Tuesday, April 21, 2009

Alexandria (Part 2) Video Blog

Hopefully this will work. Sorry for the delay, it took me a while to figure out how to get this right!

Breakfast in Alexandria (this was before we decided to go into the library)



Outside the library 1



Outside the library 2


There is a small museum inside the library that we decided to go into:


Then we went into the main library:


After this, we walked (and took a short bus ride) to the citadel:




My favorite drink in Egypt!




Big Mosque:



Taxi ride... or not




Kicked out of taxi:


Talking to guys on the street:


This was a wedding procession that went by. Interesting way to have a wedding!



Taxi ride to train:



So that is how a video blog works. Let me know if you liked it and want another installment.

Alexandria (Part 1)

After the competition, Steffen Gebhardt and I decided we should see something new. Both of us have been to Cairo a number of times and seen everything there is to see there. That’s not saying much because all there is to see in Cairo are the pyramids (very impressive), the sphinx (very unimpressive), the museum (very disorganized), and the Nile (very polluted). So we started asking our Egyptian friends what was within a half day trip of Cairo.

I’m not a history buff, but I’m kind of a nerd and watch a lot of History Channel. I knew Alexandria had a long and interesting history so we decided to check that out. To get there, we would need to take a train about 3 hours to the coast of the Mediterranean. From all my travel in Europe (and the fact that Steffen lives there), we figured trains would be simple and easy for us to understand. What we did not take into account was that these are Egyptian trains and they don’t follow any of the same rules. Take for instance schedules. European trains have them, Egyptian trains don’t. Working bathrooms, sanitary conditions, all things lacking on the trains there. We did figure out that there is a first class cabin and we happily paid the extra $1 (no kidding) to upgrade. The conditions in 1st class were what you might expect on an inner city buss or metro in the US, minus working bathrooms.

It’s a bit sobering traveling through the countryside in a place like Egypt. In America, we hear people complain about poverty and how bad the poor have it. A few months ago, I saw a TV special woman complaining that the government needed to give her better housing. In the background of her “poverty stricken” apartment she had a 60 inch flat screen. Poverty in the countryside of Egypt looked a little different. Women washing clothes in the muddy irrigation trenches, shanties built out of garbage, and small brick huts with dirt floors. It looked like the villages had electricity, but the outlying houses did not. Without trash service, locals made piles or refuse just outside the villages. The poorest of people were sorting through these piles before they were burned.

After three hours on the train, we arrived in Alexandria. We had no idea where to go, what to see, or where we would spend the night. I had checked on Expedia and only found very expensive western hotels. I prefer more of a local flavor (not to mention that all my friends say I am the cheapest person they know), so Steffen and I figured we would look for something other than a western chain. We were more or less dragged off the train by a guy who seemed quite helpful. Turned out that he was a cab driver and he pressured us into getting into his cab. We knew better than to get in without a pre-negotiated price, so we got a map, decided where we wanted to go, and then pointed it out. After agreeing on a price (that was almost certainly too high), we got into the cab. About 40 minutes later, we reached the area where we figured we would have the best shot of getting a cheap but safe motel.

Unlike inner city Europe, I never felt that I would get my pocket picked. It does not seem like the kind of place where someone will totally swindle you when you buy something at a street vendor. But they have their own form of dishonesty when it comes to dealing with tourists. We told the driver to let us out and started to pay him. He suddenly said we had to pay twice that much since there were two of us. This is somewhat common there. After negotiating a deal, they will try to add on other fees. For instance, I hired a camel at the pyramids and agreed on a price of around $10 for an hour tour. When I finished, the guide said it would be another $10 to get off the camel (which was met by my jumping off for free). My guess is that it often works on unsuspecting tourists which only reinforces the behavior. Steffen and I did not buy it so we gave the cabbie the agreed upon fair and jumped out of the cab. As we walked off, the cabbie yelled at us; but we had paid him a reasonable fair despite his attempted dishonesty.

For the next three hours, Steffen and I walked around Alexandria finding nothing of interest. No historical sites, no hotels, no local restaurants that looked safe to eat at. As the afternoon wore on, we took a turn down a street and found a security checkpoint. We asked what was going on and were informed that it was a private beach/resort area. The fee to enter was about $1 so we paid and went in. The beach was much cleaner and better kempt than the other beaches and the area felt safer. But all this still yielded no hotels or dinner possibilities. As we reached the end of the private beach, we were greeted by a woman and her daughter who asked if we needed help. It turns out that she, her husband, and her daughter who are Egyptians all spoke English and German. Lucky break for us. They lived about a half mile away and invited us to their flat. We talked for a while and they offered to find us a flat to rent for the night. For about $60, we secured a 3 bedroom place that would have registered below one star in the US, but was perfect for our budget and needs.

After getting the keys to the flat, our new Egyptian friends gave us some advice on where to go sightseeing that night and where to find dinner. It was really only after we left that Steffen and I started wondering if this was a particularly safe situation. We didn’t really know these people and we had no idea how safe the area was. Given my family background and association with the military, I am always trying to err on the side of caution. Steffen knows the security issues surrounding me also, so he said he would take the lead on any further discussions with our new friends. When we returned that night, the husband engaged Steffen in a long discussion about politics, something you are not supposed to do in a foreign culture if you are not in a secure area. But Steffen kept the conversation mostly in German and asked questions more than gave opinions. At one point, the wife looked at me and noted that I looked like I had security concerns about being there. Steffen gave me a quick glance knowing why I was worried, but we played if off on being in a foreign culture.

That night, we checked the apartment to make sure we could lock it securely from the inside. We took a couple extra steps for security, but it seemed like a legit and somewhat safe situation. With passports and credit cards by our beds for easy access, we actually slept well in our cheap accommodations.

The next morning, we met up with our host family again, returned the keys, and went on our way. Rather than trying to write everything about Alexandria, I thought I would try something new and do a video blog. Let me know what you think of it!

Competition day

Six hours of sleep later, I caught the bus to the competition. Using a practice suit from another athlete and a British swim cap, I limped through one of my worst swims. Its been years since I raced without a technical suit, and combined with little sleep and the stress of not knowing if I would even find the basic equipment to compete, the results spoke for themselves.

Next up was fencing. Steffen Gebhardt of Germany lent me his fencing outfit, nice and sweaty from three hours he spent fencing right before me in the other group. Fencing with someone else’s epees presents another challenge. You typically set up all your epees the same, and changing the grip and the blade angle throws your coordination off. For some reason, this didn’t really effect me nearly as much as I expected. Three hours later, I ended fencing with the 12 highest score and was 17th overall.

Finally we came to the run/shoot. This is new for me and would be only my second time attempting the new format. Since Mexico’s World Cup a few weeks ago, I felt like I had made some serious progress and was ready to test my ability and strategy. But I spent more time and energy looking for shorts to wear (I was lucky to have traveled in an old pair of running shoes), than I did thinking about how to execute when the time came. With a borrowed gun of a completely different make than my own, I was surprised to only move back a couple slots after the first shoot series. But the second and third series proved harder. With the higher heart rate from running, the unfamiliarity proved too much and I timed out (70 seconds) twice.

In the end, I think I finished somewhere between 25th and 30th, but I’m not really sure. I think that with my own equipment, it would have been a very different day. This competition ended a two year streak of making every final, so at least I get to blame it on luggage!

Sunday, April 19, 2009

Not as exciting as yesterday's post

But here is the follow on...

The flight to Cairo went by quickly. I slept about two thirds the flight and stayed occupied the other third by watching the Greek islands slip by one at a time beneath the airplane. Night came as we crossed over Alexandria and into Africa. Shortly thereafter, we landed in Cairo.

Egypt is one of the few countries I travel to that requires a visa. It’s only $15, but you have to stand in line to buy it at the airport. Then you wait in line for passport control. By the time I cleared passport control, my travel day was stretching to nearly 20 hours. Not too bad, but long enough that I was eager to get to the hotel and pack for the competition the next morning. This is where my luck started to run out.

As I mentioned earlier, I just made it to Premier Executive on United. There are a number of perks associated with this that are supposed to make travel a little nicer and keep you loyal to your most frequent airline. One of the perks is priority luggage. Not only do ticketing agents stop hassling you about overweight luggage, your bags also typically come out first or near the front on the carousel. So when my bags did not come out shortly after the baggage started, I knew there was probably a problem. Once the final bag came out, I realized my bags probably didn’t make the Denver to Frankfurt connection. My lucky streak came screeching to a halt as I started to think of the chances that my bags, full of the equipment I needed to compete, would come in that night.

The line for the lost luggage was only about 4 people long, but it still seemed to take forever. I had to wait for a guy who was very upset about some discoloration on his brand new suitcase (clearly not a frequent flier if he still is under the delusion that luggage ever looks good after its maiden voyage). Then there was the lady who had hard cased suitcases, one of which had been crushed before being returned to her. Then the American professor who lives in Cairo who also arrived empty handed. Finally I had my turn.

In the 21st century, you would expect that computer systems would instantly track luggage and know where it is en rout to the final destination. Surprisingly nearly 30 minutes of computer searches and phone calls by the luggage agent yielded absolutely nothing. I had my Blackberry with me and let Cami know what was going on in real time. She tried calling United at the same time and was told that all they knew was that my bags made it to Denver. That news was nearly 24 hours old to me. I was curious what continent they were on and if we would be reunited before the competition. I knew several other flight schedules that my bags could have taken which would land them in Cairo that night. The easiest was if they caught the flight from Denver to London several hours after the Frankfurt flight and then from London to Cairo. There was also a rout through Chicago that would have put them into Cairo the middle of the following morning. Not ideal, but in time to still have my gun for the shooting (the gun is the hardest piece of equipment to borrow). But the luggage agent came up with nothing and I left customs with only my carryon.

Outside customs, there were throngs of people waiting for passengers. The competition organizers had my itinerary and had agreed to pick me up. As my newfound luck would have it, they were nowhere to be found. With a bit of searching on my Blackberry, I was able to locate the number of the Egyptian Pentathlon Federation and I placed an extremely expensive call. At $2.50 per minute, I was happy that the phone was answered on the first ring by someone who spoke good English. He knew who I was and, after asking about my location, said the person sent to fetch me was in the wrong terminal. Another expensive phone call ten minutes later vectored Usama to me.

Usama is a cop and told me to wait while he checked on my luggage again. I was glad he offered because I thought he would have a better chance finding out where the bags were than I did. An hour later, the Ukrainian team exited customs. They told me Usama was still inside checking on my bags. Another 30 minutes passed and he returned with no more news about the bags. That’s when it really sunk in that I would spend the next day trying to hobble together borrowed equipment, giving me an extreme uphill battle to make the final.

(I'm posting this from the Library in Alexandria. I'll finish the competition blog and have it up when I get back to Cairo tonight.)

Friday, April 17, 2009

Chain Reaction

There is so much to this story I just don’t know where to start. So how about I start by saying this has been one of the most eventful travel experiences I have ever had.

It started back in Colorado Springs a couple days ago (but it all seems like one long day now). For the first time in my extensive travel career, I made the airplane late. Well, it was actually TSA who was responsible; but that’s not important. As the gate pulled away from the plane, the flight attendant received a call. The next thing that happened was that I was paged. (That’s never a good thing. You don’t want to be “that guy” on an airplane.) To make a very long story short, TSA had a problem with my pistol and had not put it on the plane. I wound up off the plane, in TSA’s office, then back on the plane per the pilot’s direction (rather than on a later flight). I was surprised that they had not loaded my bag onto the plane and that it took them 45 minutes after check in to contact me with their concerns.

According to my row-mate, they announced something about a gun and everyone was looking strangely at me when I returned to the aircraft. But NO ONE complained about the flight being late in front of me. As the plane took off, I realized that people were likely drawing some much more imaginative scenarios in their heads. “Thirty year old male in top physical condition with a military hair cut and a strange gun that TSA has a problem with then suddenly does not have a problem with.” And this right on the heels of the Navy shooting the pirates. It was much more fun to just sit there stoically rather than tell them that the gun in question was just a souped up bb gun!

When we deplaned (only the bureaucracy of airlines would use deplane instead of exit like the rest of the world) in Denver, I saw my luggage being unloaded. I had been concerned it would not make it onto the Denver flight with the confusion at the Colorado Springs airport. I only had about 35 minutes to make my connection on the Denver to Frankfurt flight, so I rapidly went the length of the airport and then to a new terminal and finally onto the Luftansa flight. While it was probably well over a mile between my two gates, it was less than half of that if you were to cross over outside (like the luggage carts).

I started feeling lucky for the first time on the trip when I realized that I had an empty seat next to me on the plane. This is luxury fit for a king when you are used to traveling cramped in economy class and NEVER seem to get that free upgrade. My coveted empty seat was one of the only ones on the plane and gave me the aisle and window seats together for a combined space about 4 feet across. With the help of a sleep aid earplugs, eye shades, a neck pillow, my extra seat, and a ridiculously early morning wakeup, I slept a near record of almost 7 hours on the flight. My luck seemed to be continuing.

In Frankfurt, I exercised my newly earned rights to the travel lounges. As a freshly minted Premier Executive, I can use these lounges on international flights. This is a real treat for frequent fliers. And to boot, the lounge in Frankfurt has free showers and outstanding food (also free). My luck was simply on a roll!

Stay tuned for “The rest of the story” tomorrow for me (maybe late tonight for those of you in the USA). What this means is that I am about to fall asleep and can't responsibly blog anymore. You’ll find out why tomorrow.