Angst / Fear

I’m not afraid of flying. It’s not my favorite form of transportation, the check in and out, the hustle and bustles, all those people, etc. I just don’t enjoy it. The tight space inside the air plane, economy meaning child size seating and no legroom, nothing really appeals to me. And then the overhead space for carryon luggage: I stick to the rule to have one carryon. Sometimes it is a backpack, a basket, or a small rolling carryon suitcase. And that’s it. But I hate it when people show up with a carryon, a big shopper, and 3 huge paper bags from the @%# outlet stores where they needed to spent the last money they had left from vacation. And that’s when the overhead compartments get too small. And that’s when the stewardess gets involved, shifting things from A to B, then taking smaller bags / backpacks out to accommodate the outlet bags + suitcase + shopper combo. And that smaller backpack is usually mine, so I’m asked to put my bag underneath the seat in front of me, meaning I will not have any legroom for the entire flight as a punishment for somebody else overpacking. I’m not a complainer, but with a situation like that, I do complain, which is swept away in the hectic of boarding a plane and getting everybody and everything stuffed inside. They make me be the bad person, the complainer, although I was the one following the rules, but getting punished for it. So here you go, I’m not afraid of flying, I just don’t like it.

My carryon

Being afraid and having fear is a different story. Being afraid is more a general emotion, usually without a specific reason. You’re afraid of flying in general, because it might get bumpy. Having fear is more specific. Having fear for your life is connected to an incident. And that happened on my flight over from Europe to the US.

Halfway over the Atlantic, 3 hours away from the closest airport, a passenger decided to ignore the non-smoking sign and went to the bathroom, smoking inside. The sprinkler alarm went on, flooding the whole bathroom. And it didn’t stop. The bathroom was filled with water, over spilled into the cabin, etc. the stewardesses and stewards kept running back and forth, trying to take control. They even used those coffee pots they usually offer tea and coffee with to scoop up water, so here you go: don’t drink coffee or tea on an airplane! You never know what they used it before they made coffee for you….. This whole incident took ~45min before it was under control.

15 or 20 minutes later the pilot interrupted the entertainment program and gave a 5 min speech. I didn’t understand a single word, since it was in Spanish, but I paid attention because he sounded very serious, his voice trembling, almost as if he had cried. This was different, more serious than any pilot speech I ever heard. Everybody on the plane was listening, nobody said a word, people looked shocked. And I had fear. I didn’t know what it was about, I had no idea that it was connected to the smoker in the bathroom, I just was in a “shit, why did I never learn Spanish” state of mind. All different scenarios galloping through my brain, for example the murder/suicide in 2015, where a copilot locked the pilot out of the cabin and crashed the airplane into a hillside in southern France. All 150 people died. I had the flashback and thought that this will end up in a similar way, that our pilot is doing the same. Whom should I write a message now? How much time do we have? Why? That can’t be it! It took several minutes, that seemed like an hour or so, until another person tried to explain what had happened in broken English. Part of it I experienced first hand, sitting on the aisle seat 3 rows behind the restroom. The second part I tried to understand. Apparently the sprinkler system didn’t stop, therefore we were very close to an emergency landing 3 hours away from the next airport. Not a fun idea. The person smoking will be found and hit with a $2000 fine, on top of a criminal investigation, because their action risked the lives of a few hundred people.

But that flight wasn’t bad the entire time. I hadn’t realized that Air Europe was a cheap budget airline, not providing any food or drinks, not even on international flights. So I ended up very hungry and thirsty. On the airlines’ website I saw an option to preorder food, so I just gave it a try. Unfortunately the order didn’t go through, so I tried it again: a rice bowl and a water. Again, didn’t go through. Darn! The surprise came 5 minutes later in form of a tray, topped with a rice chicken mix, gazpacho, dessert, and a glass of water. Very impressive! And very tasty!!! I had just finished every bit of it, when the steward came back and told me that he accidentally gave me the tray that was meant to be given to another person, embarrassing! And I had thought this was my rice bowl with some water! Little did I know. Another stewardess came, telling me the same thing, trying to make me be more embarrassed! And then another steward stopped by and did the same thing: the classic guilt trip! So what should I do? Give it back??? How? My seat neighbor had a good laugh, I felt embarrassed but well fed. The steward came back and asked for my order confirmation (that I didn’t have), he came back another time to check how I actually had ordered and so on. At that point I joined my neighbor laughing. Just wait and I’ll give it back…..

Travel month #5

Another month of traveling comes to an end and I can tell you: it is not getting boring! We broke some records and we do have brand new things on our list – some of which we don’t want to repeat 🥴

One Surgery and nine doctors visits – don’t try this at home!

Fourteen trains this months and I keep practicing not to jump off them and tear another meniscus. I do have one meniscus left, though… – don’t try this at home either!!

We got kicked off one train – we got a cheap “Bavaria Ticket” (=Bayern Ticket), that allows to travel a whole day on regional trains through Bavaria from 9am until 3am the next morning. “By accident” we ended up in an ICE train to Salzburg 🤪, and the conductor rolled his eyes and explained the rules. A few minutes later we heard an announcement over the speaker that “this is not a Bayern Ticket train” and everybody who is not entitled blabla… we were the only cheaters getting off at the next stop when we heard another announcement on the platform saying that “this is not a Bayern Ticket eligible train” blabla. I had the feeling that everybody inside the train starred at us two cheaters once the train continued to Salzburg – with high speed of course! Public shaming Bavarian style! So we waited half an hour for the next regional train that took its sweet time, but we made it to Salzburg after all, no problem 🥰

Salzburg

We were in Spain, Austria and Germany this month, traveling by airplane, bus, train and car. We also enjoyed 2 boat rides, one on an underground river and one on a sailboat.

October was the month with the most travel changes: instead of Valencia (Atlas Obscura tour) -> Malaga (visit my brother) -> Portugal (Macs Adventures hike along the Algarve) -> Morocco we ended up with Valencia -> Germany -> Germany -> Germany. The hiking trip we postponed to next year in October and the Morocco trip we postponed to November this year. I have three weeks now to recover, then we’ll be back on the road!

Airlines we used so far since we left California (12 flights all in all): United, Scandinavian Airlines, Eurowings, Alitalia, Ryan Air, Easy Jet, Air Europa, Air France, Lufthansa

Museums we visited in October

  • Contemporary Art Museum in Vilafamés (Spain)
  • Silk Museum in Valencia (Spain)
  • Torero Museum in Valencia (Spain)
  • Prehistory Museum in Valencia (Spain)
  • Modern Art Museum in Salzburg (Austria)
  • Buchheim Museum in Bernried (Germany)

Best performance ever: Flamenco in Valencia

One surprise party for Ted’s names day

Color of the Month: Orange

More than 7500 visitors of our blog! We wrote 190 post with 32,000 words! You count the photos 😬

Valencia – Last Day

24 C, a warm breeze, sunshine. This is Valencia! Munich will be different: even when you add the high of 16C to the low of 4C, it is still lower than the low in Valencia (21C). And there won’t be sunshine. And the sunset without a sun will be very early, at 6.37pm, an hour earlier than in Valencia! So why do we do this, why not just stay here and enjoy this gentle breath and travel to the stiff wind? Doctors appointments. Two surgery preparation appointments, so I’m good to go on the 20th of October and get my knee fixed. 11 weeks of pain will be enough!

So what did we do on our last day? We visited the Central Market again and got sucked in to all those picturesque displays of meats, fish, fruits and vegetables. The Valencia Market is inside this beautiful Modernista building and super clean (but you know that already from our first visit, right?

Afterwards we went to an unusual museum: the Museo Taurino, the bullfighter museum. And man was I surprised! It was very educational, explaining everything from the breeding of the bulls to the preparations of a fight, bullfighter schools, the history of bullfighting and the rules and regulations during a fight up to the point how the bull gets killed. Brutal and fascinating at the same time!

A highlight that I enjoyed A LOT were the costumes the bullfighters wear. There were many of them on display, one more beautiful than the other!

So far, a great day until we came back to the apartment, which is on the 7th floor: the elevator was broken. So is my meniscus – darn! It took me a while to hobble up, but how in the world will we bring our luggage downstairs tomorrow morning? ? ? ? ? ? ?

Valencia – this and that

Valencia is beautiful. The streets are clean, the traffic is organized, the people are friendly. But I’ve never complained more on this trip about bad smelling street corners / sewers than here. I’ve never seen more beggars than here. Buying them a sandwich feels like a drop on a hot stone, but it’s a short reassurance to have done something right. Until the next beggar holds up their open hands in front of you.

Like many other old towns, people don’t live here anymore. You can tell by the amount of hair salons, shoe repair shops and little corner markets and their lack off, that nobody lives here anymore. Doorbell signs are empty, all the apartments are B&Bs now. There are boutique hotels on every corner and there is an overkill of bars and restaurants. Sprinkled with ATMs in-between. There is a lack of crafts-peoples workshops, you can only sense the past by realizing that a multitude of basket stores or silk stores are on a street, that in the past, that’s where those craftspeople had their workshops / studios. That’s what I loved about Napoli. People live in the old town; all their daily needs can be fulfilled there, craftspeople do work there!

Churchbells that we can hear at our 7th floor apartment right next to the Central Market

Vilafamés – Art

It is considered one of the most beautiful villages of Spain and – not knowing what I’m talking about – I agree: Vilafamés is exquisite! after strolling around, we visited the Contemporary Art Museum, that has a very wide selection of paintings, photography and sculptures from local unknown artist to world famous people like Picasso, Man Ray and Miró!

One of my favorite paintings was from Bianca Orozco, who painted this picture during the time when she had cancer. If you look closely, it is more like a collage made with pieces of gaze and other medical supplies.
The outside patio had great sculptures, two of which are seen here!

Day on the beach in Magaluf

We met Jürgen & family today before they fly back tomorrow morning and spend a nice day on the beach right by their hotel. Swimming in the ocean felt really nice, the sun, the sand, the thunderstorm! Yes, for about 30 minutes a big fat thunderstorm passed through, the sky opened and all the rain up there poured down. When it stopped, sun shine again! I love this weather!