Ciao Egypt, Hello Emirates!

GENERAL - December 28, 2006 5:55 pm

And back to our Middle East Extravaganza Report…

While still basking in the glow of the pyramids, it was time to pack our bags and head for the Emirates. At Soenke’s request, we flew Royal Air Jordanian for this leg (rather than the dodgy Egypt Air), luxuriating in quite possibly the poshest economy class I’ve seen. Our Royal Air Jordanian experience was truly remarkable: after we checked in and were off lounging in an airport café, the check-in guy came by to personally alert us that our flight to Jordan was now considerably delayed. When I mentioned we had a tight connection to Dubai, he sat down next to us, ordered a cappucino (offering to buy us one too), got on his cellphone and called the “powers that be” to request that our connecting flight to Dubai be held until our arrival. He also offered us, as a backup, a 5-star hotel room in Jordan in case we were worried that our luggage wouldn’t make the transit (we of course contemplated this with interest, but took our chances on the connection). Feeling like two sultans, our VIP status appeared even more elevated when this fine gentleman boarded our plane prior to takeoff to personally reconfirm that we were good to go for our connecting flight. Both overcome with appreciation (and wonder), we practically offered him frankincense and myrrh in gratitude.

We happily caught our connection in Jordan. I took special note of the airport security check: a security woman in her abaya and shayla (black robe and head cover) took me into a private booth in order to conduct my check, ensuring that male eyes had no opportunity to probe. After the very-personal friskings I’ve gotten in Frankfurt, I appreciated the deference. We passed wistfully by the Royal Air Jordanian’s “Petra Lounge” (snazzy business class lounge) – which unfortunately I didn’t have time to talk our way into. Soon we were soaring high over Saudi Arabia. Being nighttime, I sadly couldn’t get a visual on the vast desert below. Instead, I quietly contemplated the incredibly different life that the women below me lived, and basked gratefully in my freedom to roam the world at will…man or no man… wearing anything I choose…doing anything my heart desires. It is a freedom I value more than anything on earth.

We landed down in glittering Dubai at 1:30am. The airport was a hotbed of activity, since many European and African flights arrive in the middle of the night. The driver from our hotel greeted us with a swanky new SUV, snacks, and chilled water for the 45 minute drive out to Ras el Khaimah – a smaller emirate – and our hotel, the Al Hamra Resort. (Let me mention here that our driver was the most intelligent, helpful individual we met during our entire course of stay at Al Hamra, if that’s any indication…)

I wish I could say that I adored this five-star, very popular “Arabian-nights”-style resort as much as the person who gave me the recommendation. The grounds were beautiful, the beach location impeccable, but the hotel was staffed with confused employees who barely could speak English (the primary language of the hotel), and the private beach – the resort’s main attraction - had stocked about ½ a beach chair per person. Our room was small and blah, and it seemed that some perpetually loud-and-drunk hotel employees were living in a room a few doors down. I started wishing for a magic carpet to whisk me away.

The only solution, of course, was to rent a car and start exploring the barren-yet-somehow-inviting tip of the Arabian peninsula. While filling out the paperwork, the hotel’s surprisingly-coherent Hertz employee announced “you will need special insurance if you want to go to Oman.”

OMAN????!!!

“Yeah heck, we DEFINITELY want to Oman. Sign us up. Where’s Oman?”

Nothing like a little road trip to Oman. And that’s where the fun began…..

(Sorry, no photos for this post. Plenty a’comin’ though….)

Merry Christmas & Frohe Weihnachten!

Europe 2006, Germany 2006 - December 24, 2006 5:19 am

From the bottom of my heart, I truly wish all of my friends, family, readers, lurkers, and casual-stumblers-upon-my-websiters a VERY VERY BLESSED AND HAPPY CHRISTMAS !

Just for the record, I thought I’d share 5 of my best Christmas-season tips:

1. Everything is a LOT more fun with a Santa hat on (for the life of me, I could NOT get Soenke to wear one today to fly his passengers to London! Scrooge!) Wear it on the bus, to work, to the mall. Everyone smiles at you, and you feel like you’re having 50% more fun than the rest of the population. My top Santa-hat experience was a few years ago, driving home from the Christmas tree lot in my tiny little convertible, top down (the car’s, not MINE), Christmas tree sticking way up out of the car, Santa hat and supermodel sunglasses on. About 500 of my fellow Californians honked and waved, and somehow I knew at that moment that Christmas trees and convertibles were what life was all about.

2. If you have weird relatives that you have to see at Christmas, you can both help the time pass more swiftly AND be the life of the party by whipping up a nice batch of German-style Gluehwein (kind of like hot mulled wine, full of sugar and cinnamon). I have my friend Marnie to thank for this super good idea (the spiking your relatives part… I thought up the Gluehwein part).

3. If you’re too lazy/busy/cheap to get a Christmas tree, then at least wrap a strand of Christmas lights around the nearest houseplant or pet to ensure your home has the minimum standard of festiveness. Although, as I learned in college, better to avoid wrapping electrical things around cactus.

4. Always, I say ALWAYS try to bring the Christmas-dinner-hostess a nice little hostess appreciation gift (poinsettia [Weihnachtstern?], bottle of wine, chocolates, etc) in order to insure future reinvitations. It’s a heck of a lot of work to make Christmas dinner, which is why I love invitations. But be careful if you live in Germany, it may be “Gruenkohl” year (mushy kohl stuff with hot mustard and various very-scary pig items - apparently very special at Christmastime but there IS a reason why it hasn’t caught on outside of Germany, I can assure you).

5. If Santa didn’t bring you that special item that you’ve been a-yearnin’ for, that’s what after-Christmas sales are for, honey. In America, you can blast right out on the 26th, get the thing giftwrapped, rush back home and still pretend Santa got it right. (In Germany there is some weird “3-day Christmas” program where you have to wait until the 27th for anything to open again, unless that super special gift item can be bought at the local Shell station).

Back soon with the captivating second-half of our Middle-East adventure: dolphins in Oman… magic carpets in Ras el Khaimah… Chili’s and the Nutcracker in Dubai…

HO HO HO!

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Our tree with it’s wildly oversized Angel topper :
Christmas tree 2006.JPG

Baby Sophie on the 11th of December - this is her profile, and she’s trying to get her thumb in her mouth:
Baby 12-11-06.jpg

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