Archive for the ‘Random Thoughts’ category

Passport mini-crisis and a sliced finger

September 24th, 2007

I sent my passport in to get a page supplement and was a bit worried about it, as it’s been looking a bit… let’s just say ‘tired’. I spoke too soon in my last post, in fact. As feared, the Embassy determined that my passport was not in condition to get new pages and that I needed a new one. They were not returning my old one; I had to go there in person. It was Monday morning, and Friday I was meant to be off to Oktoberfest. A week after that, Africa. What to do?

I was first in line at the Embassy on Tuesday, passport photos and birth certificate in hand. Luckily, I was allowed in as an ‘emergency’ and went through the process of getting a temporary passport (phew!) and a new one, which is to take 10-15 days. D’oh! That wasn’t going to be in time for Africa, and there weren’t enough pages in the temporary one for the number of countries I would visit. They gave me a glimmer of hope by saying they’d put a “little note” on it to rush, but to still expect 10-15 days. I put all my faith in the American Embassy, hoping that for once my government bureaucracy could do something right, via a post-it note.

The tightly crossed fingers got in the way of a gigantic beer-stein which smashed against mine during an animated “Prost!” in Oktoberfest. Glass everywhere, I looked down to see blood on the table and thought “Oh no! Someone was cut!” And then I realized that someone was me. Blood was gushing a little too quickly out of my pinkie. It was a very small, but deep, cut across the blood vessel on the knuckle. I knew I would need stitches.

Oktoberfest from above

Oktoberfest (photo taken a previous year)

The Germans, ever efficient, had put massive red balloons up at the first aid stations. No matter how much you drank, there was no missing them. A friend led me towards the nearest balloon, over a tent where they actually glued my finger shut. Interesting, and definitely easier than stiches. Best of all, the nurse stated that I could keep drinking and dancing – probably until I fell over and needed more first aid. She also mentioned that the event organisers had changed the glasses a few years ago. Prior to that, she had seen far more broken bones. Now, it was cuts. Hmm.

I am meant to be using this hand in just over a week to climb Spitzkoppe, otherwise known as ‘The Matterhorn of Africa’ at 1,800m. Now, not only am I out of shape but also with a lame finger. And no passport! Oh, and a bit hung over, but that should pass… I hope.

This article originally appeared on MSN UK Travel.

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A little bit of Rabies, a little bit of Hep

September 13th, 2007

“This might hurt a little” says the travel nurse as she jabs my upper arm for the fifth time. I’m starting to feel like a walking pin cushion.

I scuttle away with a long list of prescriptions and ‘necessary’ first aid kit items. Stopping at Boots on the way back to work, I pick it all up and am thinking I may need to bring an extra piece of luggage for my mobile emergency clinic. I can’t possibly need this much! But what to cut?

My number one bit of unsolicited advice for new long-term travellers is to take less than you think you need. A lot less. This is easy enough to agree to, until you start baggage triage. Do I cut the pain medication, malaria pills, or anti-diarrheal? How many bandages to take? How many bottles of repellant? And that’s just the first aid stuff…

The list keeps growing. The ‘go light’ motto is such a hard one to follow.

Backpacking packing

A similar packing shot from earlier travels

There’s not much time left to get everything in order. Thinking of this causes a dropping sensation in my gut which probably won’t go away until I’m on the plane. I have a list constantly looping through my head – wrap everything up at work, pack the bags and then the rest of my belongings into a few boxes… not to mention the final social requirements of seeing every single person I know before I go, even though 3 months are going to pass by so quickly that no one will even notice I’m gone. Time always seems to stretch out far when we look ahead, yet compresses drastically on looking back.

The good news is the flights are now purchased. I used Expedia’s multi stop option and got a pretty cheap flight in and out of Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, via Dubai. From there I’ll take another flight to Namibia, via Johannesburg, where I will meet the Hot Rock crew. It’s probably the most inefficient route I could take, but you get what you pay for.

I don’t mind, as I get a week alone in Dar Es Salaam before heading to Namibia. As of yet I have NO idea what I’m going to do there… and confess to being utterly ignorant of Tanzania and nearby Zanzibar. It will be an adventure to figure things out as I go, but I’m still hoping to get a few minutes to at least flip through a guide book or something before getting on the plane! Am very excited.

The only major thing left is my passport, currently at the embassy, which in itself makes me nervous. They seem to know when you’re in a hurry. All I requested were new pages to be added. A friend of mine just got a new passport in a week. I sent mine in over a week ago for new pages and have nothing. Tick tock tick tock… I hope it’s not too tattered for them. This could get complicated. Wish me luck.

This article originally appeared on MSN UK Travel.

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Getting ready for the Big Red Truck

September 6th, 2007

I am clean. What can I say? I smell good. I sleep in a comfortable bed with pillows and fresh white sheets, a fluffy duvet, and have a fully equipped bathroom just next to my room. In the morning, after hitting snooze 16 times, I join hordes of commuters on the Tube (pending no strikes of course), pressing into the sardine-like crowd, taking care by all means to not make eye contact with anyone and to apologise if someone steps on my foot. This much I have learned since moving to London

It’s hard to believe, but I only have three more weeks of work before I am off on a ten week climbing adventure in Africa. First stop: Namibia, where bed will mean the floor of my tiny one-person tent with dirty clothes as a pillow. Evening entertainment will consist of gazing at stars (do they really exist?) and waking to something other than a scorpion, I hope. I’ll be joining a giant red Scania truck that has been refitted to equip 20-30 rock climbers, crossing Africa overland in 2008 and the Silk Road in 2009. They probably smell. And so will I.

The Big Red Truck (BiRT)

The Big Red Truck (BiRT)

 

I’m not just giving up my bed and shower, but the comfortable job. I sit at a pleasantly cluttered desk and read email and nod dutifully during meetings. Then there’s the odd pint after work, joining colleagues for a chuckle over emails sent for the day. I can’t complain. I actually like my job for the most part, which is a rare thing these days. And as a bonus, I get paid regularly.

Did I mention I am clean? Smell good, and alll that? Maybe I am too comfortable.

The Hot Rockers have already started the trip and are currently in South Africa. Just thinking about that, that right now there is a group of people in a giant red truck with a bouldering wall hanging off the back and that soon I will be there too, is a bit nuts. It feels so abstract when I’m sitting under fluorescent lighting.

I’ll be part of the crew from Windhoek, Namibia until Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania. Countries we will pass through in that time include Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Malawi. This will be my first major undertaking in Africa and I don’t quite know what to expect. Include smelly climbers in the mix and it adds to the… flavour. I only hope this doesn’t become Big Brother on a Big Red Truck.

 A big red truck, fondly known as BiRT. Hey BiRT, I look forward to meeting you.

This article originally appeared on MSN UK Travel. View screenshot here.

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Pre-Travel Pep Talk

May 4th, 2005

Well, I’ve now quit my job, moved out of my apartment, and am under a week away from taking off. Don’t ask me what I’ve packed yet because…. I haven’t. My poor parents – I have several boxes strewn between the garage and a few bedrooms as I make the final decisions on what is packed, what is stored, and what is cut. Central Triage for my life’s collection of random items. (If you don’t know what Central Triage is, you are lucky and I will not explain).

It’s odd how I oscillate from feeling like an irresponsible spoiled brat (why the hell should *I* have this opportunity to travel?) to as though I’m going to grad school or embarking on some enormous adventure which will make me grow so much as a person and why the hell would I *not* do this now that I can? So I am doing it, but yes, on some terms I actually feel guilty for even getting to this point. I am a spoiled and acting irresponsibly. I hope this feeling passes, to some extent at least…  Carpe Diem!

In your career, you’re asked to have a clear vision and objectives. We should do ourselves the favor of putting the same energy into general life objectives. We should write them down. It’s easy to forget them and get sucked into what seems important at a certain time for a certain aspect of your life, while life quietly and quickly passes by. We are so greatly affected by our environment that we lose the bigger picture of what we can do with our lives.

My key objective has been and is that I would like to see the world and understand other cultures. I want to be challenged by other ways of thinking and be reminded that we are actually animals and that life, however messy, is an OK thing. Time to get out of an essentially sterile environment and walk into a dirty, very real world. I will be uncomfortable. There will be bugs in my bed. I may get worms in my stool or lice in my hair. These are things to deal with, and I’m sure I’ll hate it at times… but in the end I think this will all give me a perspective on life that at this point I can’t even imagine.

For the record (my own memory) and for anyone who’s thinking about traveling like this, I will try to jot down notes of what’s going on at each stage of prep and actual travel. This week, a lot will happen on the packing front.. but some of the other prep things that have happened recently include:

Things I’ve done in the past couple of weeks:

  • Bought Camera (hasn’t arrived yet.,. so excited)
  • Organized bank accounts
  • Sold Motorcycle
  • Sold a bunch of other stuff.. most of my clothes, books, etc.
  • Donated a bunch of stuff to goodwill
  • Moved out of apartment
  • Got Int’l driver’s license
  • Bought Travel Medical Insurance
  • Finished up vaccine shots
  • Got first aid kit items (while I still had insurance)
  • Cancelled some Credit Cards, opened others (check to see how much they charge for converting from one currency to another… it makes a difference!)
  • Organizing music / Ipod
  • Changed addresses everywhere (PO box with a bookeeper)
  • Fixed up/tweaked backpack
  • (A friend of mine helped me and put
  • grommets on the top of my pack so I
  • can string a lock through and actually
  • close the top portion of my pack)
  • Bought shoes, daypack,
  • and really a bunch of other stuff…

Things I think I will miss (note “things,” not people):

  • Pancakes
  • Pizza
  • Easy access to Quiet
  • Paycheck (!!)
  • Easy access to laundry
  • Sonicare toothbrush (no, I’m not sponsored to say this)
  • My car, Fred
  • Ability to drink water from the tap
  • Skiing
  • The Cascade & Olympic Mountains

Things I’m glad to get away from:

  • Traffic (esp road ragers)
  • Not enough time / fast pace
  • Paperwork (not sure I’m really getting away from this)
  • People who compete for power
  • Computer screens
  • Rain & gray Seattle skies

It’s late and this is off the top of my head, it’s nowhere near complete. The idea here is to note what I think I’ll miss and in about three months or so, write what I *actually* miss. Let’s see if they match. :)

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