Travel Adventures

The Thursday Air France flight from Toulouse to Charles de Gaulle airport in Paris was uneventful.

At check in for the AF flight 0054 to Washington Dulles we were told we would be taken to the plane by bus instead of boarding by the normal walk on method. As the 12:50 boarding time came close they announced a 30 minute delay due to a technical problem with the plane and kept repeating this for about 4 hours.

Finally they announced the problem was fixed and the buses would now take us to the plane. In situations like this it might be a good idea to encourage the older passengers with a small dose of amphetamines to help them make it up the stairs in a timely manner with their hand luggage.

We all boarded, struggled for overhead storage space and settled in when I noticed the cabin crew, all clearly close to retirement age were gathered at the cabin door chatting. Then a group of younger well made up female ground staff in high heels boarded and carrying their hand luggage and coats for them escorted the few first class passengers to BMWs parked at the stairs and drove them off into the dark and their next minimally pain free life experience.

I listened in on the cabin crew discussion and understood that while the plane’s technical problem was evidently resolved the plane crew having waited so long had exceeded some rule about staffing the flight. The flight was cancelled the buses were recalled and we were dropped off back at the airport and told to clear immigration. I broke out my collapsible walking stick and insisted on a wheelchair. This was a mistake.

Following the normal AF protocol for these situations concerning abuse of paying customers the pilot made no announcement concerning our fate and there was no AF representative waiting to announce what we should do next.

By 20:00 at the rebooking desk along with a couple of hundred others I had been given a voucher for the Campanile Hotel, please do not stay in this hotel. I was wheeled to the holding area to join the phalanx of other wheelchair bound decrepitude to await the wheelchair equipped shuttle bus. At 22:00 I returned to the rebooking desk on foot with walking stick and had an animated exchange which resulted in the appearance of the shuttle bus. When I inquired about the long wait the driver assured me it was because “there are just too many of you and only one of me.” We arrived at the hotel at 23:15 the restaurant having closed at 23:00.

This morning Friday after breakfast at 05:30 I gave up on the wheelchair approach and took the regular shuttle bus, it picks up at many of the “economy” hotels along the way and will hopefully soon board AF 0054 again and with any luck my suitcases will be on it.

What have I re-learned,

1. Never try to travel extra light by checking in all your hand luggage or you might end up in a modest hotel with no change of clothing and other travel essentials.

2. The disparity between what these hotels advertise with photos of inanely grinning people looking off into the distance bears no relationship to the reality of what you are experiencing. What you are experiencing has been reduced to the bare essential of being representative of what it claims to be. The coffee bears a resemblance to the taste of coffee, but just. The food is mysterious. The towel is a towel but washed up to a near well deserved retirement. The staff presumably being poorly paid are tired and disinterested.

And so it goes.

John

A Digitally Free Week

Some reflections on 9 days recently without TV, telephone, mobile phone or Internet service as a consequence of a major storm and a long period of torrential rain which washed out roads, bridges, houses, cables and communications.
 
TV
 
Without it we didn’t see a reporter on the evening news standing up to their knees in flood water struggling to be heard above the howling wind while telling us about the storm we were actually experiencing for ourselves. Their challenge is to do this while not showing an adjacent competing TV channel reporter doing the same thing.
 
Now that the TV service has been restored you realise you have become accustomed to seeing large groups of heavily armed militarised police SWAT squads turning up too late at another mass shooting.
 
Similarly many of the evening TV series seem to be about murder and violence and feature good looking people with clipped on police badges with guns in their hands.
 
On one channel rhythmically challenged people try dancing, on another insecure people are seemingly convinced their standing in the cosmos depends on another persons opinion about a cake they just made.
 
My life was not significantly poorer for a week without the TV programs available hereabout.
 
The videos made by people driving their cars through the recent California fires not knowing if they were heading out or into the fires were compelling. Though on reflection we only saw the videos of those that made the correct guess.
 
I did note that in both the floods here and the fires in California a significant number of the dead were old people.
 
 
Telephone “Fixe”
 
Aurelia is one of the few (older) people I know who still who still use it to call friends.
 
Mobile Phone.
 
The mobile phone service only works if you stand outside in the cold on a far end of my terrace so it gets little use anyway.
 
Internet.
 
I now realise to what extent I am becoming increasingly reliant on it.
 
I use it for weekly video calls to see and talk with my children and grandchildren and with friends in the same time zone. I use it to stay in touch with friends around the world via email.
 
It was reconfirmed for me that to make a major purchase like an airline ticket you need the internet, you now also depend on it for all banking actvities.
 
Conclusion.
 
After the first few days of the outage I visited the Orange (previously France Telecom) shop three times and on each occasion waited in a long line hoping for an estimate when they thought my service might be restored. The first two times their approach was “yes it is a terrible inconvenience but be patient we are working hard to restore service.”
 
The third time their approach had shifted markedly. When I finally got the head of the queue this time the response of the young employee filtering customers at the door was “You know that people have died, that survivors are living in school gymnasiums and village halls, they have lost their homes.There are 32,000 people without service, we are working hard to restore it but there is no point in you coming into the shop, we cannot help and we have no additional information for you.”
 
When I tried to respond to this there were murmurs from the people behind me waiting impatiently in line to buy their new smart phone, and when I turned around I heard they were saying the same things as the Orange customer service agent, in the third person. I thanked him politely, said au revoir mesdames, messieurs to those in the line and still blessed with connectivity, exited the shop and went home and waited patiently. Thinking positively about the time I was saving not routinely resetting my passwords.
 
Give it a try, turn off your wifi for a week and send me a note, if you were ready for the challenge, on how it impacted your life.
 
Be well do good work and please keep in touch.
 
John
 
It is no sign of health to be well adjusted in a profoundly sick society.
 
Jiddu Krishnamurti

Life. It Goes On

Since the huge local storm the evening of Sunday the 14th we have had no internet connection and thus no phone “fixe” or TV which also go across the rented Orange LiveBox. When you call Orange at 3900 on your mobile phone, a call for which you pay they take you through a list of if you want X press 1 and if Y press 2 etc. and then at the end tell you there are too many calls to respond and would you like them to send you an SMS with an attachment giving you the latest status of repairs in your area. You agree and of course the mobile coverage in our area is so poor you cannot open the attachment.

Staying positive we have electricity, hot water in the shower and propane for the central heating and for cooking. And Aurelia’s broken leg, she slipped and fell on 15 August, continues to improve and hopefully she will be walking again soon. However after being stuck in a wheelchair in a house in a small village in La Montaigne Noire for two months with another month to go she has decided that at her age she has had enough of isolated living in rural France and is planning to return to Spain in late November, specifically to Madrid. I have declined to accompany her as I have no wish to live in Madrid.

Early this morning when driving to the Locomotive our local bar and grocery store for our daily bread it made me smile when stopped in the rain in front of the kindergarten and primary school to see the very large and tall crossing guard bending way down to fait le bise, a kiss on each cheek with so many little children in brightly coloured raincoats, toting tiny backpacks.

This is being sent from the Locomotive our local bar and grocery store where they do have internet service, cold beer and cold wines of various colours. The pool table is covered in large carrier bags of donated clothes for the people in other villages whose homes were flooded. The Red Cross has announced it prefers donations in cash, so much more fungible after all.

And thank you for the advice on the travel search engines, it confirms my suspicion that they are all much of a much.

More later when Orange restores the internet.

Be well, do good work and keep in touch.

Your friend

John

A Dog Playing Chess – An Explanation

First my apologies to any who did not understand my previous poor attempt at humour, perhaps lost in translation concerning Zora the chess playing dog.

My son Philippe teaches young school children and finds that on Monday mornings it is sometimes difficult to perk up their interest. So having an odd sense of humour, I don’t know where it comes from, one Monday morning he asked the class “who has a pet animal at home”. Answer, we have a dog, a cat, a fish etc.

Next he asked what trick can your pet do, “my dog can roll over, mine will give you his paw, my goldfish swims around in a circle and my cat ignores everyone.”  

Then he popped up the picture of his dog on the projector and announced “my dog plays chess”.  

And immediately had the children’s attention.

He did not mention to them that he had temporarily wrapped Zora’s chess piece in a slice of ham before being able to get the picture.