I've always had a love affair with office supplies. It's sick, but true. Part of my apprehension about starting a blog was because of it's lack of actual paper. However, here I am. I hope my adventures bring you joy, laughter, and a little glimpse of the world.

For the record, please pronounce this "Blog" and not "Blaaaag".

Showing posts with label train. Show all posts
Showing posts with label train. Show all posts

Thursday, September 8, 2011

My vacation in Paris...and Munich airport.


I am going to veer from my usual conversational tone to a timeline of sorts for you to experience our days of travel to Paris. Eventually I will talk about Sacre Coeur, The Eiffel Tower, and Notre Dame, but believe me, you won’t want to miss this one.
Day of Arrival

8:20 Taxi arrived at our house to pick us up.

9:30 Arrived at Domodedovo airport with 2.5 hours before flight time. Tried to check our bags and a zipper broke on one of the pieces of luggage. Fixed it and moved through the security lines quickly.

14:22 (Munich time) Arrived in Munich with a 25 minute layover. Went through passport control.

14:27 Arrived at a second security check including shoes, camera operation, laptop, and all bags. By the time we got four kids’ shoes untied, we were running for gate G10. Arrived at the gate just in time and they agreed to board us….until my husband asked the question, “Did you grab the laptop?” Since I had no idea the laptop was not in the backpack he was carrying, how would I know it was left at security?

14:45 Retrieved laptop. Missed flight

15:00 Went to Lufthansa Service center. Writing those words feels like paying property taxes.

15:35 Waited 35 minutes to be told our new flight is leaving now and we must run to gate G81.
Ran to gate 81, at the other end the airport. Nearly passed out.

15:45 Arrived at gate 81. Denied entrance at 81 and told us to get help at the service center. Walked--- less fast back to the service center where we cut in line in front of 70 people. The lady helped us book a new flight.

16:30 Went back to gate G46. Sat and waited for everyone to board and finally got back on a plane. Uneventful flight.

18:25 Stood up to disembark. Number 3 complained of belly ache. My husband picked her up and she puked all over him, myself, herself, and the gentlemen behind us. The aisle was chunky stuff. I’ve never seen a motivated line of people waiting to get off a plane stop so suddenly. Nobody wanted to be the first to step over the puke. Tried to clean her up in the airplane bathroom because it’s so spacious while she tried to continue puking in the aisle, not the sink.

18:35 Arrived at CDG. Pushed an oversized six year old around in bent umbrella stroller. Number 4 had to walk and tote luggage. Realized we missed our train. Went to retrieve tickets and rebook. We were told, “so sorry, can’t rebook after one hour.” We were 12 minutes too late.

19:37 I put my head on the counter and started crying. She talked to the manager and pulled some strings. Finally---a break.

19:47 Tried to find the train platform. Sat relaxed because we had an hour to wait. Hubby kept thinking we were in the wrong place.

20:09 Number 3 puked again. Cleaned it up, changed my clothes on the train platform. Hey, it’s no big deal to do that in Europe. In fact, on the way to the train station, I saw a lady changing her panties by the side of the highway. Believe me, she was not young.

20:30 Saw our train pulling in, two tracks away. Picked up the puker, the luggage, hustled up two flights of stairs. Number 4 started crying, Number 1 was screaming and I was trying to catch a breath. I may workout, but carrying two 50 pound bags up two flights of stairs isn’t exactly the same thing.

20:36 Train.
Threw the luggage in, armed number 3 with a ziploc. An angel named Katy helped us find our seats and stow the luggage. By the time we sat down, we arrived to our destination. It was a high speed train that went 200 kilometers per hour.

20:47 Carried the crap, got a taxi. Arrived at hotel.

I could end this story now. But it’s not enough. We also traveled home from Paris. Some may ask, “why?” I ask this myself.

Day of Departure

7:45 We were waiting at the curb to leave extra early to avoid any delays. The taxi was late. It arrived at 7:55. No big deal.

8:00 Arrived at train station. Not our favorite option, but it was in fact faster and cheaper than any other way to get to the airport for a family of six.

9:14 Train arrived---10 minutes late. We were on the correct platform, correct car, and proper seats. Got off 10 minutes later at Terminal 2 of Charles DeGaulle Airport with luggage and kids.

9:30 Headed for the CDG Shuttle to Terminal 1.

9:35 Hubby realized he left a bag on the train. Not just any bag. The bag with two cameras and lenses, worth about $600 containing 2000 photos, ALL OF OUR PASSPORTS, his wallet and identification. We stood still and he ran down to the platform. I was still optimistic at this point—after all, we still had three hours until our plane left.

9:45 Hubby came to tell me the train station had the bag in custody but that it was at the other end of the line, one hour away. He left to retrieve it.

9:50 We waited in terminal 1 for three hours with no news.

Meanwhile, hubby was waiting for the train that was 25 minutes late heading toward the bag. Sweated the whole ride until the correct station. Arrived to retrieve bag, but was required to get his wallet out of it to visit the ATM so he could pay the 9 Euro fee for holding it for one hour. Then was told, "you may purchase your return ticket at the kiosk." Instead, he boarded the train--ticketless, and avoided the conductor all the way back to CDG. Ran off the train to find his family.

12:45 Watched our flight to Dusseldorf board. Obviously didn’t make it. I went to the Lufthansa Service Center (a recurring theme) to inquire about rebook. The lady politely told me, “your ticket is not changeable. You’ll have to re-purchase.” I started crying involuntarily as I walked away.

13:15 Continued crying until my husband arrived with the bag and passports. He is now haunted by the 4 tone train jingle which played repeatedly throughout his unwanted journey. For now, if I want to remind him of his shortcomings, all I have to do is hum the little song.

13:25 Went back to the Service Center and re-told the story. The lady whispered quietly that she could make an exception for this “special circumstance.” Needless to say, my gratitude was abundant.

13:30 Waited in the ticket line and checked our bags. Finally getting out of here!

14:15 Went through security and Number 2 was searched. Arrived at boarding gate.

15:00 Suggested my husband do some perfume shopping at the Duty Free store to begin to amend the hardships. A little retail therapy made me feel slightly better.

16:30 Boarded a flight for Munich. Ziplocs for Number 3.

18:05 Arrived in Munich. Found a shop that had beer to go (how great is that!) and gave the kids ice-cream. This is one of my mottos; “when stressed out, eat ice-cream!”

21:10 Boarded flight to Moscow. Kids slept through the whole thing and I sat next to my husband, whom I love dearly. I realized this story would be really funny later.

2:30 (Moscow time) Arrived in Moscow. Picked up bags, found cab, and drove home.

4:00 Arrived back home, but left expensive souvenirs in van. The story goes on…

Upon reflection of this nightmare, I have discovered a moral. If traveling to vacation is terrible and traveling home from vacation is terrible, then maybe next time I should just STAY ON VACATION!

Monday, December 13, 2010

Small Treausres

A couple of my kids have croup, so yesterday, the other two kids and I went to church alone. This was my first solo trip navigating the metro and buses and I was excited to be so independent. Church was wonderful. My kids are about 80% of the Sunday School program, but they love their teachers dearly who represent several different countries around the world. I asked Number 1 why she likes church so much and she said, “Because the leaders are so different from us. They have different lives and families, but we have one thing in common---we all come here because we love Jesus.” What wisdom from an eight year-old.

One of the highlights of Sunday mornings is the florist stand outside the metro stop. Every time we attend, I treat myself to a bouquet to remind myself that living things do grow in this cold atmosphere. This week, Number 3 had requested roses. They are expensive, but we found some pretty orange ones. In Russia, it is bad luck to give flowers in even numbers so you would never see a dozen. We purchased five. I paid the man 300 rubles and waited for him to wrap them. After he wrapped them he proclaimed in a loud voice with opened arms, “EYE LUUFFF YOU!” I smiled and said, “Spaseebah.” He saw my confusion and pointed to the flowers and said again, “EYE LUUFF YOU!” I said, “Da,Da” and walked away. While I thought the vendor was proclaiming his undying devotion to me, he was actually explaining what the flowers represented.

Occasionally on the metro, they will empty the train completely at a random stop. I don’t know why. Official police (sometimes with guns) motion for everyone to get off. Usually you just wait for the next train, but today they would not let us get back on. So I was forced to re-route. An older lady saw the map in my hands and assumed my confusion. I said to her in Russian, “Do you speak English?” She nodded and showed us where we needed to go, even going so far as to give us directions regarding the next station. Nothing like this has happened when my husband is with me.

We arrived in our town and I thought we would try a taxi this time. But I discovered that I had misplaced my badge that grants entrance to our private community. So I waited for the bus. I took the girls to a coffee shop where I ordered hot chocolates, a latte, and a yogurt parfait. She delivered the hot chocolates and they were exactly that! Cups of warm chocolate syrup. It looked more like pudding than a beverage. We all laughed about it and re-checked the menu. Cocoa was one line down from hot chocolate and it contained milk. Lesson learned. The bus came and we went home.

I took a hot shower, turned on the bathroom heater, sat by the fire and thanked God for all the small treasures I had enjoyed today.