Alaska has always been one on my "must see" list. I remember back in the early 80's when I was a kid, my parents had a wallpaper mural in one of the rooms of our house (how 70's of them!). The picture was of beautiful autumn trees dabbled between evergreens. Beyond was a majestic snow covered mountain and a placid lake which mirrored it. I always wondered where that place may be, if it even existed.
As we drove along the Seward Highway (AK-1) I was reminded of that mural from years ago. The mountains sometimes soared above the clouds so high that they seemed to pierce the sky. The water was calm and glistened in the morning sun and patches of fog cropped up between the valleys. We started off out of Anchorage around 9am, waking up to a breakfast of strong coffee scrambled eggs and reindeer sausage. We looked outside, and the mountains were already snow covered. The locals said that this was a little unusual this time of year and the snow often doesn't start accumulating until a bit later in the season.
Along our drive, we stopped for any reason we could. The first few times just to breathe in the brisk fresh air and to take some photos of the steep mountain ranges, glaciers and fall foliage.
Another time was to try to get a glimpse of the Beluga whale that we saw in the bay as we were driving. I was amazed at how easily it was to spot wildlife and how freely they roamed in their natural habitat. Around every turn in the road, it seemed like there was a better view. Snow capped mountains and powerful waterfalls in the distance, bald eagles soaring above.
We arrived at our destination in the Kenai Peninsula. There are a lot of tours that go out of Seward for wildlife and glacial viewing as well as fishing trips. We decided to stop and have lunch at a place on the water called Ray's. We had a great view of the fishing boats as well as a large sea otter popping in and out of the water, probably looking for his lunch as well. I ordered the fish and chips with cod, red snapper and halibut. It was awesome! Probably because I was eating it in a small fishing village in Alaska.
After lunch we decided to head to the Exit Glacier in the Kenai National Forest. I had seen glaciers before, but never had the chance to walk right up and touch one. For some reason, I expected the glacier to be like packed snow. I was completely wrong. It literally was a block of solid ice, slowly melting away. Here are more photos of the view from the park:
This is where the glacier used to reach in 1926:
A solid block of ice:
A little piece of history melting away:
On the way back to Anchorage, we stopped at a wildlife conservation center where injured animals are either rehabilitated or kept if they are unable to go back into the wild. For example, we saw a Bald Eagle who had lost a wing and could no longer fly. here are a few photos of the brown bears and black bear high in the trees!
I wanted to see a moose all day - he was pretty chill (no flared nostrils):
So much to see and do in Alaska. It is truly beautiful here.
Sunday, May 11, 2008
A Dinner Date in London
I know that I've been slacking a bit on updating my travelings. I've been flying around the U.S. most recently, to New York, D.C., Las Vegas, Dallas - but mostly short trips with not very much time to get out to see and do things. Imagine working an 8 hour day at the office and then when you walk out the door at night, your office has been magically transported to another city or a foreign country - many timezones away. I have to reset my watch, find the closest grocery store for some shopping and cross my fingers my hotel room is comfortable. I suppose I'm always getting somewhere at the end of the day - literally!
On my most recent trip, we boarded the plane bound for England. The flight was smooth, but seemed to go by extremely slow. I served dinner to my two passengers as well as the pilots, made beds for my passengers in the back of the cabin and put them to bed. I sat up front in the crew rest area reading Jim Cramer's Mad Money (thanks to my Dad) and drinking coffee to try and stay awake. We arrived in Luton around 1:30am after almost a 9 hour flight from Dallas. We settled into our hotel and I set my alarm clock to wake me up around 11:30am to do some grocery shopping at Marks and Spencer for the flight home. (One thing I have to mention about the hotels in Europe are the beds. Why do they always have two tiny beds pushed together to make a double bed? There is a huge crack down the middle anyway - it just doesn't make sense to me).
Even though our trip was going to be very brief, I was excited to be heading into the city to meet Molly for dinner! Thursday turned out to be the most perfect day to be in London (our cab driver said it was the nicest day all year). People were laying out in the parks, sitting around the fountain in Picadilly Circus and eating gelato. It was gorgeous outside and as 5pm rolled around, the pubs were spilling with patrons enjoying the warm evening outdoors. I was supposed to meet Molly at the "Ain't Nothin' But Blues Bar" but instead met at the Blues Post next door. It was fun catching up and hearing about her exciting life in London town since the move from San Francisco. Later in the evening we started to get hungry and I really wanted to find some Fish n' Chips for dinner. As time got away from us (and the hungrier I got), we ended up settling for the nearest KFC!!
We ended our night and said goodbye and I caught the train back to Luton. I boarded the plane the next afternoon and headed back to LA - just in time for dinner on Friday night.
On my most recent trip, we boarded the plane bound for England. The flight was smooth, but seemed to go by extremely slow. I served dinner to my two passengers as well as the pilots, made beds for my passengers in the back of the cabin and put them to bed. I sat up front in the crew rest area reading Jim Cramer's Mad Money (thanks to my Dad) and drinking coffee to try and stay awake. We arrived in Luton around 1:30am after almost a 9 hour flight from Dallas. We settled into our hotel and I set my alarm clock to wake me up around 11:30am to do some grocery shopping at Marks and Spencer for the flight home. (One thing I have to mention about the hotels in Europe are the beds. Why do they always have two tiny beds pushed together to make a double bed? There is a huge crack down the middle anyway - it just doesn't make sense to me).
Even though our trip was going to be very brief, I was excited to be heading into the city to meet Molly for dinner! Thursday turned out to be the most perfect day to be in London (our cab driver said it was the nicest day all year). People were laying out in the parks, sitting around the fountain in Picadilly Circus and eating gelato. It was gorgeous outside and as 5pm rolled around, the pubs were spilling with patrons enjoying the warm evening outdoors. I was supposed to meet Molly at the "Ain't Nothin' But Blues Bar" but instead met at the Blues Post next door. It was fun catching up and hearing about her exciting life in London town since the move from San Francisco. Later in the evening we started to get hungry and I really wanted to find some Fish n' Chips for dinner. As time got away from us (and the hungrier I got), we ended up settling for the nearest KFC!!
We ended our night and said goodbye and I caught the train back to Luton. I boarded the plane the next afternoon and headed back to LA - just in time for dinner on Friday night.
Tuesday, April 1, 2008
Over 161,922 Miles! Where would you like to visit?
This is pretty crazy - as I was trying to figure out where I spent most of my time this year (for tax purposes) and I mapped my routes and found out that I have traveled over 161,000 miles in the last year! It's pretty unbelievable to me to see all of the airports I've landed at in the last ten months and that isn't including personal vacation and short trips for work (Vegas and back, San Francisco and back, etc). The route map above gives a good visual.
I think my favorite trips included Venice, Dublin, Palma de Mallorca, Stockholm and Rabat.
If you could choose one place in the world to visit, where would it be?
AIRPORTS:
Los Angeles [Intl], CA, US
London [Stansted], Essex, England, GB
Minneapolis [Minneapolis-St. Paul Intl/Wold-Chamberlain Airport]
Las Vegas [Mc Carran Intl], NV, US
Boston [General Edward Lawrence Logan Intl], MA, US
Firenze (Florence) [Peretola], Italy
Bedfordshire, England, GB
Teterboro, NJ, US
New York [John F Kennedy Intl], NY, US
Van Nuys, CA, US
Kahului, Maui, HI, US
Flint [Bishop Intl], MI, US
Chicago [Chicago Midway Intl], IL, US
Paris [Le Bourget], France
Reykjavík [Keflavík], Iceland
Vancouver [Intl], BC, CA
Seattle [Seattle-Tacoma Intl], WA, US
Tokyo (Narita) [New Tokyo Intl], Honshu, Japan
Honolulu [Intl], Oahu, HI, US
Juneau [Intl], AK, US
Málaga [Pablo Ruiz Picasso], Spain
Zürich [Zürich-Kloten], CH
Iqaluit [Frobisher Bay], NW, CA
Venezia (Venice) [Marco Polo / Tessera], Italy
Eivissa (Ibiza), Eivissa, Balearic Islands, Spain
San Juan [Luis Muñoz Marin Intl], PR, US
West Palm Beach [Palm Beach Intl], FL, US
Nantucket [Nantucket Memorial Airport], MA, US
Washington [Washington Dulles Intl], DC, US
Amsterdam [Schiphol], NL
Leeds/Bradford (Yeadon) [Leeds Bradford Intl], Yorkshire, England
Fort Myers [Southwest Florida Intl], FL, US
Lisboa (Lisbon) [Aeroporto da Portela de Sacavem], PT
Atlanta [Hartsfield - Jackson Atlanta Intl], GA, US
Dublin, IE
Palma de Mallorca [Son Sant Joan Airport], Mallorca, Balearic Islands
Rabat [Sale], MA
Los Cabos (San José del Cabo) [Intl], BCS, MX
Bordeaux [Mérignac], FR
Shannon (Limerick), IE
Gander [Intl], NL, CA
Houston [William P Hobby Airport], TX, US
Quito [Mariscal Sucre], Ecuador
Liberia [Daniel Oduber Quiros Intl], Costa Rica
Farnborough, Hampshire, England
London [Heathrow], Middlesex, England
Stockholm [Arlanda], Sweden
Santa Maria, Azores, PT
Oakland [Metropolitan Oakland Intl], CA, US
Burbank [Bob Hope Airport], CA, US
Tuesday, March 4, 2008
New York to Puerto Rico via Stockholm
We left Teterboro around midnight for an overnight flight to Farnborough, England (without passengers). The plane had to be at the airport at a certain time because another crew was taking it straight back to Van Nuys with one passenger. The sun began coming up again within just a few hours of our departure (due to the time zones), and just in time for us to coast in over Ireland. As I looked out the window, I could see the Cliffs of Mohr and the Ring of Dingle, making me wish the pilots could just drop me off in
Dublin instead of England. Eric was in the cockpit as well, and we were looking forward to seeing some different countries together.
We finally landed in Barbados thinking that we would be able to walk off the plane, get a hotel and go straight to bed, but unfortunately the office wanted us to reposition to Puerto Rico. After another 1.5 hour flight, customs and searching for the Marriott we finally got to bed around 5:30am. Luckily though, we were able to relax in Puerto Rico for about three days - enjoying the hammocks, the warm water and a good book!
Dublin instead of England. Eric was in the cockpit as well, and we were looking forward to seeing some different countries together.
We landed in England and passed the plane of to the other crew, jumped in the car where the driver took us to this random hotel out in the middle of nowhere it seemed. We pulled up to the Potter's International Hotel in a little town called Aldershot and checked in with the front desk. We tried to locate our rooms, but the hotel was a complete labryinth. We jumped into the elevator, walked down a hallway, took a left, walked for a while, took a right, walked up more spiral stairs to another hallway. It was the strangest thing. All of the rooms in the hotel had their doors wide open and it almost had the feeling of being in someone's house (although the hotel was quite big). Although we hadn't slept the night before, it was too early to go to bed now. It was about 3pm so we decided to sit outside by the Cricket Field before dinner. We watched as an older man meticulously mowed the field - back and forth, back and forth. Sometimes I take a moment to think about where I am in the world and how completely random it is at times to be in these specific situations and places. It truly is like closing your eyes, pointing to a place on a map and arriving there, half sleeping, wondering if it's actually a dream or if you're really there.
The next morning, a car picked us up to take us to Heathrow Airport, about 35 miles north of Aldershot. We had instructions to board a British Airways flight bound for Stockholm! Eric and I were both really excited because neither of us had been to Sweden before. We arrived at the Stockholm airport in the early afternoon and a cab took us to our hotel. It was a cute little hotel - and the interior design was right out of an Ikea catalog. We had our own little kitchen, living room and bedroom. The hotel was also right across from the train station, so we decided to go into town for dinner. Stockholm was FREEZING, weather I'm not used to anymore living in California. It was Valentines Day and we wanted to eat somewhere nice - but Stockholm is actually really expensive. Our first stop was to the Absolut Ice Bar in the Nordic Sea Hotel. They made us put on these heavy space-age coats and walk into a room that is kept at about -5 degrees celsius.
Our drinks came in hollowed out square ice cubes and the tables were carved out of ice as well! We didn't stay too long as it was so cold inside and we wanted to head to a warm place to get some dinner. After our Valentine's Day dinner (at a very fancy Pizza Hut no less!) we headed out to the Old Town to check out some of the sights. It was dark, snowy and the city itself is beautiful, but quite eerie at the same time.
We walked past all the little restaurants, bars and went to the Castle where we were told by the guard that we needed to leave the premises immediately! Stockholm is gorgeous at night and we walked around for a while in the dark as we didn't think we'd actually get to go into the city the next day because we had an early afternoon flight out of Sweden.
Fortunately our flight to Barbados was delayed so Eric and I were able to go into the city again during the daylight hours, have lunch and take more photos.
One of the strangest things I noticed about Sweden is that while everything is written in Swedish (menus, street signs, information, etc), their English was amazing. We didn't meet one person there the whole time that couldn't speak English when we asked for help.
Our drinks came in hollowed out square ice cubes and the tables were carved out of ice as well! We didn't stay too long as it was so cold inside and we wanted to head to a warm place to get some dinner. After our Valentine's Day dinner (at a very fancy Pizza Hut no less!) we headed out to the Old Town to check out some of the sights. It was dark, snowy and the city itself is beautiful, but quite eerie at the same time.
We walked past all the little restaurants, bars and went to the Castle where we were told by the guard that we needed to leave the premises immediately! Stockholm is gorgeous at night and we walked around for a while in the dark as we didn't think we'd actually get to go into the city the next day because we had an early afternoon flight out of Sweden.
Fortunately our flight to Barbados was delayed so Eric and I were able to go into the city again during the daylight hours, have lunch and take more photos.
One of the strangest things I noticed about Sweden is that while everything is written in Swedish (menus, street signs, information, etc), their English was amazing. We didn't meet one person there the whole time that couldn't speak English when we asked for help.
Later that evening, we boarded the plane and took two passengers to Barbados. The flight was about 13 hours (yikes) but amazingly went by pretty fast. We were able to stop in the Azores for fuel - which was cool because I never thought I'd step foot on those islands in the middle of the Atlantic.
We finally landed in Barbados thinking that we would be able to walk off the plane, get a hotel and go straight to bed, but unfortunately the office wanted us to reposition to Puerto Rico. After another 1.5 hour flight, customs and searching for the Marriott we finally got to bed around 5:30am. Luckily though, we were able to relax in Puerto Rico for about three days - enjoying the hammocks, the warm water and a good book!
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