Archive for the ‘travel’ Category

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My canine’s canines

April 21, 2009

I loved getting a root canal so much that I’m getting one for my dog.

A little more than a year ago, I noticed that one of Isis’ teeny little lower front teeth looked like it had been worn down. I googled it, got scared and took her to the vet, whose reaction was basically, “Eh, no big.”

That tooth never seemed to bother her and didn’t wear away to nothing. So I wasn’t overly concerned when I noticed that Isis’ canines were no longer pointy. It’s kind of a mixed blessing, isn’t it? Like Stew not having claws. Stew can’t scratch and Isis’ canines can’t puncture. (Theory B as yet untested).

How did this happen? She chews on your normal dog stuff. Rubber toys, plush squeakies. I know tennis balls can be bad, but she doesn’t chew on those too often. Soccer balls, yes, daily…but not for an excessive length of time.

Saturday, on the long drive home from dog class (she’s doing so well! I’m so proud, and even the trainer was beaming with pride), I noticed that the top of the lower left canine looked reddish or brownish. Last night, the whole tooth was brownish gray. So it’s dead or dying, and probably needs a root canal, which is absolutely my preference over an extraction.

We’ll be seeing a veterinary dentist next week to learn more. I’m not sure if the vet dentist will be able to tell why this happened, but I emailed my dog trainer. She mentions at least once every time I see her that she feeds her dogs raw. She has suggested that some of Isis’ behavioral problems could be nutritionally based, but waited until now to go into full proselytizing mode.

I get the feeling she has been waiting eagerly for the right moment, when I’d be faced with something that would make me consider even for a second obtaining and feeding my dog whole raw chickens. And tripe. Organs. Etc.

She sensed it would be off-putting to suggest I do anything other than buy a 40-pound bag of kibble, since as far as I knew, Isis was perfectly healthy. But the second I asked, “Do you think there’s something wrong with Isis’ nutrition that would result in her teeth eroding like this?”

Bam.

She didn’t say I had to feed Isis raw, or that I obviously don’t love my dog if I continue to feed her kibble. She said, “Please tell me if I’m out of line.” But I bit, and asked to hear more. And I’m considering it.

The anticipated expense of my dog’s dental work has me stressed out for other reasons too. I had just gotten my heart set on going to Cambodia and Vietnam in July. A friend is performing at the Park Hyatt Saigon for three months, and are you kidding me, of course I want to go visit.

The airline ticket would cost the same as a root canal for my dog.

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Is this line secure?

October 22, 2008

Back in the day, paper records were considered to be the reliable, permanent thing, right? I’m sure there was a time when sending someone an email felt riskier than sending it in the regular mail…or even sending a fax.

If they have the paper in hand, I know they’ve got it. This email thing? I don’t know where it goes, or if it even got to the person. There’s no permanent record.

But for some reason, I consider email more private and effective than regular mail or the fax. It targets a specific person, right? I have no control over who opens the mailbox or checks the fax machine.

I’m trying to get a partial refund for the leg of our American Airlines flight to India that was canceled in April. The Seattle to Chicago part. A lot of flights were canceled that week for inspections, and you can imagine how disconcerting it would have been to miss our Chicago to Delhi flight. Because I am prophetic, and also an Alaska Airlines frequent flier and credit card user … the night before, I booked us on another flight for $5.

Nevertheless, I think we’re entitled to something back for that canceled flight. Without getting into the whole customer service thing, let me just say that I was unsuccessful in getting my refund on the phone or the internet. I was told I had to submit my request in writing. By mail or fax.

So there’s this paper that’s out there somewhere, I don’t know if anyone’s read it, or whose desk it is stacked on. If it went through a computer, it’d be in a queue somewhere, and at some point, someone would have to deal with it, right?

I’m having these thoughts when my boss tells me he’s going to fax me my annual evaluation for me to sign and send back to him. OMG, fax? Like, just anyone could pick it up off the machine? (Nevermind that I’m the only one here). Still, that means it’s been printed out and someone other than my boss is actually putting those papers through a machine. It’s so exposed.

And about this time, I discover an old email I wrote at a previous job, venting about an old-school secretary, recently returned from retirement, who flipped out when I couldn’t produce the paper record of a leave request.

An email would be acceptable, I was told:

This serves in lieu of the old leave slips we used to use. It becomes part of our permanent payroll records, along with a new report. Print a copy for your records. Everyone needs to keep a copy of what they asked for and his approval. Then if there are any questions later, they have the information they need to support their claim.


I had vented:

Upon learning that we don’t use leave slips anymore, Secretary is now trying to “come up” with another way to do it. See, they used to give leave slips to Boss and Boss would sign them and Secretary would make a copy on yellow paper for the employee’s records. (Must be yellow paper) But absent that policy… she’s going to make everyone print out the e-mail so Secretary can make a bunch of copies so everyone has records of everything on paper. That they have to put somewhere and remember where it is should they ever need it. Because that makes a lot more sense than looking it up on the computer!!

Apropos of nothing, does your Blogger dashboard give you the option of typing in Hindi, or is this a souvenir setting from blogging in India?

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You can bring your dog

July 28, 2008


Last summer we took Isis on a couple of road trips. She does great in the car, but her nighttime barking was a major stressor. Even though we stayed places that allowed dogs (except for one sleazy place we sneaked her into. Sneaked. A German shepherd.), every time she barked, Rob said, “She’s going to get us kicked out of this place.”

I had forgotten this little wrinkle when I suggested she and I accompany Rob to the Kitsap Peninsula for a kettlebell instructors training. What fun it would be to take her to the beach and play all day while Rob was in class.

We booked a steal of a room, very close to the ferry terminal. They had two pet rooms, both of which were booked. They told me the only available room was a smoking room and it smelled “very smoky.” This was a dealbreaker at first, but when I couldn’t find another room on the entire peninsula, except one that was $120/night plus $30 for the dog…I thought, “Eh, what’s a little smoke?”

I called back and the woman told me that there had been a cancellation and they had a nonsmoking room available. “It’s not normally a pet room, but everyone wants to bring their pets these days.” The room was $62/night with no extra charge for the dog. Which really, there should have been, because we left behind a ridiculous amount of dog hair. I don’t know if it was the weather or stress, or what, but that dog was shedding like nothing you’ve ever seen. The red motel rug was coated in it. So I also left behind a $20 tip along with a note that said, “Thank you!!” and I drew a little paw print and signed Isis’ name.

We got to the motel after 10 p.m. on Friday and were pleased that our room was actually in back, the last of three rooms on the landing. Meaning, there were only two other rooms on our “floor” and no one would be walking past our door.

After lights out, Isis was on heightened alert and so was I. Until that moment, I’d forgotten the trip to Portland where she woke me up every hour with a bark alert. And now Rob was trying to get some rest before a strenuous two-day training. What had I done? Invited myself along, assuming he’d enjoy having us there, not realizing that he may have thought it advantageous to sleep alone in a motel room, with no dog to disturb him. (He assured me later that he was happy to have us there.)

To take Isis out, I had to leash her, put on my sandals and a sweatshirt and walk across this creaky landing to a flight of stairs down to a grassy area. I did this perhaps five times in the night. Noting with irony that if we had been in one of those other rooms, and someone else creaked by five times in the night with a dog, that Isis would have gone nuts every time.

Thanks to Ambien, I fell back asleep easily after each trip outside … and Isis’ bark alarm only went off once in the night. One short bark. I said, “No big deal, Isis,” and she shut up. Then at about six, she bark-bark-barked, and Rob said, “She’s going to get us kicked out of this place,” and I was like, “Are you kidding? I can’t even believe how good she was last night!”

The second night, I only had to get up twice (which, let’s be honest, I do at home) and she didn’t make a sound. Plus, there was a dog in one of the rooms on the floor below us that woofed as we passed right before bed. Isis perked up, but didn’t freak out. I thought, “Oh nooo. We’re going to have a bark-off every time we go out during the night.” But that was the last we heard from that dog.

Super-bizarrely, we only saw one other person staying at the motel, and actually, Isis barked her head off quite aggressively at him when he went up the stairs toward his room, on the same floor as ours. This was the first night and we were down on the grass at the time. I was quite pleased with my ability to calm her down, but didn’t want to make eye contact to see whether the guy was equally impressed, or in fact, terrified.

Aside from the one bark from inside another room, and rumors (from the front desk lady) that the person directly below us had cats…there was no evidence of other pets staying there. And by evidence, I mean poop. I scooped Isis’ and put it in the trash can next to the stairs. I peeked in right before check-out, and our bags of poop were the only ones there. I thought we’d have trouble using the facilities, if another dog were using the small patch of grass at the same time, but it was quite private.

Altogether, Isis is a perfectly delightful traveling companion. I had a lot of fun, and I think she did too.

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Moshi Moshi

July 14, 2008

Rob’s parents and older sister are hosting Japanese exchange students for two weeks. Three boys altogether. We met them this morning and showed them how to play Wii.

I got all excited about showing them my photos from when I stayed with a family in Japan for two weeks when I was almost their same age. I found the album and plan to take it next time I see them.

As I flipped through the fat album, its plastic-covered sticky pages browned with age, looking at photos of myself wearing pleated shorts and button-down shirts tied at the waist, it occurred to me that my showing this album to these boys is the equivalent of someone in Japan saying to 15-year-old me, “I was in America once!” and forcing me to look at their pictures from the 1970s.

1991 sure was a long time ago.

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Me: 2 / Vancouver: 0

July 9, 2008

An e-mail regarding a Canadian parking ticket:

It seems I was refunded the $45 fee twice, in one $90 check. I am happy to pay the city back … but I live in Washington. To pay back $45, it winds up costing me money, in foreign exchange fees and postage, or the gas in my car should I choose to drive to Vancouver and pay the ticket in person. If I pay by credit card, I pay a finance charge in addition to the foreign exchange fee.

The correspondence below confirms that this relates to the reimbursement for a wrongful tow on Dec. 3. I was parked perfectly legally and in fact had paid the meter, yet my car was towed. Through no fault of my own, I found myself stranded in a foreign city at 11 o’clock at night. I paid a cab $10 to get to the impound lot, where I discovered that the tow truck had damaged my bumper.

So you can see that this incident already has cost more than the inconvenience and the price of the tow and parking fine.

I think I was pretty understanding at the time that the parking sign was confusingly worded and parking enforcement simply had made a mistake. Everyone at the city was quite polite and it seemed that the problem was getting resolved.

I had charged the $45 fine to my credit card, so I thought the charge would just be reversed, in which case, Bank of America also would have reversed the finance charges and foreign exchange fee. Instead I received a check, which is a further inconvenience because I don’t live in Canada. I actually opened an account at RBC to deposit the reimbursement check for the towing, which I received in February.

This too cost me the gas it took to get across the border twice: to open the account and again to deposit this $90 check that apparently was issued in error. Now I’ve received an invoice for $45, to correct the city’s mistake in my favor. Did the city also correct the mistake(s) made in its own favor? Did you contact and refund money to all the other drivers whose cars were towed that night and every other night until parking enforcement learned (from me, it seems) that they had interpreted their own sign incorrectly?

As a journalist, my instinct is to find out how many other accidental tows there have been. I’m wondering if there isn’t a class action lawsuit here. For a city the size of Vancouver to have this kind of incompetence in its parking enforcement and revenue services is, frankly, offensive.

Again, I do not have Canadian checks, but I do have an RBC savings account. With an e-mail address or RBC account number, I think I can transfer money online to the revenue services division. However, this too costs an additional fee. So I’m not even sure how much I owe the city of Vancouver, after the $10 cab ride, credit card fees, an international phone call this afternoon, damage to my car bumper, and so forth.

What do you suggest?

Response:


This was quite the trip you had coming to Vancouver, BC. I would like to extend my apologies for our errors. I am preparing to write off this request that you pay back the city $45.00. I think you have been through enough inconvenience and therefore please disregard our invoice this debt has been removed.

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Little tearful

June 5, 2008

Here’s someone who was unhappier than we were to be on the extremely crowded Kangra Valley Rail.


You have to click to see the larger picture, to really get a good look at those welling-up tears.

Here’s another unhappy traveler, although she seems more annoyed than anything:


Don’t know why I felt better, having documented their discomfort … but I did.

More pictures here, as we find peace in Little Lhasa.

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Flashing back (cue whoosing sound from Lost)

June 3, 2008

Remember when I called Delhi hell on earth?


I sorta meant it. I’ve finally gotten around to editing my Mumbai (Bombay) and Delhi photos, and I think the reason it took me so long is that I feel conflicted about those captured moments. That was about the point the trip turned around, and our days became more unpleasant than they weren’t. (Excepting Dharamsala.)

It makes me sad to listen to Rob describe the trip to people, because what comes out first is “It was challenging,” and it’s the Bombay/Delhi portion he’s referring to. I’m a firm believer that years after a trip, the stressful, negative stuff fades away and the overall memory is a happy one. I’m afraid that the unpleasant stuff during our last days has tainted Rob’s memory of the entire trip.

I say, “What about Kerala, what about Bodh Gaya … Varanasi? I loved Varanasi!”

Even in Bombay (Mumbai) and Delhi, there were moments that made enduring the other stuff worth it (for me, at least).


The day we visited Elephanta was excruciatingly hot. We got on the hour-long deluxe (allegedly) boat and wondered what made us think the excursion was a good idea. It was then that I coined the phrase, “Did you have something better to do today? Look at a bookstore or something?”

We fell for a scam within minutes of sitting down, and were uncomfortably sweaty all the way to the base of the steps to the caves. We climbed that endless path of stone steps, browsing the souvenir stands along the way, and the irritability fell away. It felt good to be a tourist again. This is what we came to see. Probably didn’t hurt that these steps were shaded.

The caves themselves were fun to look at and photograph. (Also, shaded from the sun.) Security was tight though, if you got too close to one of the carvings, a security guard blew a whistle at you.


In Delhi, a highlight was the Baha’i Lotus Temple. It’s a little out of the way compared to other sites in Delhi, and on the drive there, I wondered if we were going to have the same “Yep, there it is” experience we’d had earlier at the Rajghat memorial to Gandhi.

Oh, no. Not to oversell it, but it’s like Michelangelo’s David. You think you’ve already seen it in the figurines and posters all over Florence, but when you’re standing before it, it’s magnificent.

I’m proud to note that this is the second of the seven (at press time) existing Baha’i Temples that I have visited. The first was circa 1994 in Wilmette, Ill. Next stop, Samoa.

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Our trip in pictures (Part 1 of 999)

May 15, 2008

I hope no one’s tired of my trip to India yet. We’ve been back almost 2 weeks, and I’m still uploading pictures.

Can you believe I’ve created 7 new albums on Facebook, and not one of them contains a picture of my dog?

Nepal

Along the Ganges

The Bodhi Tree

Calcutta, Chennai and Cochin

Obligatory Taj Mahal Shots

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The Sleeper Bus

May 10, 2008

Can’t recommend it.

Clearly our multi-train journey was not the most efficient or comfortable method of travel between Delhi and Dharamsala, so we decided to follow the world’s advice and take the sleeper bus.

It sounds so easy. Show up and get on the bus. They sell tickets for the thing all over town. Sposedta leave at 6:30 p.m. and take 12 hours. Trouble is (one of the many troubles), you can’t tell which is your bus from a long line of unlabeled buses lining the hill leading out of Mcleod Ganj.

My fear was that we’d get on a bus to Delhi and it wouldn’t be air-conditioned. Not that it necessarily would have been the end of the world, just that I wanted to get what we paid for.

You hand your ticket to a dude who looks at it and hands it back to you. No change in his expression. No indication that yes, this is the right bus.

Other backpackers are standing around, so you ask them if they’re on the a/c bus. You think probably yes, this is the right bus, but the dude isn’t taking your bag to put it in the holding area. A scruffy European dude puts his bags in and the dude tells him, “Eighty.”

“Eighty what?” backpacker asks in his European accent (I can’t remember which, it was probably British). “Rupees?”

He’s outraged. As a female European says, “But we’ve already paid 700,” the dude yanks 8 bags, including a large embroidered Guatemalan duffel and a guitar, out of the hold.

I decide that it’s not worth the inconvenience of wrestling our bags onto the bus for 10 rupees a bag (25 cents). We fork it over.

8-bag guy stacks his bags in the middle of the aisle of the bus.

Dude, I support your moral outrage, but there’s a point at which it comes at the expense of your fellow travelers.

On the bus is chaos. There don’t seem to be seat numbers. We select a double bunk that could be seats EF, which is what it looks like our ticket says. It’s an upper bunk. There are round a/c vents on the ceiling. The bunk itself isn’t bad. A cushion like a futon. The singles were way too narrow but the double was a good size for us.

We’re told to move to a lower bunk. I don’t mind not having to climb up the ladder…but Rob would have preferred the upper. The vents in this new bunk are missing and there’s wires where the vents should be. I say to a dude, “What’s the deal with this hole in the ceiling?” He bursts out laughing and says something to the other bus dude and walks away.

Further chaos as it seems there are more people on the bus than there are sleepers. We have our curtain drawn closed at this point so we don’t know how it turned out, but the bunkless chick was saying “It’s your problem, you find a solution.”

Again, supporting your moral outrage…but how is he supposed to create another bunk for you? It’s actually not his fault, since he’s not the one overselling the tickets.

I think he tried to get two women to double up, and they said, “No. We paid for it because we wanted it.”

I lay there staring out the dark window as it started pouring down rain and lightning, and trees blew like crazy and we finally got going. We didn’t care about the delay, since we didn’t want to get to Delhi at 6 a.m. anyway.

At first, I worried that they’d wake me up every time there was a stop. On trains, I can wake up and pee on my own schedule. On the bus, there was no way to tell whether we were stopped for a pee break or what. I missed a pee break at 3:30 a.m. when I climbed over the European’s 8 bags and asked the guys in front if I had time or if we were leaving. “We are leaving,” one of them said. Probably shouldn’t have made it a multiple choice question.

I made the pee breaks at 9:30 p.m. and 5:30 a.m. While I was off the bus at 5:30 a.m., Rob said the dude announced it would be another 4 hours to Delhi, but I never heard the guys tell us anything about anything. No announcement from the flight deck or whatever.

The bus seemed to get cool when we first departed, but I kept waking up feeling really stuffy and hot. Rob opened our window. At about 8:30 a.m., I sat up and looked out the window and the breeze felt nice. Then I felt cool air coming out of the gaping vent hole for the first time.

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Kerala

May 7, 2008

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