Thursday, June 28, 2012

And a Happy Stonewall Day to you all!





I hope you all rioted appropriately!

Richard and I decided to go to New York City for the 50th anniversary of the Stonewall Riots, June 28, 2019. It could be a very different sib trip!

Wednesday, June 27, 2012

25 years ago today



The AIDS Quilt made its debut. 40 panels were hung from the Mayor’s balcony at San Francisco city hall.

It was approximately 15 years ago that we made Wayno’s panel.


Okay, it is hard to see, but Wayn's is the bottom left. The picture is from the Names Project website.

Monday, June 25, 2012

How to kill the travel industry.



Richard and I booked our flights to Europe back in January. It is really a simple itinerary. We fly from Portland, Oregon to Amsterdam, Netherlands and catch a connecting flight to Prague, Czech Republic. The return trip is stunning in its variety. We fly from Prague, Czech Republic to Amsterdam, Netherlands and catch connecting flight to Portland, Oregon.

We both thought all was okey-dokey. We couldn’t get our seat assignments at the time we bought our tickets, but we were careful to note the date we could get them. On that date we went online and, well, we could get seat assignment on our flight from Portland to Amsterdam, our flight from Amsterdam to Prague was still a free-for-all, the return flight from Prague to Amsterdam wasn’t even listed yet and we were 14 days early to get our seats from Amsterdam to Portland. That’s fine. No one ever said international travel was easy.

14 days later we were back on the internet. Our seats were confirmed on our 1st leg. The 2nd leg was still a chaos in motion, the 3rd leg still didn’t exist and the 4th leg let us get seat assignments. Lordy, this is moving so smoothly!

Fast forward to last Friday. We still have seats on both directions that involve Portland and Amsterdam. The flight from Amsterdam to Prague is still a calamity waiting to happen and the return flight to Amsterdam doesn’t exist. But when we went to Travelocity’s website (yes, we bought out tickets though them), all four legs of our flight were listed as they should be. I, of course, was cool a cucumber, but Richard wanted action. So, I sent Travelocity the following email:

“Portion of flight missing from airline websites.

Our reservations are Portland to Amsterdam and on to Prague, with the return being the opposite. On Travelocity's website that is listed, but when I go to the website of the airlines involved (KLM, Delta and Czech) the return leg from Prague to Amsterdam is missing. What should I do?”
(Note: I did have to give them pertinent information like booking number, confirmation number, license number, mother’s maiden name, shortest sister’s social security number and a random bank account with the access code before they would let me send them an email.)

We received an email back six hours later saying (and I paraphrase), “Call us, you noodle-nosed loser, at 888-xxx-xxxx.” Turns out they gave me the wrong number. The correct number is 666-xxx-xxxx.

So Saturday, I called. The guy I talked with (I couldn’t understand his name) said that they couldn’t tell me what was going on, but there was bad weather in Prague so the flight had been postponed and could I call back in 24 hours. It was a stretch, but I also knew I was going nowhere fast with this call.

Sunday I forgot to call back, so today I did. An hour later, all I can tell you is the flight we’re booked on no longer exists, there are only a hand few of ways to get from Prague to Portland (most of them include hitchhiking), and the people in the travel industry really, really don’t care.

Oh, and the ‘airline’ is only open from 9am to 7:30pm Central Time, and it was 7:41 Central Time (after an hour on the phone) so there was nothing we could do. I have to call back tomorrow.

Wednesday, June 20, 2012




Happy Summer

Thursday, June 14, 2012

Today’s important Czech word

Více – which is pronounced vee-tse. It means “More”. So, Více pivo, prosím. It is going to be a grand time in Prague.

Tuesday, June 12, 2012

This Czech word is critical.

Today’s word is:
Pivo (Pronounced like you think, if you think like someone who speaks Czech. I have no clue. But I will make it work.)
Pivo is Beer. Everyone knows the Czechs are famous for their beers. This is a word I will remember for the rest of my life.

Monday, June 11, 2012

Czech phrase/word of the day.



We all remember:
Ahoj = Hello [Pronounced like “Ahoy, Matey” (without the “Matey”), but with accent on the first syllable. (The Czech always accent the first syllable, so keep that in mind.)]
Prosím = Please (Prounounced “pro-seem” – remember which syllable gets accented. Oh, and roll your “r”)

Our new phrase:

Kde je nákupni centrum? = Where’s a shopping mall? (Pronounced “gde ye na-kup-nyee tsen-trum”, of course. I mean, that is so obvious!)
I think I have a few sisters who would find this a key phrase in Prague. (And I bet they are trying to memorize it as we speak!)

Computer crisis.

Saturday morning, we awoke to a dead computer. There was a lot of cursing and gnashing of teeth and general poor dispositions for a couple of hours. I’m really trying to avoid making us sound like crotchety old men. But we are. And it’s finals week and Richard really needs to be able to get online. (He is teaching an online class this quarter.)

Finally, reaching desperation, I pulled our old computer downstairs and jump-started the poor dude. He coughed and sputtered and gave weak signs of life. We instantly remembered why we bought a new computer. There were vultures gathering outside the window, waiting for the old plastic box with Intel inside to take its last breath. But with some mechanical nursing, good thoughts and a nearby sledgehammer, our Vaio beat the odds and returned to the living: the very slow living. And Richard didn’t have to drive the 33 miles for our house to the college every day this week. He could curse from home!

But for all the unpleasantries, there has been a silver lining. All my genealogy crap is on the old computer that we just brought back to life. I was unable to transfer it to the new computer when we did the switch-over. (Hence the old computer has not been recycled, as I knew new technology was coming.) And, maybe the new technology to use to move the data to a new home on whatever computer we end up with, has come. (Our current ‘new’ computer is at the local geekery. I believe he is in ICU. But if he pulls through, we may keep him for a while.) So, that is good.

Second, I found some great pictures I had forgotten about.










Sunday, June 10, 2012

Ask the linguistic expert.


I have deemed myself a linguistic expert as I speak English like a native of a certain education level; my French is flawless, as twenty secular geese will attest; and I am conversant in Dutch, as long as the conversation is about, “Vijf youngen springen op de tafel.” After that, I get a little confused.

In honor of our upcoming trip to Prague, I have turned my linguistic prowess to the Czech language. Some of you may not be aware, but many experts consider Czech to be the third most difficult language to learn, right after Mandarin Chinese and Estonian. I know little about Chinese or Estonian, but Holy Toledo, if they are harder to learn the Czech, I ain’t going any where near them.

First of all, the Czech are stingy with vowels. Apparently, many, many moons ago when they were creating the Czech language (Čestina, as they say), they were dirt poor and couldn’t afford to buy vowels (damn you, Pat and Vanna), so when it came to words like “krk” and “prst”, they were forced to forgo the luxury of being able to pronounce the words. Then a few years later, they had an evil archduke with a speech impediment. He made this unbelievable sound, like a rolled ‘r’ with a ‘zh’ behind it. He deemed it a letter, “Ř” and got it inserted into a large number of words. Just a bunch more words that can’t be pronounced.

Throw into that mess, nouns are either male, female or neuter and every adjective changes depending on the gender of the noun. It is a friggin’ nightmare. And is ‘neuter’ really a gender?

So far I have learned two words, “Ahoj” and “Prosím”, (“Hello” and “Please”). I’m guessing I won’t be having long, intimate chats with any of my new Czech friends.

Wednesday, June 6, 2012

The summer of 2012: Prague, Salzburg and Vienna


Planning has begun in earnest. We have our airline tickets. We leave Portland on July 29th on a flight to Amsterdam. From there we catch a flight to Prague in the Czech Republic. We arrive the following day at something like 1 in the afternoon. My first thought is that it is a shame that the Czech Republic and Slovakia spit in to separate countries. Czechoslovakia was the neatest named country in the world. Now they are both just, well… blah. My second thought is that this will be Richard any my first trip to the other side of the Iron Curtain. For those of you too young or too history deprived to know, the Iron Curtain was this amazing barrier that the Soviet Union built across the continent of Europe. The curtain rods were amazing as the Iron Curtain itself was astonishingly heavy. Short of the Great Wall of China, it was one of the most amazing feats of limitation ever created by man. Oh, but we are building damn near as sweet of a barrier along our border with Mexico. But, I digress.

We will spend four nights in Prague. We have one day trip planned, to Terezín. Some of you may know it better as Theresienstadt. It was a "gathering" area for the Jews of Czechoslovakia used by the Germans. (That translates to "ghetto".) Although not a death camp, the vast majority who entered Theresienstadt died. If I had a bucket list, visiting a concentration camp would be on it. And while Terezín doesn’t quite fit the bill, but unless I can someday get to Auschwitz, I’ll let it count.

From Prague we go to Salzburg, Austria for three nights. You will be all stunned to hear that Salzburg has a theatre festival going on while we are there. It is such an amazing coincidence. I was shocked when Richard told me. I’ve heard that there are five things not to like about Salzburg. Three of them have escaped my memory. But I do recall: it is so expensive it makes Vienna look dirt cheap and whatever you do in Salzburg, you will do with 500,000 of your best friends, so get used to being crushed.

From Salzburg, we go to Vienna for six nights. We have rented an apartment on the edge of gay Vienna. I think that is appropriate. We are planning two side trips from Vienna; one to Bratislava in Slovakia, and one to Sopron in Hungary. They pad the old passport.

Then we head back to Prague for two nights before returning home.

Friday, June 1, 2012

It's National Doughnut Day!

I'd tell you more, but my fingers are all sticky and there are crumbs everywhere!