Sunday, January 5, 2014
One bag, two bags, three bags, four
but we have many, many more.
Our daughter
finally got rid of us today by taking us to the Washington Dulles airport and
dumping us at the curb at 6 PM for our 11:30 flight. While she and Sandy waited at the curb, I
went inside to see if we had procured the much-sought-after “privileged
baggage” allowance I had been working on for more than a month. We managed to get approval for one extra
checked in bag at no cost. We had asked
for two, one each, but half a loaf is better than none. That brought our total checked bags up to
five, about 250 pounds en mass. This
means we will be able take 50 pounds of books for the kids in Kasavai that we
would otherwise have had to leave home.
But this is
only half the annual battle. Now, with
us in line with the five bags to be checked plus two overstuffed carry-ons and
two bulging back packs (i.e., “one personal item each”), much to our
consternation, a fellow came by checking carry-on bags for weight and size.
We cringed.
Miraculously
he skipped us. So, our next move in this
game of hide (the bag) and seek would be to walk leisurely toward the counter demonstrating
how light our carry-ons and “personal items” must be. Sandy’s probably weighed 35 pounds and mine
came in around 30 pounds. That’s not
counting my back pack that weighed 25 pounds at least and Sandy’s that would
have tipped the scales near 20 pounds.
And, the agent at the desk had just weighed the carry-ons of all the
passengers in line ahead of us. The
woman in front of us had one that weighed in right at the limit, 18 pounds.
Again we
cringed.
“How many
bags do you have to check?” the agent asked as we approached her. “Five” I said while Sandy stood back with our
carry-ons which were snuggled up to the counter, hidden by her clever
move. One minute, two minutes, three
minutes passed – “Your bags are checked all the way through to Nairobi. No need to pick them up in Istanbul. Here are your boarding passes and luggage
claim checks. Have a nice flight, you
leave from gate B39.”
T’was yet another
miracle.
And, do you
recall that woman who had her carry-on weighed just in front of us (if not,
read more carefully). Well, she, Sandy,
and I tripped over each other repeatedly in the security line as we took off
our shoes, belts, coats, and sweaters and put everything in those bins for
x-ray and then stood with our hands over our heads for the electronic
pat-down. Her name is Larisa.
We met her again
on the shuttle train to terminal B and again as we proceeded to our gate and
looked for a spot for dinner. Might as
well have dinner together at Harry’s Tap Room right across from B39, so we
invited her to join us. She’s from
Moldova, has one son, Ivan, in graduate school in the US, another, Andre,
employed in Moldova, a step-son who is a physician in San Diego, and she lives
in Istabul (near Hagia Sofia) with her husband and she speaks almost no English. Perhaps we’ll contact her when we are in
Istanbul near the end of our trip. Or we
might visit her son in Moldova next time we are in the area. After all, it’s a small world.
Monday,
January 6, 2014
A day without sunshine.
We were in
the terminal at 6 PM EST, in the air at 11:30 EST, on the ground at 5 PM on
Monday in Istanbul, in the plane at 7:50 in Istanbul, in the air until 3:45 AM on
Tuesday in Nairobi, and in our hotel room at 5:30 AM on Tuesday in Nairobi. All without a minute of daylight. A three day span in the dark is too much.
This is what we saw outside for 30 hours or so.
Do you want beef or chicken?
They say
that your choices on an airplane are warmed over beef, warmed over chicken, or
warmed over salmon. All too true, but
Turkish Airlines tries to do it with panache.
They give you warm damp towels before the meal is served, fancy menus,
typical Turkish appetizers, then the choice of beef or chicken or of salmon or
chicken. I give them a grade of B.
How many hours did you spend in route before you were able to lay in a bed and get some rest?
ReplyDeleteWe got out of bed in MD at about 9 AM on Sunday and got back in a bed at 6 AM on Tuesday in Nairobi. I guess that's 37 hours, pillow to pillow. Not all in route, but all out of bed.
ReplyDelete