless, I have few complaints about Dubai airport.   The food and services were very reasonably priced.  The best thing about it was the free and ubiquitous wireless Internet access; in most airports, they charge you $10 for a little bit of access, which is extremely annoying.  Not so in Dubai.  Lastly, you aren't allowed into the gate lounges until they're ready to board you, basically, and there isn't enough seating outside the gate lounges.  They obviously expect you to shop.
  • The airport in Karachi ran surprisingly well for something run in Pakistan.  I mean, it was, for the most part, a normal large airport.  People still didn't follow the rules (Pakistanis don't believe in rules), but at least things worked.
  • The airport in Chennai was surprisingly dilapidated for a major city in India.  Bathrooms are disgusting.  Efficient and orderly, at least in our experience, but oddly dilapidated.
  • Finally, United Airlines was OK.  For the most part.  Well, on our way back we had a flight attendant with a mental toothache, so to speak.  Eventually, she divulged the reason for her mental toothache, and I sympathize.  Capitalism sux.  But the airline was OK.  Not spectacular, not bad.  Individual entertainment, but not the selection or quality of Emirates.  Food was whatever the local caterers brought.  Do not trust them when they say that it is "turkey, not ham."  It is probably ham.

That last, you may wonder why I didn't order the halal meal.  Well, it goes like this: for stuff I don't cook myself, I'm not all that strict about halalitude.  A lot of North American Muslims are like that.  If I ordered the halal meal, I'd have been condemned to eating beans and rice on all the non-Emirates flights (Emirates is 100% halal, they emphasize it in their literature, and I believe them).  Usually, the airlines have a meal that isn't pork.  We had one exception which my pork radar was easily able to detect.

January 18, 2007

Did you miss me?

Obviously, you did.

However, I am back in the USA from my trip to Karachi, Pakistan and Madras/Chennai, India.  I spent the last couple of days packing those of my family who had traveled with me back to their own final destinations (I am the family travel agent), and life returneth to normal.

Some of you in the blogosphere seem to have been enjoying yourselves.  I did poke my head in from time to time, but my access to the Internet wasn't very consistent.  I deeply resent whoever decided to replace Jason Cherniak's Ritalin with sugar pills while I was away.  The Anglo-American feminist blogosphere has gone through a couple of more Alamos.  And so on. 

I may even be persuaded to post some photos of my trip eventually.  Some of you have already head about my doings in Asia, which I shall henceforth dub "South Asia 06-07: The Landed Gentry Tour."   Let's just say that I survived the traffic.

January 18, 2006

Back in the You Ess

I am now back in the USA.  My trip back to the USA was uneventful, except,

  • The first leg of the flight was interrupted in mid-flight by the fact that the airport in question was so fogged up that nothing could land.  The airport is in a city whose name rhymes with "revoit", if "revoit" were a word.  So we got diverted to another major airport before the plane ran out of fuel.
  • It turns out that our captain was clever and did not go to a major airport but to a minor little one.  Since apparently he was the only one who thought of this, we were refueled and back in the air before any of the other delay victims were.
  • I still missed my connection at the original connecting airport.  But I got the next one.  Annoying but not too bad.
  • On the next (and last) leg of the trip, I sat next to a woman who seemed like an experienced flyer.  Except, she wasn't.  Obviously, not---because she didn't apparently realize that the seats were small.  Now, it wasn't her trying to take up all the space; it's that she was the first person to complain to me that I was taking up too much.  Lady, I can do very little about the fact that my shoulders protrude by a considerable margin on either side of the tiny seat.  So I can squish you, or I can squish the guy on the other side.  Most people take one look at me and realize that it's a lost cause.

December 21, 2005

Minor airport panic

I've had an almost perfect record leaving from US airports and crossing back into the US.  Despite my appearance and suspicious real name, I haven't ever had a problem or been stopped by security.  There was one trip with a weird international route that had a security-related delay for me, but that was actually instigated by me deliberately: I wanted to tell US customs to warn another US customs stop at a different airport that I would be zigzagging through Canada and to explain to them preemptively why I was crossing the border twice in one day (long story), which is obviously odd and suspicious.  This strategy worked: at the second crossing, they saw the note left by guards at the previous crossing, and didn't delay me.

So it looks like this time I got careless.  Usually I search my carry-on items very carefully for Suspicious Objects, like cutlery or scissors and things---but they've changed some of the rules for this in the US (screwing with our minds, really).  So I forgot to remove a fork and knife from my shoulderbag/big-man-purse, and didn't realize it.  So imagine my panic when the conveyor belt through the X-ray machine suddenly stops with my bag still in it, and the X-ray operator lady yells "BAG CHECK!"  They left me hanging there a little bit while the security officer took her own time to stroll over---and subjecting me to dirty looks from the other passengers who were waiting for their own luggage to go through the silly machine.

Anyway, the bag check officer searched my big-man-purse thoroughly, and then, to my chagrin and consternation, found the fork and knife in the back pocket.  "Fork OK, this knife not."  It's a flimsy metal table knife with a cheap plastic handle.  I stood there and gibbered something about a meal a few days back that I had brought into work and about my normal thorough habits and how stupid I was.  She smiled at me in my panic and said, "That's OK, have a safe trip."  Then she walked over to a weird cabinet-thing and dumped the knife into a slot and ticked something off on a form.  I hope that form doesn't contain my identification---it would suck if I now have a note on my record.  We'll see when I go back to the US if I get any trouble, especially after so many untroubled crossings.