Showing posts with label summer vacations. Show all posts
Showing posts with label summer vacations. Show all posts

Friday, July 8, 2016

Looking Forward to Your Vacation? Read on By Andrea Downing


Ah, summer.  Lazy days on the beach, toes dipped in pools, a light breeze over the lake, or a splash in the stream.  Also, hour-long lines at security, bags going missing, four dollar bottles of water and screaming kids.  As you read this, I will just be landing in London, England, and I can only pray as I write that what happened to me recently on my return from Jackson, WY, to New York does not have a repeat performance.
Obviously, I’ve lived to tell the tale.  Only just….
Flight one on my return goes from Jackson to Denver.  Jackson airport is like a hotel lounge—it rather lulls you into a false sense of security.  And when I was upgraded to Business/First, what could possibly go wrong?  Hail in Denver was what went wrong.  And since Jackson is a small airport, taking small planes, which in turn have small fuel tanks, we couldn’t just hang about in the sky over Denver waiting for the hail to move on.  Nope, instead, we moved on—to Grand Island, Nebraska.
One and a half hours later, having been assured all flights were delayed so our connections would still be good, we got back into the air and made our way to Denver and flight two.  I had an hour first—enough time to indulge at Rocky Mt. Chocolate Factory—got my second upgrade to Business/First for the four hour flight to LaGuardia, and settled in next to a gentleman, who happened also to be going on to East Hampton.  Delightful.
Until the flight attendant announced we didn’t have a pilot, so we all had to get off once more.
Our pilot had a family crisis so United was working its way down its pilot list.  This list might have been one pilot long because none could be found in the area; either they were stuck elsewhere or couldn’t get in, in time, or had already done too many hours. Visions of sleeping forever on the floor of Denver airport danced across my tiring brain.  But, aha!  New flight put on for eight a.m. next morning, hotel vouchers available at the Customer Service desk….
Except the Customer Service desk already had about one thousand people in line, a line which zig-zagged in front of said desk before making its way down the entire Terminal B concourse.  Amazing how you get chatty with strangers in such a situation.  After considering that the line was going nowhere fast, and that all airport hotels were soon to announce they had no rooms, smarty pants (my middle name) pulled out her phone, rang United, and got through within minutes.  I checked in for the morning’s flight and got a 10% discount on a La Quinta room reachable via shuttle.  Better than a voucher, I’d say, and the shuttle was waiting when I got there.
Now there was one thing I wasn’t so smart about, and that was the contents of my carry-on:  chargers, jewelry, medications, the above mentioned chocolates, and the contents of my Jackson fridge. For some unknown reason, I had decided to transport home:  one part cucumber, one smoked trout (luckily in sealed pouch), nuts, and an apple that could have passed for a pumpkin.  Available at the front desk was a toothbrush (one row of bristles, perfect for a baby) and a sachet smear of toothpaste.  In the room was soap.  And what a room!  Giant living room, separate bedroom and bathroom.  Also, no coffee for the coffee maker, television blaring from the lobby, heater in the bedroom so you couldn’t possibly sleep with it on, traffic noise from outside, and where were the lovely, fluffy bathrobes?  Not at La Quinta!  For dinner, I rather idiotically ate chocolate and the giant apple.  Freezing to death after my shower, with no spare blanket, I wrapped myself in two dry bath towels, set the alarm for five a.m., and tried to sleep.  Who was I kidding?  Chocolate has more caffeine than a cup of coffee, dumb-dumb. And my face, which went without eye cream and face cream for the first time in fifty-six years, felt as if it might crack.  In this state, further enhanced by the pain in recovering broken shoulder, my phone vibrated at precisely 2.40 a.m.
Luckily, I looked at it.  United announcing that the 8 a.m. flight was now an 11 a.m. flight.  This meant arrival in NYC, with the two hour time difference, at 5p.m Memorial weekend Friday.
But I’m awake!  So I got myself onto an alternative flight at 8.10 a.m., one of the last 2 seats into Newark.  Sat in an exit row seat between two lovely guys who tried to convince me that, as it was now the Friday of Memorial Day weekend, I really didn’t want to continue on to East Hampton via the Long Island Expressway, otherwise known as the free parking lot. 
Oh, but I did.
My daughter, bless her, made something like five different jitney reservations for me, arranged for a car to collect me at Newark, take me into NYC, have a sandwich delivered to my apartment, and I was able to make reservation Numero Dos—one hour later.  Traffic not bad on the LIE, and she had dinner waiting for me on arrival.  The angel!
Oh, and my checked bag?  Well, I knew it wouldn’t be on my flight so went directly to the luggage people on arrival at Newark and had it sent straight to my home.  Easy as pie….
And you can read far less miserable stories at
WEBSITE AND BLOG:  http://andreadowning.com
Twitter:  @andidowning  https://twitter.com/AndiDowning



Friday, August 30, 2013

Summer Vacations



by Diane Burton

When I was a kid, we didn’t take very many vacations. Not enough money and Dad often worked two jobs so he didn’t have time off. During my high school years, Dad decided a great vacation would be to drive up into the wilds of Canada—way north of the Soo—and camp. Eight of us (the youngest was either not born yet or left with Gram) in a canvas tent and not even an outhouse nearby. At least the lake was clean enough to swim in and no poison ivy in the bushes. Even worse, we went back the next year.

I have to say camping was never high on my bucket list after that. When I was a Girl Scout leader, I had to suck it up, put on my this-will-be-fun face, and take my troop camping. I did enjoy those trips even though Hubs always said my idea of roughing it was no room service.

According to my kids when they were in middle and high school, we took “encyclopedia” vacations—Washington, DC, Gettysburg, Mount Rushmore, Pikes Peak. I would research the places and share that info during the long car rides. With no handheld games, no video screens, no iPods (you know, back in the Dark Ages), they had to listen. Though they groaned and complained, some of it did sink in. As adults, they now say they appreciated the trips.

When they were little, one vacation was everyone’s favorite. A 4-hour drive to a cottage on a lake where Hubs (a very early riser) would go out fishing while the kiddies and I slept. We were just getting up when he returned and we all had breakfast. Then we went exploring. While I sat in the shade and read, he taught the kiddies how to fish on the dock—often grabbing the line as daughter got so excited when she got a nibble she let go of the pole. While she and I have never been avid fishermen (fisherwomen?), Hubs and Son are. This past March, they fished in Lake Pleasant north of Phoenix. They didn’t keep what they caught. The relaxation of a day on the water had more appeal. That and some father-son bonding.

I got a mani-pedi.

I blog here on the 8th and 30th of each month and Mondays on my own blogsite http://dianeburton.blogspot.com