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In 1998 I drove to the west coast and back for the first time.

From 2003 - 2009 I did it six more times (summer 2003, summer 2004, fall 2004, summer 2006, summer 2007, winter 2008/9). That coincided with leaving the world of full time sysadmin work for a few years of campaign volunteering, campaign work, then part time & contract computergeekery + campaign work. But then in May 2009 I took a full time computergeekery job again, the kind where I have a set number of vacation days a year. A good job that I like and don't plan to leave anytime soon.

My shortest round-the-country trip was just over 3 weeks, but the rest were 4-6 weeks, and 4 weeks seems like the minimum for a comfortable trip where I get to actually see friends in a variety of places. My current job has 3 weeks of vacation a year - some of which I use for other things.

So now it's almost two years since the last time I embarked on one of these rounds of the country, to go to Berkeley & San Francisco for New Years*. That's the longest break since 2003. And I probably won't be able to go in 2011.

I miss it. I miss people and places.


* Odd that I spent two New Years' in a row, 2007/8 and 2008/9, visiting [livejournal.com profile] mackelzinzie on Dec 30/31 'til sunset, then going over to [livejournal.com profile] dr_memory & [livejournal.com profile] missionista's for that night and Jan 1st, yet mackelzinzie and dr_memory have never met.

P.S. where should I go for New Years this time? I can't go to half the country, but I could go to a specific place.
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[Poll #1627468]

Edit: If you wanna talk about combining travel plans, leave a comment.
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Oct. 2nd, 2010 08:29

drinks

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The English drink tea.

One of my cousins, with Majorca's standard ice tea

The French drink wine.
The Finns drink vodka. (Oh yeah, so do the Russians, though not as much :)

Sure, they drink other things, but some places have their endemic drink of choice. In Italy, it's espresso everywhere. When I ordered tea at some restaurants, they gave me strange looks. In Kenya, passion fruit juice is their parallel to our orange juice - the standard juice you can assume will be available.

I'm not sure what Spain's drink is, but on Majorca at least, the ice tea niche is rather odd: Wherever I ordered ice tea, it was always the same. At a fancy hotel's restaurant, or an even fancier one, at a sidewalk cafe or a streetside bar, an expensive restaurant, anywhere - they always gave me a glass bottle of Nestea, and a glass with ice. Always the same Nestea logo, and exactly the same tea. Well, except for one place: they gave me a can of Nestea (same logo, same stuff) and a glass with ice. Apparently, there is no other ice tea on that island.

I'd always associated Germany with beer. But now that I've been to Germany, or at least one part of it, I think it's actually sparkling water. At restaurants and at people's homes, sparkling water is what they pour by default. If you want just water, you have to ask for "still water". Beer is something they might offer, or ask if you want, but plain sparkling water is what they assume you want without asking.

Got any others to add to the list?
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Foreign places have their own styles of tasty food, but even better are their languages. I try to devour them wherever I go, but they can only be eaten slowly - too slowly for me, because there's always more; you can never finish even one.

I pick up scaps of languages and then don't follow up. I can try to learn them when I'm home, and probably really should ... but they're so much different when they're at home. When the announcement on the PA, the signs on stores, the names of things on packages, the snatches of conversation on the street, the names of places, are the kinds of things that let me inbibe the language.

After four days in Cologne last week, and another one & a half now, I'd finally reached the point where I could sometimes understand simple practical sentences. On the train to the airport, when the announcer listed upcoming stations and arrival times, I got most of them, and when he said "nächste Station, Düsseldorf Flughafen" I understood effortlessly (like a lot of German, it's much clearer to English-speakers when written than it is when heard). But now I'm flying home. In 2008 when I got 9 full days in Italy after a week there with the family, I got much further. In both cases, I had help from spending most of my time with someone who spoke both languages - [livejournal.com profile] elfy in Germany, [livejournal.com profile] magickalpony in Italy.

Five days in Majorca gave me very little Spanish because I spent all that time with my extended family, but I had forgotten how much my Hebrew vocabulary expands when I'm immersed in that kind of environment! Not the same thing as being in a language's home country, but they do bring along with them a little bubble of shared conversation, including a lot of slang. Most amusing to me were some of the newer English-derived informal words that have been adapted to Hebrew grammar, such as:

Legagel: To Google. As in, "gigalti otach" (I Googled you(f))

Letayeg: To tag, on a social networking site. As in, "hoo tiyeg oti" (he tagged me)

And apparently "le`alter", "to alter", isn't even considered slang, but a fully accepted word.

On the cab ride to my hotel for the last night (I stayed one extra night), my cabbie spoke barely any English - and I have almost no Spanish. Which would've been okay, because I had a map with the name and address of the hotel, and he had a GPS map thing. But he happened to mention knowing French, and we chatted in French the entire ride. By the time I got to the hotel, I nearly spoke to the desk clerk in French.

The next day, I stopped at a little bar to buy a bottle of Spanish Casera beer for [livejournal.com profile] elfy, except I had forgotten the word "casera", I only remembered that the Spanish drink a lot of this combination of beer with something like lemon-flavored tonic water. The man behind the bar spoke little English, so I tried to communicate what I wanted with the few Spanish words I could call up - "cerveza", "limon", "botelle". He asked, "casera?" and it took a few times before I realized he was offerring me the very thing I wanted! In my hasted to say yes, what came out was:
    Oui! ... Ken! ... Yes! ... Sí!

At least I didn't add a "ja" and a "kyllä" in there somewhere before I got to Sí :)
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This summer I've been slowly unpacking some of my oldest boxes, ones that have gone with me through several moves, and contain stuff from the 90s. Early 90s, in a few cases, as [livejournal.com profile] chanaleh has already heard :) Today, inside one of them, I found a small long narrow cardboard box, and inside it, a wooden judge-style gavel. On the decorative metal circling the center of the head is written "In Personal Appreciation of Your Support", followed by an etching of the handwritten signature of Newt Gingrich.

What is this doing in a box full of stuff that is recognizably mine?

P.S. Also in this box: Finnish currency. Which means I packed it no earlier than 2002. Probably when I moved from Somerville to the Hawkes' house in 2003.
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Heading to Falcon Ridge for the rest of the weekend. Are you going?

P.S. Vote online for Mac before Sunday!
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In the east African highlands, even during the rainy seasons, it's sunny and clear. You can see a great distance, like you can in Montana, and during the rainy season, you can see the rains slowly meandering across the land. After your first few, you quickly learn to estimate their path, size, and speed. Over the course of an afternoon, it might go like this...

    That one's gonna miss me. Off to the left.

    Ahh, this one's headed here. It'll be here in about 25 minutes and it looks like it'll last less than 10 minutes before it moves on.

    Now there's a big one, looks like a half hour of rain! But it's going to pass to my right, not too far, I'll probably get some peripheral rain, but not the real downpour.


Today at lunchtime I went to the farmers' market, and picked just the wrong time. *boom* the sky opened up, and I hadn't seen it coming. I ducked inside Harvest to get some groceries there, and when I was done, pulled up the weather radar on my phone. I could see the spot of red, a small one right over Camberville, and I could see how fast it was moving, so I waited out it. About ten more minutes 'til it waned, I guessed, and I was about right.

Today's technology makes this almost as easy as East Africa. Pity it can't bring the 60s-to-80s medium humidity air here, too.
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Anyone feel like picking me up from Logan on Sunday night, June 6th, a little after midnight, since I'll get in too late to catch the last red line home?
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You've probably seen some things that say "printed on recycled paper" in small print at the bottom.

The Greenpeace free drink tickets at tonight's reception at Netroots Nation say:
    Printed on 100% PCW Recycled Process chlorine-free paper using vegetable based inks on a wind powered press.


Take that.

P.S. Fun aside, it's really nice that the Pittsburgh convention center has clearly labelled paper and plastic/glass recycle bins next to every trash can, and the box lunches they served us came in compostable dishes & boxes. Also I hear they use air from the basement to cool the convention hall.
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