Friday, June 26, 2009

Too Soon?

A few random notes:

MJ died today. To me he died years ago. Between the lack of a career and looking like a zombie I can't really act that impacted. I'm wondering though if he even needs to be embalmed given the extensive plastic surgery he has had. Also, I've read that Madonna has been pretty upset about the whole ordeal. I wonder if she'll try to adopt any of MJ's 3 kids.

The other day I saw two different girls with tattoos of someones name on their neck. It's like a hickey that never goes away.

I discovered a box of rice in our pantry that proudly states the rice comes from the USA. I never actually knew we made rice here.

The mail I got reminding me to renew my KY drivers license was postmarked as coming from somewhere in Tennessee. Strange.

I've noticed this week coffee shops in the US are pretty different than in Ukraine. Besides not selling beer here, there are fewer people in each coffee shop but everyone stays longer. In Ukraine there are a lot of people and they come and go fairly quickly.

I've also noticed that I find myself staring at less women here in the US. Not in a perverted way, but I don't see as many head turning women here. Granted I'm stuck at home with my mom most of the days, when I do get out it's mainly stay at home soccer-moms who aren't working and anyone my age is busy at their job. In Ukraine the youth work much less and jobs are mainly things for 'adults' and people after they've received their university degrees.

Wednesday, June 17, 2009

I can't believe I'm typing this

I may get stuck in Cancun for 2 extra days. I don't know if anyone has ever been forced to stay here to continue their vacation in a timeshare they have til the end of the week, but I may have it happen to me. The direct flight on Thursday now looks to have more standby passengers than seats. The flights to Atlanta are open, but by the time they land the only flights left to Cincy are all oversold. I would certainly rather sleep in Cancun than the ATL airport.

I'm still working on things, but for now they don't look great.

Tuesday, June 16, 2009

Cancun

So it's been 10 days since I've written anything here. It's not that nothing ridiculous has happened in Cancun, but quite frankly none of it is repeatable since my family would kill me for doing so.

Also, I have sunburn. Twice. I'm ready to get out of Cancun but don't want to start working again. I just don't sit still very well, and at this point it's a whole lot of sitting around down here.

Sunday, June 7, 2009

28 hours, 10 minutes

It took me 28 Hours and 10 minutes to touch down in Cincinnati after I left Tashkent, Uzbekistan. I got home EARLIER than I expected because a flight to Cincy from JFK was 2 hours later, and I was able to get back here around 8:30 instead of nearly 11:30. I absolutely passed out on the flight from NY to Cincy, and that helped me stay awake until around almost 11 last night. Strangely I feel (yet) no effects of jetlag. All it took was basically staying up for two days straight - between not sleeping the day before I left, and not being able to sleep for most of the time I was flying between Uzbekistan and NY.

Also, I'm making eggs for breakfast and put some PAM in the pan. There is a freshness label on the can on PAM. What the hell part of conola oil - the main ingredient - goes bad? Or maybe it's the water, which is the other ingredient. Just seems like a marketing gimmick to me. If anyone is dumb enough to throw out their half used can of the stuff because "it's not fresh anymore", then they don't deserve to keep their money.

Saturday, June 6, 2009

Thoughts on flying in Asia

They are clearly still scared of swine flu and bird flu here. Half the people on the plane were wearing surgical masks, and a large group of the staff at the Istanbul airport are wearing them too. If I had to sneeze I'd probably do it in the direction of one of those people since they are clearly protected from anything I may give them, as opposed to someone without a mask.

Also, in Europe it's fairly normal for people on the plane to clap when the plane lands. I wonder if they would boo if the plane crashed.

Friday, June 5, 2009

Everything you read on the interwebs is true!

Words can't describe the feeling when you experience something you read on the internet about a specific culture. Case in point - Toasting in Uzbekistan. It's worth noting that this toasting procedure is applicable to almost all of the former soviet union.

Anyways, while doing some research before this trip I came across toasting/business lunch customs for Uzbekistan. Without fail, the first three toasts over lunch will be for 1) To Health, 2) To the women/any women who are present, 3) To the families of the people present. So, while at lunch yesterday (as in June 4th) we went out to lunch with the Deputy Director of the institute we were visiting and someone else. Quite frankly I don't actually know the title of the other person, but you could tell he was a subordinate of the Deputy Director. Anyways, we ordered a bottle of vodka. Within 5 minutes he was proposing the first toast - for the health of everyone present. A few minutes later the waiter came around and refilled the shot glasses. (An interesting side note is that he warned me he was drinking 'bottoms-up' and said I could follow along if I was comfortable.) After our glasses were filled back up be quickly moved to make another toast. This time to the women - specifically Miss Parker. Once again, bottoms up. (I'm drinking bottoms up - Miss Parker is sipping her vodka - I think she only claims to be from Bella-Russia.)

Also worth noting, is the reason why the deputy director claims vodka is important with meals in Uzbekistan. Traditionally the food is cooked with a lot of fat. The food we ate had a lot of fat on it, so I can attest to the truthfulness of his comment. He claims that drinking amounts of vodka is a way of naturally encouraging the stomach to start working so that it's ready to break down the fat with the meals. While I'll give some credence to this theory, the man had a bit of a pot-belly, so I assume he wasn't drinking enough.

Anyways, back to the drinking. Knowing that it's customary for the guests to make at least one toast, and seeing that the bottle was getting towards the bottom - I moved to make the next toast before he did. As is with custom, it was to the families of everyone involved. Little did I know that he was going to order ANOTHER bottle of vodka after we finished that one.

End of the story - I had 5 shots of vodka at lunch while I was working yesterday. Fortunately I was able to keep drinking water and eating bread and meat in between them. I think it served as a great warm-up for my trip to Cancun in the coming days. Although that's typically tequila, and that stuff is the devils water.

Time Travel

Admit it, there have been times when you wished there were more than 24 hours in the day. Unfortunately there is nothing you can do about making the day longer. Right?

Wrong. I've found a solution to this problem. I'll be chasing the sun tomorrow. I leave my hotel in 3 hours to go to the airport. I'll be flying from Uzbekistan to Istanbul, have a 3.5 hour layover, take an 11.5 hour flight to New York (JFK), have another 3.5 hour layover, then fly to Cincinnati and land on the same day - 27 hours later. That's right. 27 hours in the day. Time travel in its finest.

I should be up in the air for 19.5 hours tomorrow. Considering I'll be flying against the rotation of the Earth, I wonder if there is a way to quantify the amount of distance I'll travel due to the rotation of the planet instead of the jet propulsion related to the 3 airplanes I'll be on. In all I will be flying about 8950 miles to get to Cancun. 10 time zones. Should be a good time.

Thursday, June 4, 2009

Kazakhstan: Great Success!

My visit to Kazakhstan was actually not a great success. While it was certainly worth visiting for work, I can not say that I would return for my own personal travel. As for Kazakhstan, I’ll divide my comments into a few categories.

The Hotel:

The hotel was crap. I can’t imagine how they continue to get $190 per night for the place. My room had a small twin bed that was very uncomfortable. They charged $29 for 24 hours of wifi. While I will admit their wifi was fast – it wasn’t worth the $120 I spent over the 4 days I was there. They did have a cheaper option though. They have a dialup connection you can use for $1 per hour. Perhaps I’m spoiled, but what good is dialup? Especially for downloading movies because there is nothing around the hotel to do.

There was no safe in the hotel, and the rooms were certainly old – you needed a key to open the doors, as in a regular key. You also had to remember to lock your door when you left, especially since there was no safe to put your stuff in if you forgot to lock your door.

The hotel room did come with a feature I’ve never seen before. As you can see in the picture below, the bathroom came equipped with a wall to rest your head on while sitting on the toilet. I think there might have been 18 inches of space between the toilet and the wall. If I was any taller I probably would have had my knees on the wall to even sit down on the toilet. You can also see that the water is blue. This isn’t for cleaning, but is so you can stay away from people who have been drinking out of the toilet. Anyone who had blue or green lips should be avoided immediately.

Another defining characteristic of the hotel was terrible food. The breakfast was terrible. The dinner was terrible. None of it was fresh, and it all sat waiting for you to find it in an electric warming device of sorts. Fortunately breakfast was included in our rate – because there is no way I would willingly pay the roughly $28 for breakfast every day. For me that consisted of 2 glasses of water and something that was a combination of a crepe and a pancake. The one night I went to dinner I basically had a plate of rice with some random meats – none of which were worth going back for second servings of.

The Work:

There are three centers in Kazakhstan that we had to visit. The first is a high security nuclear research center. In addition to all of the paperwork we filled out before we arrived so we could get in, we needed to bring our identification papers to the center. However nobody told me this. Our contact in Kazakhstan asked if I had my passport when we were about 10 minutes from the center. I replied by saying that I didn’t know I needed it and that nobody told me to bring it. My colleague – known here as Miss Parker – tried to give me crap for not knowing to bring my passport. I wasn’t in the mood for it and responded with the fact that I’ve needed it for 0 of the previous centers, and that I can’t be held responsible for knowing things that they haven’t told me. I eventually was able to get in, but it took the person we were meeting with having the director of the institute talking directly to the head of security. An almost expired state of Kentucky drivers license is just enough to get into a national nuclear laboratory. That particular meeting went moderately well despite my translator not being that great.

The second and third visits were much worse. Between realizing that the centers had been swallowed by other institutes in a communist equipment sharing program, to the fact that the translator/country contact pawned off her translating duties to any random semi-english speaking student she could find at each center, I really was not able to collect much data relating to the questions that I wanted to ask about the centers. Miss Parker and the country contact spoke exclusively in Russian with everyone we met with, did not include me in any of the discussions, and left me with half-assed translations that were summaries of what people were saying. I was also called out for asking questions about information that we were provided with – in RUSSIAN. Apparently I should have had my Russian-english translator out working through the documents before I asked any questions. When I asked if Miss Parker planned on translating any of the documents for me so I can write my reports she said that someone at the office in DC has an intern that I should get in touch with. I’m sure the intern will love to see 50 pages worth of presentations and other stuff show up in her email. I don’t expect Miss Parker to translate the entire thing, but I would at least expect her to give me subject headings or some idea of what was provided.

I think the easiest way to sum up the work section of the trip is that I was the dumb English speaking third wheel. I’m not bitter about it, I just don’t know how I’m supposed to do my job. When the reports are half as long as the other ones and someone asks why I’ll just point to what happened.

The City:

Whomever designed Almaty must have been in love with the grid system. The entire city is one large series of blocks that are almost perfectly and equally spaced. The streets are lined with trees, but not enough to absorb all of the car fumes from the air. The city smells like auto exhaust. It also has a very high altitude. These two conditions make trying to run rather difficult – I think I got two blocks away before I turned around and went back to the hotel.

The streets of the city were slightly different from the streets you would expect to see in the USA. Besides allowing you to simulate what it would feel like to drive across the craters of the moon, the streets allow for additional excitement related to the fact that there are no lines to designate specific lanes. While the driving experience wasn’t as terrifying as Azerbaijan or Georgia, it was still something I would describe as frightening. Essentially you never knew if the bump you felt was someone hitting you or that you hit a pothole. Additionally, sometimes you swerved away from cars and sometimes you swerved away from potholes.

The last night I was there I was on my own for dinner – actually every night I was on my own for dinner. The last night though, I went to four restaurants before I found one with an English menu. Things started off well. They brew their own beer. If you want one you have two choices, large or small. Simply having a menu translated into English does not necessarily mean that the menu is actually IN English. As you can see from some of the pictures I took, well, the translation sucked. Some of my favorite dishes were: ‘Juicy Roast’, ‘Meat by on Chinese’, and my personal favorite ‘Cauliflower in Claire’ – I hope they pay that poor girl well. I ordered the ‘Firm Dish’ which was supposed to be beef, mutton, and chicken. I was able to figure out which one was chicken, but have no idea which of the other two things that came out was beef and which was the mutton.




Other random notes:

In Kazakhstan when you have a guest over to your house, or any other type of important meeting at the house it is customary to serve the head of a goat. It’s a tradition that the oldest person gets the tongue, the youngest get the ears, and so on. I knew this when I left. However knowing about the tradition is completely different than seeing a line of 6 or 7 goat heads for sale by a sidewalk street vendor.

While I was walking I came across a long sidewalk that was filled with people holding up signs with numbers on them and letters I couldn’t read. At first it seemed like the majority of the people were women and I assumed this is how the prostitution in the country worked. Later I came across some men, and some men who were too old to be involved in prostitution – or at least too old to want to think about them being involved in it. Also, because of Borat, I thought that maybe the women were listing their prices to plow fields. Considering that some of the prices people were holding up were roughly $15, I assumed it wasn’t prostitution and was various work.

It turns out that Craigslist in Kazakhstan is actually the sidewalk of a street. Most of the people there are trying to rent apartments, sell services, and sell other random things. I also found out that at night you can find a prostitute there. You also get hassled by the gypsies, but that service is free.

Finally, in what was probably the biggest shock for me (and I don’t know why) is that the majority of the Kazak people are all Asian. The boarder with China should have probably given me a hint, but I never connected the idea in my head. The country is basically part of the former Mongolian Empire, and many of the people have Mongol roots. Yes, Mongol is a proper word.


I’m in Uzbekistan now and will write more about that sometime later. The hotel is a whole lot better, internet is free, the breakfast buffet is wonderful, and the women who work here are almost all amazingly gorgeous. Also, while I was flying here I was paging through the in-flight magazine. There was an article on some Uzbek circus families that are world famous. I came across one person that was really special though. I don’t remember her name, but they introduced her in the article like this, “Woman’s name, Uzbekistans first woman clown.” I found that to be an interesting title. I probably would have that put on my business card if it were true.

Monday, June 1, 2009

Huh?

I'm not claiming to be an expert at toilet bowl operations, but something about this seems strange.