Category Archives: Travel

Portugal

I arrived in Portugal after a completely uneventful air trip TOL-CVG-CDG-LIS. Actually, my transatlantic leg was better than most; I sat next to an American expat who was working for Michelin. We had a fascinating conversation about working overseas, the differences between French and American companies, and various misadventures he had while adjusting to French bureaucracy. Speaking of which: when I got to CDG, I found that, as usual, Air France managed to add a delay to my schedule, but I was in such a good mood from my post-arrival shower at their lounge in Terminal 2C that I didn’t mind too much. (Note to self: remember that CDG isn’t air-conditioned and dress appropriately).

Along the way to the terminal, I found a small chapel that had a guestbook wherein visitors were encouraged to write messages or prayers. I wrote my testimony in French, which was kind of neat. Of course, it’s entirely possible that my rusty grammar will turn people off, but I was pleased that my habit of reading French-language church publications had enriched my vocabulary so much.

I got to Lisbon a few minutes late and headed to the arrival area to meet Devin, whose flight had arrived around the same time. I’d wanted to buy a prepaid SIM for Arlene’s old phone (which is now my outside-the-US phone), but there were none for sale at CDG. Fortunately, Vodafone had a kiosk right in the Lisbon arrival area, so we bought SIMs and took a taxi to our hotel. I can’t say that the taxi driver was the least friendly driver I’ve ever had, but he’d certainly rank in the top ten.

Despite his demeanor, though, we made it to the Vila Galé Opera hotel just fine. The hotel sits right near a large convention hall and next to the Bridge of 25 April (the linked photo was apparently taken from our hotel’s front yard, or very close to it; the picture below was taken from a pedestrian bridge near the conference center). It was a nice enough place; as you might expect, there were lots of subtle and not-so-subtle differences from typical US hotels, including the fact that you have to stick your room key in a slot near the front door to turn on the room’s electricity. All in all, not a bad place to stay.

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We had a pleasant dinner at a restaurant right across from the hotel; there were actually a row of them in an area called Las Docas (“the docks”). The restaurant where we ate had a great menu that listed, among other delicacies, barnacles and spider crab skull. Though it was hard to resist (I mean, who doesn’t love skull?) I had a steak, which turned out to be quite good. The service was fairly poor; I found this to be true of all the restaurants and other public venues (notably, the airport). People just didn’t seem to care.

The staff at the conference center was exceptionally helpful; they got the telephone and network connectivity set up flawlessly. As a result, the 1200+ attendees got what they came for: an in-depth look at the new features in Exchange 2007, Office 2007, and Windows Vista. My presentation on Exchange Unified Messaging was a real hoot; I was driving the UM demo of Outlook Voice Access from my MacBook Pro and a telephone that had been patched into the room’s sound system. The audience loved it when I told OVA to clear my calendar because I was going to the beach, and the demonstration of Live Communications Server’s telephone control features went very well too. (As a bonus, I got to meet Exchange MVP Rui J.M. Silva and an Outlook MVP whose name I’ve regrettably forgotten.)

In the afternoon, after Devin and I got done, we went sightseeing / souvenir hunting. We walked several kilometres into town, where I spotted a cow (see below) from this year’s Cow Parade and a very cool statue of Prince Henry the Navigator (note the elephants around the statue’s base). We didn’t find any souvenirs, sorry to say. However, we both noticed that the people on the streets looked somewhere between downtrodden and angry, in all but a few cases. Maybe it was just the area where we were.

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I went back to the docks and had a great dinner of chouriço (sausage, baked in a dish with two cheeses on top) and lasagna at a restaurant called “Cosmos”. Then I went back to the hotel, worked for a while, slept all too briefly, and took my next flight LIS-AMS on TAP Air Portugal. Good news: they have in-flight entertainment. Bad news: it was “Big Momma’s House”. Worst news: they play the movie audio over the cabin PA, in English, with onscreen Portugese subtitles. Man, I had those headphones on in nothing flat.

Even though I had a 90-minute layover in AMS, I almost didn’t make my flight; I had to find a Delta gate to check in, and that took some doing. I was almost the last pax aboard my flight back to CVG, but after that, I had a smooth trip back home except that my new airplane laptop adapter doesn’t have enough juice to drive the MacBook Pro while it’s charging. Jim McBee told me his had the same problem, but I dismissed it as a one-off. Oops. Time for a new one, I guess.

Actually, it’s time to get ready for going to Oslo tomorrow.

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Some encouraging news from Delta

Delta had a big event in Atlanta last night. I couldn’t attend (duh), but some of the folks from FlyerTalk who did attend posted their notes on the event, and some of the planned changes are pretty exciting; in particular, they’re stepping up the frequency of aircraft deep cleaning, they’re retrofitting song amenities (like in-seat in-flight entertainment) to their mainline fleet, and they’re upgrading the business cabins for their international fleet. I hope these changes bear fruit!

Update: my favorite enhancement is definitely being able to get automated notification of flight delays. Reportedly, Delta’s going to enhance this so that you can specify someone else to get your flight alerts– I’d love that feature, as it gives me an easy way for Arlene to keep track of when to get me from the airport. Running a close second is this report that DL’s going to stop buying CRJs and get the EMB-170/190 instead, which is about a million times more comfortable.

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Northwest offers perks out of Toledo Express

Pretty interesting postcard in the mail: Northwest (which has a huge hub just up the road at DTW) has been bought off by the Toledo-Lucas County Port Authority, which operates Toledo Express Airport. NW is offering some pretty nice perks. If you fly NW round-trip out of TOL, you get 1000 bonus miles, and can qualify for elite status in half the normal time, plus you get a mileage bonus: 8 roundtrips for silver, 15 roundtrips for Gold, and 25 for Platinum, with 50%, 100%, and 125% mileage bonuses. This is a pretty good deal, especially given that parking and terminal access at TOL are much, much easier than they are at DTW. As far as I can tell, you don’t have to do anything special other than fly roundtrips TOL-xxx-TOL and use your NW WorldPerks number. Happy travels!

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Travel gear on the way

I was missing two pieces of hardware for this trip: an airplane power adapter (have one, can’t find it) and a small portable wireless router. I didn’t miss the adapter because I have a spare laptop battery; I did miss the router, though, because if I’d had one I could have worked on my hotel balcony. So, I now have a Linksys Compact Wireless-G Broadband Router WRT54GC on the way; Devin has one and recommends it, so I figured I’d give it a try.
If I can’t find my power adapter, I know there are several now that take an Empower plug and have a regular two-prong, 110VAC outlet. That’s the kind I want, since I can use it with whatever device I happen to have.

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Coming home

Getting out of France turned out to be more of an adventure than I wanted it to be. I arrived about 0845 for a 1005 flight, which I figured would be plenty of time. Unfortunately, when I went to the Air France check-in desk, they couldn’t find my electronic ticket because when the helpful Delta TA in Detroit rebooked me, I’d ended up with a new number. After 15 min or so of fumbling, she directed me to the Delta desk. More fumbling ensued, then they produced an itinerary receipt. I returned to see Air France again and waited while my agent tried to reach the ticketing desk. When that failed, she walked me over to the ticketing desk; more fumbling, and I was the proud owner of a paper ticket for NCE-CDG. Apparently there’s some lingering animosity between the respective computers at DL and AF. Paper ticket in hand, I went back to the AF check-in desk and checked in. A short walk took me to my departure gate, where I boarded. The first thing I noticed was the unfortunate fact that the plane stank like a locker room. The second thing I noticed was that, after our departure time had come and gone, we were still at the gate. It turns out that some of the folks in the back weren’t in their seats; for whatever reason, the cabin crew didn’t do anything about it. Once everyone was finally strapped in, we’d missed our arrival time slot into CDG, so we sat for another 45 minutes, departing at 1110. The rest of the flight was uneventful, but I really had to hustle to make my CDG-CVG flight.
Security procedures were essentially no different than they are at US airports; the French equivalent of the TSA is no more or less efficient or polite than the average in the US (excepting such places as EWR and SEA, where TSA is chronically rude, and MCO, where they’re practically Italian in their efficiency).

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Monaco

Wednesday night, I fired up the ol’ Citroen and drove to Monaco with fellow MVPs Jim McBee and Sue Mosher. We took le moyen Corniche to get there, a coast road that overlooks some beautiful scenes of the Meditarranean and more than a few fancy houses. (In Nice, given that a 700-square-foot apartment might set you back 120,000 euros or more, I can’t imagine what some of these houses must have cost!) When we got to Monaco proper, we drove around the town a bit until we got to Parking les pecheurs, the big parking garage downhill from the aquarium. Sadly, the aquarium was already closed, but we had a nice walk around the area, followed by supper at Le Pinocchio, an excellent Italian restaurant.
The highlight of our outing actually came as we were returning to Nice. We’d decided to take the A8 autoroute back so I wouldn’t have to drive the Corniche in the dark; we followed the signs in Monaco faithfully, but the road we wanted to take was blocked, so we had to go in the opposite direction. As a result, I got to drive about a mile of the course for the upcoming Monaco Grand Prix. I can now add “Grand Prix driver” to my resume and be at least partially accurate.

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A few observations about Nice

This was my first full day in Nice; I arrived mid-morning yesterday and got settled in to my hotel (le Palais de la Mediterranee— extremely nice). For some reason, when I checked in at the DTW ticket counter, the DL TA called the international routing desk and changed my routing from DTW-JFK-CDG-NCE to DTW-JFK-NCE. This was a great optimization, as it got me 3 extra hours in Nice and saved me from having to change planes in CDG.
Yesterday I spent some time exploring the immediate area around my hotel, combined with a little shopping and a hunt for the nearest Carrefour. I found it, bought some snacks and a pair of shorts (which I inexplicably forgot to pack), and drove around to find the conference center where Exchange Connections is being held. For dinner, I met my friend Jim, after which I collapsed in an exhausted heap at the hotel.
Today was day 1 of the conference. I only had two sessions, and they were spaced well apart, so I got some work done in the speaker lounge. As you might expect, the convention center food was good (we’re in France, after all) but not as good as restaurant food (it’s a convention center– what do you expect?) The sessions both went well, with lots of audience interaction. By the time I got done, it was late, so I stopped back at Carrefour for some ibuprofen, went back to the hotel, then walked around the pedestrian district some. It wasn’t as crowded as it was last night.
A few random observations:

  • There are lots of scooters here, and it’s not a good idea to follow them through traffic unless you want to end up playing chicken with a bus. Trust me on this.
  • Apple is maddening. I heard some songs I liked on the local equivalent of MTV. iTunes will show me the French version of the music store, and it will let me search for songs– but I can’t buy them. To make things worse, the prevailing price for a CD single with two songs on it is €4.99, or about $6.20. To make things worse still, don’t even think that anyone will sell you an iTunes Music Store card in France– even Carrefour, which sells iPods.
  • Parking in downtown is very expensive, but forget about parking on the streets! Even with the little micro-cars people drive here (like the Citroen C4 I rented) it’s a very tight squeeze.
  • It’s hard to beat French bread dipped in olive oil.

It’s time for me to hit the bed; I’ll try to post some pictures tomorrow.

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Germs on airplanes: it really does happen

An eye-opening article from the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention: several people are thought to have caught mumps from flying on commercial airplanes with infected passengers. Yikes! Maybe I should take a surgical mask to wear next time I fly somewhere.

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Appleton

Wow, we had a blast in Appleton! We arrived mid-day Wednesday and went to Dad’s condo for a quick tour. It’s in a good location, well-built, and furnished with all the mod cons (including a robot vacuum that was a big hit with the boys). Once the hotel was ready for us, we went there and dropped off our stuff, then Dad and I had dinner with Chris Vogel at the Black and Tan downtown. The food and company were both excellent.
Thursday morning we got up and made the short drive to Green Bay to take the Lambeau Field tour. The only other pro football stadium I’ve been to is the Superdome, and this couldn’t have been more different. Our tour guide was extremely knowledgeable and friendly, and the history of the Packers and Lambeau really captured the older boys’ attention (Matthew was mostly interested in the elevators).
We drove back to Appleton, dropped Arlene off at a quilt store, and located The Big Picture downtown, a nifty little IMAX theater where the boys and I ate a huge tub of popcorn and saw Fighter Pilot: Operation Red Flag. There’s no such thing as a bad IMAX movie, this one more so because it was full of airplanes! For dinner, we went to Prime Quarter, where the deal is that you cook your own steak on their grill. This was fun; fortunately we got there just before the crowd hit.
Today once we get everyone together, it’s back on the road– through Oshkosh, where we’ll stop at the EAA museum, then back to Perrysburg.

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Kalahari Waterpark Wisconsin Dells

I wasn’t sure if this was a review or a travelogue; I guess it’s both. We left Sunday for spring break, setting out to drive the ~420 miles from Perrysburg to Lake Delton, Wisconsin. Why? Kalahari, that’s why– it claims to be America’s largest indoor waterpark. After an unnecessarily long drive (thank you, Streets & Trips, for not telling us to avoid the Ryan Expressway in Chicago), we arrived at a huge building with a prominent sign that says “Kalahari”. When we entered the lobby, the boys remarked on the carved wooden animals and other African-themed decorative touches; Arlene and I remarked on the big Krispy Kreme stand immediately next to the registration desk.
We’d reserved a Desert Room— two queens with a pull-out sofa bed– but at checkin, we were upgraded to a two-room family suite. This was a really nice touch, and it set the tone for our overall visit: every person we met was friendly and helpful, the facilities were spotless and well-maintained, and the waterpark… well, how can you not have fun with six waterslides, a big wave pool, and too much other stuff to list?
Each day, we’d have breakfast, hit the pool for a while, and take a break in the middle of the day (usually accompanied by lunch). On Monday, we went driving around the downtown Dells area, which is clotted with tourist-y stuff. Unfortunately, it was all closed; apparently high tourist season doesn’t start for another month or so. We found a grocery store and stocked up on provisions. A good thing, too, as the Great Karoo restaurant was only OK in our collective opinion. One beef: food is very expensive here, even in the lobby shops ($6 for a caramel apple? Get real!) Overall, though, we had a delightful experience– even Matthew, who’s leery of most kinds of swimming-related activities.
Today we’re headed to Appleton to visit Dad for a couple of days, and to explore. We’ve planned a trip to Lambeau Field and the EAA AirVenture Museum in Oshkosh. Arlene’s taken a bunch of pictures, but I haven’t had a chance to download any of them yet.

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Northwest now selling exit row seats

Well, isn’t this sucky: Northwest is now charging $15 to book exit row seats on some flights. Want extra legroom? Pay up! I sure hope other airlines don’t copy this “enhancement”, although I admit that paying $15 extra for seat 6D is a decent deal for a long flight.

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