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Walkabout Nepal

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  • April, 2015 Trip
    • Coos Bay to Tansen
      • Day 1
      • Day 2
      • Day 3
      • Why I’m Here
      • Day 4
      • Day 5
    • Visiting Tansen
      • Day 6
      • Day 7
      • Day 8
      • Day 9
      • Day 10
      • Day 11
      • Day 12
      • Day 13
      • Three Things
      • Day 14
    • Pokhara / ABC Trek #1
      • Day 15
      • Day 16
      • Trekking Map
      • Day 17, Trek-1
      • Day 18, Trek-2
      • Poon Hill, Trek-3
      • Day 19, Trek-3
    • ABC trek #2 / Pokhara
      • Day 20, Trek-4
      • Day 21, Trek-5
      • Day 22, Trek-6
      • Day 23, Trek-7
      • Day 24, Trek-8
      • Day 25, Trek-9
      • Day 26
    • Kathmandu and 7.8 Earthquake
      • Day 27
      • Day 28 – Quake!
      • Day 29
    • Return Trip
      • Day 30
      • Day 31
      • Day 32
    • Epilogue
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Return Trip

April 27-29

Apr 29 2016

Day 32

Wednesday, April 29, 2015

The McCullough Bridge is a welcomed sight.
The McCullough Bridge is a welcomed sight.

The Maucks treated me to another wonderful homemade breakfast, we visited a while longer and after thanking them for all their wonderful service and hospitality I loaded my gear in the car and drove out for Coos Bay, Oregon.

At 4:15 pm I reached what is a welcoming landmark for all true people of Oregon’s bay area, the McCullough Bridge.

Reunited with Eileen after 31 days!
Reunited with Eileen after 31 days!

And at 4:30 pm …I was home! I hugged Eileen, dropped my stuff in a pile, pulled off my shoes, and sat down.

God is good, and I’m thankful for many things.

(I will be posting an Epilogue page with some final thoughts.)

Peace, ya’ll!

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Written by Pete Schaefers · Categorized: Return Trip

Apr 28 2016

Day 31

Tuesday, April 28, 2015

The airport shuttle in Guangzhou.
The airport shuttle in Guangzhou.

Touching down at a little after 2:00 am local time in Guangzhou, China, we disembarked and loaded on to a shuttle bus to the terminal. From there we went through customs, were lead to where our baggage was held (in case we needed something out of it), and then were taken by bus to a hotel for the the night. This is an advantage of a layover longer than eight hours, ours was twelve – personal service and a free hotel stay.

Going through customs.
Going through customs.
Checking into the hotel at 4:00 am.
Checking into the hotel at 4:00 am.

The bus ride to the hotel was longer than we expected, about half an hour. We actually wondered if the driver was lost at one point, but I’m sure he wasn’t, we just assumed the hotel would be close by. At 4:00 am we checked into the hotel, and I was amazed at the size of everything – large! The country that had provided me with such tiny size-L thermal bottoms sure had a contrast to that when it came to construction!

The view from my 23 floor hotel suite.
The view from my 23 floor hotel suite.

We were told to meet the bus at 11:00 am and that breakfast was provided in the morning. I was noticing the room numbers being assigned to people ahead of me, and they were fairly low floors (ninth, etc.) so I was surprised when I was assigned to the 23rd floor!

When I got up to my room, I decided “room” wasn’t the word for it, “suite” was more fitting! It was actually five rooms, including two bathrooms. It was huge! Everything in it was electronically controlled. The culture shock between there and Nepal was immense, way beyond flush toilets, in fact it would have been a culture shock between there and my home in the US! I took a quick shower and crawled into my gigantic bed with the alarm set for 10:00 am.

When I got up in the morning I caught up on email with Adam and Nora, both of whom had been wondering where in the world I was for a couple days! (Interesting note: China blocks Facebook, so no posts happened there.) Next I explored the balcony (required removing one bolt, he he) and took a quick documentary video of the suite before hurrying down to breakfast. Even rushing it, it took over two minutes to show everything…

A tour of my suite on the 23rd floor.

Getting down to the lobby for breakfast I discovered it to be three stories high, with huge marble pillars. Breakfast was on the second level, where I was seated and given a menu. I expected a little better English capability at a hotel used by the airline, but we muddled through, and I ordered dumplings and water – so she brought me tea (that’s water, right?). I was surprised that smoking was allowed, fortunately it wasn’t that close to me. The people eating there were all very well dressed and I felt pretty out-classed.

The hotel lobby from the second level.
The hotel lobby from the second level.

None of the others I had been traveling with were there, so I was concerned about the time, but the dumplings finally arrived and I quickly ate them. The next thing to arrive was the check. Check?! Uh-oh… I tried to explain that I was to be comped by the airline but that didn’t work. I wasn’t about to hand them my US credit card, which hadn’t been working internationally anyway, so I pulled out a US $20 bill and hoped that would cover the fancy dining. But they couldn’t make change there and I was escorted down to the front desk. Apparently there was a complimentary breakfast buffet in another area, the rest of my had eaten there, but I never saw that and ended up in the main dining area. Oops! How was I to know that…? So I handed the front desk the $20 and hoped it was enough. They didn’t have enough US currency to make change and handed me Chinese juan and some coin. I had no idea how I had come out on the deal, but I took it and got on the bus to go back to the airport. Later, in the airport, I had someone at a shop convert my Chinese change and, to my surprise, the breakfast had been only $4.00!

On the bus ride back to the airport.

On the way back to the airport.
On the way back to the airport.
The airport terminal at Guangzhou.
The airport terminal at Guangzhou.
The PNW-5.
The PNW-5.

Once inside the airport I again realized the Chinese affinity for largeness. I joined up with four others who were also heading to the Pacific Northwest, a single guy from Seattle, a woman from Nepal who lived in Alberta, Canada with her husband and children, and a couple from (I believe) the Seattle area also who had been trekking in Nepal. I dubbed us “The PNW-5.”

Getting checked in.
Getting checked in.

We went through the process of finding our gate, getting boarding passes and dealing with red tape since we were off schedule. Some were getting upset and a little freaked (earthquake trauma?) because things were messed up, but I knew it would be ok. The Nepali style “make it work” attitude kicked in and before long we were boarded and ready for our twelve hour flight to Vancouver, Canada.

On the tarmac in Guangzhou, ready to depart for Canada.
On the tarmac in Guangzhou, ready to depart for Canada.

4-28i Once I sat down on the plane I didn’t get up again for the next twelve hours! I don’t know why, but through two full meals, and all of that time, I never once had the desire to get up, or even go to the bathroom. The later was a huge blessing from God because I still had an intestinal bug of some sort, but it took a 48 hour vacation while I was traveling!

4-28jThe flight over was very turbulent! The captain kept climbing higher and higher in an attempt to get above it, but to no avail. It was kind of fun though, watching the entire fuselage of the plane flex as we bounced along. From my seat near the rear I had a very good perspective on that. I also enjoyed the view of the clouds below us.

Flying over the Pacific.

Landing in Vancouver, Canada.
Landing in Vancouver, Canada.

We arrived in Canada at about 10:15 am local time, which was really strange since we had left China at 2:00 pm the same day! Even stranger was that (again) at 2:00 pm the same day I would be leaving Canada for Portland, Oregon. Gotta love the time zones!

Dealing with Air Canada was a pleasure because they sorted out the ticketing and luggage mess that China Southern had created. They said “that always happens with them” and they kindly got me and my baggage back on course, without any additional charges.

 

On the plane for Portland.
On the plane for Portland.

Once aboard the small turboprop for Portland the length of the trip began to really hit me. It felt like the end of a marathon (though I have never run one) where you are exhausted but know you are so close you will definitely make it. I bobbed in and out of sleep the whole hour plus flight.

Landing in Portland, Oregon.
Landing in Portland, Oregon.

At 3:16 pm, my own home time, the wheels hit the tarmac in Portland, Oregon!

Arriving in Portland on a typical PNW gray day.
Arriving in Portland on a typical PNW gray day.
Back in Portland!
Back in Portland!

After collecting my baggage, and taking the “carpet pic,” I called Eileen, the Maucks (my ride and where I was staying for the night), and posted my arrival to Facebook.  Once at the Mauck’s house they fed me an amazing meal (thanks Bonnie!) and then we talked… or I should say, I talked! The excitement of the month, coupled with very little conversation over the past two days, caused me to spill until about 1:00 am!

So, from 4:00 pm Nepal time on the 26th until 3:15 pm on the 28th, with the time zone corrections, I had been traveling for exactly 60 hours!

…and I went to sleep.

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Written by Pete Schaefers · Categorized: Return Trip

Apr 27 2016

Day 30

Monday, April 27, 2015

I spent my last night in Nepal here... and I miss it in a way.
I spent my last night in Nepal here… and I miss it in a way.

I woke up at 5:00 am after very little actual sleep, cold and aching from the hard floor and drafty hallway. I gathered up my stuff and wandered around. At the security check-in area people were sleeping on folding tables, so I joined them on one of the tables for a short nap. Getting up again I wondered if my flight would be in that morning, I thought about food (all I had eaten since lunch the day before was some trail mix), and I wandered around some more.

I saw Peter and his wife, whom we had trekked with (I thought I had caught a glimpse of them the night before), but we didn’t talk nor did our eyes even meet. He was on a  mission to catch up with an official, and I was feeling antisocial. What a small world we live in! I didn’t see him again, but we exchanged emails with pictures a month or so later.

"Hotel KTM," people wandering, trash building up quickly...
“Hotel KTM,” people wandering, trash building up quickly…

I stopped by the terminal snack-bar. There was really nothing there beyond odd Asian/Indian packages of junk food, and bottled water. The cooked food had sold out the night before. Bottled water was brought in some time in the morning but nothing else. There were also waters stations brought in to the waiting areas.

Something that I again noticed with pleasure was that Nepalis didn’t price gouge. Bottled water remained 50NR throughout my time there, even when it was in short supply, and food was the same as it was in the “outside world.” Contrasting this, a liter of bottled water in the Vancouver airport was $5.00! Shame on us…

I staked out a claim on a chair in the waiting area for my gate. The FIDS (flight information display) didn’t show my flight, and soon we heard that the flight was delayed until around 11:00 am. As people continued to wake up, and more were let in from outside, the room quickly filled. It was possible to determine who was waiting for the same flight or airline by the messages to which they paid attention. I formed an alliance with a European couple near me which allowed us to check on flight information and visit the bathrooms without losing our seats. (It’s the little things…) As the hours slowly ticked by it became evident that nothing was happening for me at 11:00 am. The truth turned out to be that my flight had been diverted the night before because the flight crew was required to get sleep before they could continue in service. (I was ok with that!) They had been diverted to a neighboring country (I don’t recall which) for a layover and we were told to expect them mid/late afternoon.

The packed waiting area where I spent my last 12 hours before flying out.
The packed waiting area where I spent my last 12 hours before flying out.

While sitting there the main entertainment, besides people watching (and there was plenty of that), was scrutinizing the FIDS board. Flights would pop on, move down, disappear again, and reappear later. There was a pattern to the chaos of it, sort of… Announcements were made through a crude PA system that consisted if a microphone on a table in the hallway. Anyone could have grabbed it and said whatever they wanted. (Yes, I considered it. ha!) The benefit to us was that we could see who was talking, and they were the airline employees, so we knew who to corner and ask questions of when the announcement was about a flight or airline we cared about.

An airliner on the runway.
An airliner on the runway.

When each flight actually was on the tarmac passengers for that flight would be called to the gate via the PA. If anyone was missing from the flight manifest they would be paged by name. We then would play game called “Pick Out the Straggler” as we looked for someone pushing their way through the crowd. There would usually be one or two last calls for that person. At one point after a third “last and final call” had been made for a woman, we finally saw her being escorted rather abruptly by airline personnel through the crowed room. I realized that the entire flight (and each one after it) was being delayed, in this case for over half an hour while they searched for her throughout the terminal. To me this seemed highly inefficient – better to leave one and re-book them than to create a greater backlog. But I wasn’t consulted on that one.

One of many aid flights entering Nepal that afternoon.
One of many aid flights entering Nepal that afternoon.

Meanwhile there were 10-12 flights circling above waiting to land. The KTM airport only has enough room for 10 (I think) jetliners at a time, so it gets crowded, and with the disaster relief flights starting to show up, passenger flights had to take turns.

In early afternoon everything came to a complete stop… not flights boarding, the FIDS board stopped updating, and we all just sat waiting. After about an hour a flight was updated on the FIDS board and the entire room erupted in applause! It’s funny how fixated we had all become on that display, so much that there was a spontaneous reaction when it moved again.

A Chinese military jet.
A Chinese military jet.

The reason for that long delay was political and diplomatic. There were international heads of state arriving and being welcomed by Nepali heads of state. India, China, in particular where some that I saw. When the Chinese military jet arrived, it pulled up directly in front of us. The jet engines were very loud, and they were close, maybe a bit too close.

Chinese and Nepali diplomats.
Chinese and Nepali diplomats.

The Nepali military was there, armed and in jeeps, escorting vehicles off of the tarmac. Watching this unfold gave us all something to do, and a reason to move about.

Meanwhile the time ticked on, the trash piled up everywhere, and people were getting tired and hungry. When I say trash piled up, I mean literal piles of paper and plastic or foil wrappers, mainly from food and drinks. They were still out of food, but were vending drinks like there was no tomorrow. Everything just ended up on the ground and trash cans were overflowing. The bathrooms were beyond what I will describe here! It also was hot, and stinky might I add? Eventually a team of didis came in with large trash bags and hand brooms made from straw, and they began sweeping (more like raking) the piles across the room, around the people in chairs and on the floor. When the pile became too large to move they would bag it and move on. They were our heroes at that point and I was happy to move for them and help a little. One woman in particular caught me attention because as the sun was dropping lower in the sky she had moved out onto the tarmac and was sweeping the dust up off of it with her straw broom. It had the appearance of an exercise in futility and a sacrifice of love all at the same time. I wish I had taken a picture of that.

At about 5:00 pm something wonderful happened… fresh food was delivered to the snack-bar! Was there a stampede, elbowing and pushing (beyond the Asian standard), price gouging? Nope, not at all. Those poor workers though! The three of them were so maxed out as they sold food to us. I bought some chicken mo mos! I was so thankful for that and it refreshed me because the trail food had run out hours ago, and it was my first real meal in about 30 hours!

People waiting...
People waiting…

As I sat there eating I became aware of an older Chinese couple behind me. The husband was leaning on the back of my chair at times and it was annoying when his hand touched my shoulders but I didn’t let it bother me because I felt compassion for them. The seat opened up next to me and his wife took it. When I finished eating I offered him my seat, which he declined at first, but once I insisted and put him in charge of the bag under my seat he accepted. I was fed, free (sort of), and thankful for the stretch.

As evening approached there continued to be confusion and frustration with flight schedules. I was amazed that no angry incidents had taken place so far. The closest we came was when a man confronted an Arab airline employee about something, exactly what I couldn’t tell. Suddenly several others stood up and joined in the argument. This was directly in front of me and before long the employee was surrounded by 20 or so men, none of whom seemed too pleased. About the point when I was deciding what to do next one man waded into the group, waving his arms in a “calm down” manner, and speaking loudly. He continued for a couple minutes and slowly the group dispersed, and the airline employee looked relieved. That was it! Pretty amazing for the degree of angst and duration of time we were all there that it stayed as calm as it did. I should point out that we were all basically prisoners of the airport, not allowed to leave security for any reason, not having a plane to get on, no sleep and not much food. It was hot, loud, stinky, and a crowd comprised of people from all over the world with many different cultural norms. On top of that we had all been through an earthquake, some people were bandaged and hurting, and the aftershocks continued to remind us about that.

In all I would be there inside the airport for about 28 hours. It was awful. It was wonderful.

Our group moving out onto the tarmac.
Our group moving out onto the tarmac.

Finally my long awaited flight number reappeared on the FIDS board! I cautiously put some faith in that. Many “phantom flights” on China Southern had done the same thing throughout the day. But by 6:00 pm it appeared that this one was indeed my flight, that it was indeed on the tarmac, and that I would be boarding said plane.

Sitting next to the Chinese military jet, awaiting clearance to take off.
Sitting next to the Chinese military jet, awaiting clearance to take off.

Once on the plane we sat for a very long time on the runway, waiting for clearance to take off, I assumed. Eventually we taxed past the Chinese military jet and took off!

Kathmandu at night.
Kathmandu at night.

At 7:56 pm I looked out my window at the now dark city below and took one last picture of the lights of Kathmandu.

About four hours later I was in Guangzhou, China, where I had a 12 hour layover due to the rearranged flight schedule.

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Written by Pete Schaefers · Categorized: Return Trip

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