Also, wtf, 70 pageviews? You people are ridiculous! <3
So, let's see, how have travels gone? Shockingly, the flight from LAN to DTW was uneventful, except the gate we waited at was un-air-conditioned for no apparent reason. Our departure from DTW was then delayed for about an hour because our cabin was too hot for Delta travel guidelines. Well done Michigan! Detroit's temperature of 38C at the time was the hottest in the country, according to the CNN feed I saw on one of the in-terminal monitors.
| This is the only picture I took yesterday in the US. |
This time, though, it was different. It turns out the guy I was sitting next to was pretty awesome. For one, he has the best birthday in the whole world. (Along with Madonna. And me.) Which I thought was a pretty awesome coincidence. But he also lived in the DC area for 40 years (went to Georgetown for grad school and stayed there until retirement) and absolutely loved classical music - in his house in Dayton, Ohio (where he grew up and retired to. protip guys: retiring somewhere cheap is a good idea!), he has more than 6000 classical music CDs and 4000 classical records. He was headed to Amsterdam to connect to a flight to Budapest to begin a journey down the Danube, which would complete a trans-European river extravaganza he had planned.
So, like, three hours into the flight, I realized we were almost half-way into the flight and I hadn't attempted to sleep or made use of the plane's entertainment features. Oh, yeah, those: zomg. Everyone had their own little remote control they could use to control the TV in front of them, where we had like 40 movies to choose from and 40 TV episodes it was all so CRAZY and even while I was having fun let's-talk-about-Osmo-Vänskä time I was also like "I JUST WANT TO WATCH 20 OF THESE MOVIES RIGHT NOW" so eventually I just kind of was like "welp I should probably go to a quiet place so that I can pretend to rest some" and watched "Hugo" (which was good!) and then attempted to sleep for an hour but it wasn't very effective. Meanwhile my awesome seatmate watched Office Space, because he was awesome.
The one drawback to the entertainment system: they had a single episode of Game of Thrones to watch. Okay, cool, makes sense. And what was that one episode? Season 1. Episode 9.
Season 1. Episode 9. w. t. f. FAIL.
Tragically, though, I failed to swap contact information with him. In fact, I never even got his name, I don't think. Argh. I really need to not do that, because yay for friends from all over the world :\
Anyway, as we were landing, awesome seatmate was like "I don't remember Schiphol being all that big" but of course it was huge. The first thing that Schiphol remended me of was vanilla chapstick, because I think the cleaner they used smelled like it. I wandered over to my gate and gave my awesome seatmate a manly handshake as we parted ways. Then I did something really stupid: I wandered over to my gate and went through the random passport checkpoint they had there to sequester all the UK-bound passengers on KLM flights in one area.
Yeah, no. Don't do that. Not right away.
| Can you spot the semantically-implausible syntactic ambiguity? |
You see, I had about a four hour layover. When I landed, the only thing I could think of was "I have to go to the bathroom REAL BAD". So, when I was looking for a bathroom outside the passport perimeter and saw that the first one I located had a long line (i.e., it had one), I immediately thought to myself, "Aha! There will be one through the checkpoint!" and went through right away and it turned out I was the opposite of correct because it turns out that the men's bathroom inside the checkpoint area was entirely closed and so now I was stuck in an area where there was one overpriced snack vendor and nothing to do and AUGH.
I did fix the bathroom issue (there was a unisex one) and the nothing to do issue (free wireless internet in Schiphol?!) but the food issue ended up being anti-fixed because one reason I thought it was okay to go through security was that they said they were going to feed me lunch on the Amsterdam-->Glasgow plane but then "lunch" was A TINY BAG OF SALT-AND-PEPPER CRACKERS WHAT DOES THAT EVEN MEAN??? (crackers with salt and pepper on them. my Minnesotan sensibilities were offended by the pepper.) Also American carry-on standards are apparently quite different from European ones so I had to be "that guy" who puts his bag in sideways into the overhead bins. The one redeeming thing about Schiphol was that there was a guy with a copy of Storm of Swords, but he wasn't even reading it.
So by the time I get to Glasgow I'm cranky and hungry and frustrated and sleep-deprived, but at the same time I'm exhilarated and excited and enthusiastic and ready to jump around because there's people around me talking in SCOTTISH ACCENTS like that's a PERFECTLY REASONABLE THING TO DO. What on earth is that about? So I get cash, get lunch from a lovely lass named Lindsay, then head out the door and onto the Glasgow bus, where I have to ask, in the most pathetic way possible, "What do I do?" to the bus driver to make my way to the place where I'm staying.
One of the things that struck me about important trips before, and international travel in particular, is how interesting the difference is between the perspective of the traveler and everyone else around them. For me, this is a really important day: it's the start of an exciting and awesome new adventure, a fitting end to my undergraduate career and start to my graduate, where I'll be visiting awesome places in Europe and having a lot of fun. For most everyone else who got on board that bus as it wended its way through Glasgow, it was Wednesday. (Worse yet, I was taking up slightly more than a seat with my bags, and whenever I'm doing that a cute old granny sits next to me, and I have to dislodge her from her seat to get out. argh.)
| EU = Holiday Inn = Scotland? |
So, Glasgow. Fun fact, Americans: you know how weather this summer has been hot, sunny, and dry? Well, Europe's had the opposite of that.
| You know what are fun? 25C temperature drops from departure to arrival. |
To help keep myself away, I took myself on a walk up to the conference location for tomorrow and then visited the close-by Hunterian Museum, which was pretty alright (and free!). Apparently, though, all museums in Glasgow close at 5, so I didn't see the Kelvingrove Museum, which is supposed to be better.
| Siamese deer say "och aye" to that! |
Tomorrow, the first day of the conference and presentation time!
Flails,
Chris
GOOD LUCK PRESENTING!
ReplyDeleteYeah, besta luck! Still diggin' the blog. I'm reading this on my phone, and as a result I can't expose the hidden text about the syntactic ambiguity. I know what it is, but this is still frustrating. I'll come back and read that when I can.
ReplyDeleteFeet on the ground, head on your shoulders, have fun, be safe, good luck!
ReplyDelete