Category Archives: Travel

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Potsdam
May 7, 2011 

Distance Traveled today:  30

Distance So Far:  9964

[NOTE:  Since I was on a bicycle all day and my camera is big, heavy, fragile and expensive, I had to leave it behind.  So no actual photos of Potsam, very sorry about this.  It is a beautiful place and I encourage you to look it up.]

Full day excursion to the palace-strewn town of Potsdam.  First time I’ve been on a bicycle in seventeen years, believe it or not. 

The Spree River winds its way through Berlin
The Spree River winds its way through Berlin

The very last time I was ever on a bicycle was in May lf 1994, at the closing ceremonies of the very first California AIDS Ride.  I had just bicycled my way from San Francisco to Los Angeles, which was the only physically impressive thing that I’ve ever done in my life. 

I loved the event, loved that I had done every mile on my own, and returned to work as a non-riding volunteer for nine more rides.  But the experience also cured me, permanently, of cycling. 

After my tumble on the Segway on Tuesday I was a tiny bit apprehensive, but I did fine.  No falling.

You see these networks of pipes all over the city.   They are an attempt to fortify the water table and thereby slow down the scary process of all of Berlin's old buildings sinking into the swamp.
You see these networks of pipes all over the city. They are an attempt to fortify the water table and thereby slow down the scary process of all of Berlin's old buildings sinking into the swamp.

Potsdam is beautiful, and of course wildly historical.  We got to stand in the very room and see the very table where Truman, Stalin and Churchill hammered out the disposition of Europe, and particularly of Germany, at the end of the War. 

I also had the opportunity to be a tiny bit patriotic early in the day.  The way the tour worked is that we all met at the Fat Tire Bike headquarters, got our bikes, and then hauled them on to the commuter train to Potsdam.  There was a nice family of Kiwis in the tour group, and after we arrived at the leafy retreat some fifteen miles out of Berlin, he reported that the train carriage they had been on had been populated by a group of unruly skinheads.  “They were singing illegal songs, ” Kiwi Dad said.

Songs can be ‘illegal’”? I asked, knowing full well exactly where this was going.

“Here in Germany they can.”  Clearly he was talking about Nazi songs.

steeple_2I am an asshole, so I continued.  “So . .  Germany doesn’t have freedom of speech, then.”

“Well, not on this subject.”

I replied, without a trace of haughtiness, “Well, I come from a country where even unpopular speech is protected.”

“Oh, yeah, what country?”

“The United States of America.”

He scoffed.  “Yeah, right, how about that radio DJ who lost his job.”

“You mean Don Imus?  First, he’s rich and immediately got another job so don’t worry about him.  Second, he was fired by the private company he worked for.  Free Speech means the government cannot censor you.”

“Oh.  Yeah.  Good point.”

OWNED!!! 

USA: 1, New Zealand:  0.

Why indeed?
Why indeed?

Now, don’t get me wrong.  I’m certainly not interested in supporting the singing of Nazi songs on public trains.  But I think it’s a mistake that Germany makes the swastika and other Nazi stuff literally illegal.  If we only protect the speech we like, then speech isn’t free.

///

It’s my last day in Berlin.  I’ve enjoyed my time in this beautiful but ragged city.  I think my favorite aspect of the city is its spectacular public transportation system.  I have been without a car in Los Angeles since last summer, and I have to tell you that, except for commuting to and from downtown during rush hour, it SUCKS to not have a car in LA.  But it would totally be possible here in Berlin.  Between the trams, buses, subways, and commuter trains, you can get where you need to go, and get there quickly and easily.  I’ve been jetting around the city like a native.

///

Also a good day, kid-wise.  I’m usually no good with kids.  My only play is video games, and that opens the door for me sometimes, but not always.  For some reason, however, the kids on today’s tour found me unendingly fascinating.

At two different points in the tour, a diferent kid latched onto me.  While we were tooling around Potsdam on the bikes, 10-year old New Zealander William (or Wilhelm, as I insisted on calling him) reminded me, almost painfully, of myself at his age.  A real motormouth know-it-all.  Obviously a voracious reader, already well-versed in history (you could tell this by the questions he asked during the tourguide’s various spiels).

He was one of those “Didja know?!” kids.  Every thirty seconds there would be a new “Didja know?!”  I tormented my father and other adults with this syndrome for a few years, so it was pretty esy to be tolerant.  The only disturbing thing was that he informed me that his parents didn’t let him play video games.  I’m sure there is a Family Services type agency in Holland where they are living that I can contact.

On the train ride back, young Adam, four going on five, wouldn’t budge an inch from me.  His family was in Berlin while his Dad worked on a film.  They were  a nice foursome from The Valley.  Adam showed off a birthday gift – a tiny cheetah.  I told him that on a recent birthday of my own, I’d seen a real cheetah at the San Diego Wild Animal Park.  Of course as a fellow Californian, he’d been there also.  Then he proceeded to ruthlessly quiz me on my feeble German vocabulary.  I realized I actually knew more German words than I thought I knew, as I had to keep pulling them out of my head.  “What othe rwords do you know?!” he’d demand immediately after I’d produce a translated word.  The next day was his fifth birthday, and he was to spend it with his sister and parents at the Olympia Stadium, where there was to be a big medieval jousting tournament.  Pretty cool birthday, I said.

People Who Are Better With Kids Than Me

  • Everyone

 

People Who Are Worse With Kids Than Me

Average Rating: 4.6 out of 5 based on 165 user reviews.

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Berlin
May 6, 2011 

Super-groovy art cinema in old East Berlin
Super-groovy art cinema in old East Berlin

I felt pretty sore today from the bruises I got from my Segway spill.  I slept in, messed around on my computer for a while, then headed out to the “gay” neighorhood.  The term may be a bit unneccesary in a city as gay as Berlin.  It has the third highest gay population in the world, after San Francisco and Sydney. 

The neighborhood was nice, but seemed very normal.  This is a good thing, I guess.  It’s time gay people became boring and normal.  That would be a victory.

I had paella at a place called El Toro Negro.  I realized it was perhaps the first time I’d ever actually had paella, but what’s not to like?  Chicken, rice and veggies.  Yum.

No,  they're talking about the angry old German dude,  not the civil rights leader.   Dr.  King has a dream; Martin Luther had 99 Theses.
No, they're talking about the angry old German dude, not the civil rights leader. Dr. King has a dream; Martin Luther had 99 Theses.

Afterwards my pain was bothering me a bit less so I walked another hour or so through one of the big expensive shopping streets.  Then home.

Tomorrow is my bicicyle tour of Potsdam.  I guess it’s too much to hope that cutie pie Kevin will be the tourguide again!

///

The Tiergarten at dusk
The Tiergarten at dusk

Yesterday I read Jon Krakauer’s disturbing new expose of Greg Mortensen, the hugely successful bestselling author of Three Cups of Tea and Stones Into Schools.  Mortenson has received enormous adulation and financial success stemming from tales of his altruistic exploits building schools in Pakistan and Afghanistan.  The problem is, according to Krakauer:  Almost everything that comes out of his mouth is a lie.  Most of what he wrote in both books is a lie.  He also appears to be guilty of stunning financial irregularities.  He was just destroyed on 60 Minutes.  I think it’s safe to say that when Jon Krakauer and 60 Minutes are on to you, it’s time to give it up.  I hope he’s in jail soon.

Krakauer, by the way, is a real journalistic stud.  I’ve now read every book he has published.  He’s a writer of tremendous skill, power and integrity.  I’m glad a man of his fierce intelligence and passion is on our side. 

Books I’ve Read by Jon Krakauer

  • Into Thin Air
  • Into the Wild
  • Under the Banner of Heaven
  • Where Men Win Glory
  • Eiger Dreams

Average Rating: 4.4 out of 5 based on 212 user reviews.

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Berlin
May 5, 2011 

We have this rule at my apartment building in Los Angeles,  too.   :(
We have this rule at my apartment building in Los Angeles, too. 🙁

Berlin is the single most grafitti-soaked city I have ever been in.  I keep expecting to see graffiti on restaurant menus.  I swear I saw graffiti on a baby.  The Berliners do seem to like their graffiti.

Had a terrific day following young Kevin the Tourguide’s advice on fun neighborhoods to explore.  I went to three of them, all in old East Berlin.  

Then I grabbed a bite and went on to more touristy stuff – I do have photos to get, after all. 

"Remember when that Jewish family paid us to hide in our cellar?  And then Papa turned them in anyway and we got to keep their stuff?  That was great."  "Ich stimme.   Jews always had the BEST toys."
"Remember when that Jewish family paid us to hide in our cellar? And then Papa turned them in anyway and we got to keep their stuff? That was great." "Ich stimme. Jews always had the BEST toys."

I revisited the Jewish Holocaust Memorial. It’s impressive yet a bit troubling that the city of Berlin didn’t seem the feel the need to erect one until – wait for it – 2003.  Seriously?  Wow.

Yeah,  it took them until 2004 to build a memorial in Berlin to the Jews murdered by the Nazis.
Yeah, it took them until 2004 to build a memorial in Berlin to the Jews murdered by the Nazis.

I also found the easily-overlooked memorial to the homosexual victims of the Holocaust.  Some people may not know that thousands of gay men were sent to the camps along with other targeted groups – Jews, gypsies, Jehovah’s Witnesses, and members of other “undesirable” groups.  The memorial was unveiled in 2008.  It’s underwhelming, but I’m still glad it’s there.

The Gay Holocaust Memorial may be underwhelming,  but I'm glad it's there.
The Gay Holocaust Memorial may be underwhelming, but I'm glad it's there.

I then took a stroll down to the busy commercial district of Potstamerstrasse and saw the godawful boring 3D movie Thor.  Jesus what a dull movie.  But then, I think most supehero movies are dull, dull, dull.  The list of comic book movies I like is rather small:

Superhero Movies That Don’t Make Me Gag

  • Superman (1978)
  • Superman II (1980)
  • Superman Returns (2006)
  • The Dark Knight (2008)
  • Spider-Man (2002)
  • Spider-Man 2 (2004)
  • Iron Man (2008)

 

After the movie I took a stroll through the Tiergarten to get pictures of the monumental angel statue Siegessäule (1873) that was featured in that beautiful but boring movie Wings of Desireleafy_2

Average Rating: 4.4 out of 5 based on 174 user reviews.

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Berlin
May 4, 2011 

Big Bad Berlin!

Checkpoint Charlie is an amazingly potent monument to dramatic recent history.
Checkpoint Charlie is an amazingly potent monument to dramatic recent history.

Berlin sits on the Spree River, which winds through the city.  At one point  there’s a large island, and on this island is a collection of museums.  Today I visited them.

The big ticket, for me anyway, is the Pergamon Museum.  It contains two amazing items that are themselves worth a journey to Berlin to see.

The first is the Pergamon Altar.  It was part of a huge Acropolis in Asia Minor from the Second Century BC.  A crazy German archaeologist/engineer named Carl Humann began digging it up.  He found enough fragments to reconstruct a portion of it.  It’s so huge that the museum was built specifically to house it. 

"Hi!  I'm the handsome American soldier welcoming you to freedom!"
"Hi! I'm the handsome American soldier welcoming you to freedom!"

The other feature of the Pergamon Museum is the magnificent Ishtar Gate from Nebuchadnezzar II’s Babylon.  It’s also monumental and simply unforgettable to see.

This fantastical architectural painting by the architect Schinkel just blew me away.
This fantastical architectural painting by the architect Schinkel just blew me away.

After the ancient stuff I went and looked at German art at the Alte Nationalgalerie.  I discovered two painters that I really like.  The first is Carl Spitzweg, who has a lovely little painting in there called Kite Flying.  The second is a giant of German painting named Karl Friedrich Schinkel.  The interesting thing about Schinkel is that he’s probably more famous as an architect and theatrical set designer than he is a painter.  But he’s an amazing painter.

"And I'm the creepy,  homely,  jug-eared,  skinny commie welcoming you back to the land where your neighbors are probably spying on you for the Stasi."
"And I'm the creepy, homely, jug-eared, skinny commie welcoming you back to the land where your neighbors are probably spying on you for the Stasi."

What I love about him is that he’s a bit of a fantasist.  While many of his contemporaries were depicting famous cathedrals and other buildings, Schinkel liked to just make stuff up.  His architectural and landscape paintings come from his knowledge of architecture and his imagination.  It’s really dreamy stuff.

After I’d had all the beauty I could stand, I hopped on the train and headed back to Stargarder Strasse to theCafe Sol to have Mexican food.  I had nachos, which were perfecty acceptable.

My plan tomorrow is to explore some of those fun neighborhoods Kevin referred me to.

The Wall
The Wall

I’m just so pleased that I’m finally having the opportunity to explore this city!

They've left a bit of the wall standing.
They've left a bit of the wall standing.

Cities I’m Most Eager to Visit For the First Time

This double cobblestone line winds through the city,  marking the location of the former Wall.
This double cobblestone line winds through the city, marking the location of the former Wall.

  • Sidney
  • Stockholm
  • Oslo
  • Hong Kong
  • Cape Town
  • Buenos Aires
  • Melbourne
  • Toronto
This is one of the pictures that turned me into a Schinkel fan.
This is one of the pictures that turned me into a Schinkel fan on the spot.

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 213 user reviews.

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Berlin
May 3, 2011 

Private Segway Tour of Berlin!

Yes.   I am beautiful on a Segway.   Particularly when I'm not falling over.
Yes. I am beautiful on a Segway. Particularly when I'm not falling over.

I began the day with a four hour private Segway tour of Berlin.  I say private because I was the only one signed up for the tour.  This was fantastic, as it meant I had the tourguide – an adorable gay ex-pat video artist named Kevin – to my self.  He was a great tourguide and gave me a great introduction to Berlin. 

For decades,  the Brandenburg Gate was in the Dead Zone between layers of The Wall.
For decades, the Brandenburg Gate was in the Dead Zone between layers of The Wall.

Berlin’s history, when you look back on the last 100 years, is simply insane.  It’s mind-boggling how much has happened in this city.  Two world wars, the poisonous paranoia of post-War East Germany, the fall of Communism, the Reunification, etc.  It’s just a titanic amount of events in a relatively short period.

I learned from Kevin that Berlin has a very popular openly gay mayor. 

You have to give the graffiti artist credit for effort on this one.  It's in the middle of the river.
You have to give the graffiti artist credit for effort on this one. It's in the middle of the river.

I also learned that Berlin is sinking into the swamp.  There are blue pipes all over the city which are literally pumping water into the water table to keep the city afloat.  The main cathedral of Berlin is sinking at an alarming rate. 

We, of course, went to Checkpoint Charlie.  It’s such a cliché, I didn’t expect it to be particularly interesting.  But it was surprisingly moving to see the old sign – “You are entering the American sector” and its chilly reverse.  The former location of the Wall is marked by a double line of cobblestones that winds its way through Berlin.  Of course they left a little bit of it actually standing, just for history’s sake.

During the War,  specially trained Nazi dachshunds were members of an elite squad known as the "judenschniffen."
During the War, specially trained Nazi dachshunds were members of an elite squad known as the "judenschniffen."

In many places the Wall had a very wide “Dead Zone” between the two layers of wall, and so when it came down in 1989 the city suddenly had a huge amount of undeveloped real estate right in the middle of town.  They’ve built many interesting new things on it, including the Jewish Holocaust Memorial.

"The Pope's Revenge"
"The Pope's Revenge"

Kevin also told me a fun story about the godawful ugly tower which juts up out of the Alexanderplatz (a huge transit hub).  It’s a phallic concrete monstrosity built by the East Germans as a way to show the superiority of Communist know-how and engineering.  The only trouble is, the brain drain from East Germany had been so severe that the building couldn’t actually be designed or built by East Germans.  So they secretly snuck in an entire work force from Sweden to build the thing.  Of course, the truth was found out eventually.  It generally is.

Another amusing thing about the tower.  East Germany was officially atheist, remember, while the rest of Berlin remained Lutheran and Catholic.  When the tower was completed an interesting and unexpected natural phenomenon occurred when the sun was in the west:  Its reflection on the bumpy globe at the top of the tower creates a perfect cross.  Locally it’s known as “The Pope’s Revenge.”

Kevin also was a wealth of good advice on where to get a hair cut, and what neighborhoods would be fun to explore.  This was good info to get because Berlin is one of those cities that doesn’t have a real center, which can make it intimidating for a tourist.

"I know! We'll name our convenience store after a failed artificial language! That'll really bring the customers in!!"
"I know! We'll name our convenience store after a failed artificial language! That'll really bring the customers in!!"

leafy_1I am good on the Segway.  This was my second time I’ve done a Segway tour.  However, I did have one unfortunate moment when I was dismounting and the beast got itself into a slow but unstoppable spiral.  It and me went down.  I’m not hurt, but I my right side is pretty bruised and sore.  What was worse was, I did it right in the middle of about a thousand people.  I think that hurt more than the fall.

Reasons Tourguide Kevin Will Give Up His Life in Berlin to Move to Los Angeles To Be With Me

  • … okay, guys, a little help here?  There’s got to be some reasons we can come up with . . .

Average Rating: 4.7 out of 5 based on 157 user reviews.

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Vilnius/Frankfurt/Berlin
May 2, 2011 

Distance Traveled Today:  1035

Total Distance Traveled:  9934

Obama Kills Osama

Well, it took nearly 10 years, but we finally go the son-of-a-bitch.  I just wish I felt better about it .

Why couldn’t we have apprehended him?  Why did we have to pounce, commando-style, guns blazing?  Wouldn’t it have been better for us, better for the world, to put him on public trial?  Incarcerate him?  Did the administration think it would make the USA look weak if we didn’t murder him?  I don’t really get it.

This magnificent golden angel figured prominently in the very beautiful but excruciatingly boring film "Wings of Desire."
This magnificent golden angel figured prominently in the very beautiful but excruciatingly boring film "Wings of Desire."

I also feel a tiny bit guilty for taking a bit of partisan pleasure in the fact that this victory happened on Obama’s watch.  Good for him.  Along with the exasperated release of his birth certificate last week, it seems to be a pretty good month for the President.

Memorable Accomplishments of Barak Hussein Obama

  • Getting elected, even though he was a black dude named Hussein
  • Passing his compromised yet still important health bill
  • Getting Bin Laden

///

I made a pretty costly mistake regarding the inter-Europe flights.  The weight allowance for baggage is sharply less than it is for intercontinental flights, and I got slapped with pretty vicious fees on the Brussels to Vilnius and the Vilnius to Berlin flights.  I got pretty steamed, but it’s really my fault for not doing better research.  If I’d known it would be so expensive, I would have found a way to ship one of my large bags by train or something from Brussels to Berlin.  I’ll be more careful next time. 

Uh,  yeah.   Because it worked so well last time.
Uh, yeah. Because it worked so well last time.

///

As queasy as it made me to fly on the very day Osama’s death announced, my two short flights were easy and boring, as you want all flights to be.

I got to Berlin and my hotel just fine, but quickly realize I’d made a mistake thinking the hotel was in a “cool” part of the city.  It’s called Courtyard City Center, so it was an honest mistake, I think.  I mean, doesn’t that sound good?  But it turns out the “city center” – called Mitte – is a boring, strictly business-only district with few amenities and very little charm.  The hotel is very definitely a business, not tourist, hotel. 

Best name for a Scottish folk band EVAR
Best name for a Scottish folk band EVAR

But that’s okay.  I made my way to the subway and after a little struggle figured out how to purchase a week pass.  Public transportation is fantastic in Berlin, and with this pass I can easily hop around the city to get to the good parts. 

Theres a lot of sort-of "post-Fascist" monumental architecture around Potsdamer Platz
Theres a lot of sort-of "post-Fascist" monumental architecture around Potsdamer Platz

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 293 user reviews.

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Vilnius/Trakai
May 1, 2011 

Distance Traveled Today:  40 miles

Total Distance Traveled:  8899

outrageous_churchVilnius feels like a stimulating marriage of ancient and very modern.  Everyone seems to speak English, which is a blessing, as Lithuanian is baffling.  It’s one of those orphan languages, not really related to any modern European language.  Its roots are in Sanskrit.  Yeah, Sanskrit. 

About the only bad thing I can say about Lithuania is that there are no good looking men here.  It’s a national tragedy.  I’m actually very surprised.  John and Milana assure me that it’s just a Lithuania thing; that Russia and Estonia won’t be this way.  There are plenty of attractive women, however.  Whenever you see a couple walking, you think, “Dude.  No WAY would you be able to get her any place but here.” 

My cousin John,  his wife Milana and their daughter Vivienne
My cousin John, his wife Milana and their daughter Vivienne

Sunday was a great day.  We jumped in the car and took a short drive to Trakai, which has two main attractions : A famous local pastry called kibinai, , and the ridiculously photogenic  15th Century Trakai Castle, perched like a jewel in the middle of Lake Galve.  On John’s orders I tried another famous dish:  a bacon and cabbage soup served in a black bread bowl.  It was a tranformative experience. 

John and Milana understand and respect my trademark directive to go the movies and to find Mexican food in every foreign place I visit.  Today we accomplished both. 

Trakai Castle,  Lithuania
Trakai Castle, Lithuania

We went to the local multiplex and saw, alas, Water For Elephants.  While its setting should be irresistable – a circus during the depression – the movie falls pretty flat.  Its biggest problem is the lead, Robert Pattinson of Twilight fame.  He is nice enough looking but has zero charisma and only the most basic acting chops.  How, I wonder, did he get past the tough gatekeepers of show business?  He doesn’t seem in any way special to me.  He didn’t even follow the Ray and Tayler rule – meaning he didn’t get in shape even though he was playing the “hunky” young lead in an A picture.  Shame on his charisma-free self.

I didn't take this picture,  but I just had to show you the ultracool bell tower of the Vilnius Cathedral.
I didn't take this picture, but I just had to show you the ultracool bell tower of the Vilnius Cathedral.

Also, the movie doesn’t provide a good role for my beloved Reese Witherspoon.  She is way too short and stubby a body to look good in circus clothes.  It’s just very unfortunate.  It’s also not an interesting role.  She seems to have the Oscar curse almost as bad as Adrien Brody.  I hope she works through it and gets herself into some good movies soon.

The one only two things the movie has going for it are 1) the performance by the dazzling Christoph Walz as the circus boss, and 2) the framing device with Hal Halbrook and the very handsome and very underrated Paul Schneider. 

All in all, quite a disappointment. 

I don’t know how much longer John and Milana will stay in Vilnius.  They’re eager to make a change, either to the States or to Milana’s native Prague.  I’m very glad I had the opportunity to visit them while I was here. John is going to try to meet me for my short stay in St. Petersburg at the end of the month, and Milana might try to meet me in Tallinn.  Fingers crossed.

I’ve now been on the road for over seven weeks.  I’m having a great time but I’m definitely homesick. 

Today I fly to Berlin and I’m quite excited about the prospect of six days in a city I’ve long wanted to visit!

Favorite Reese Witherspoon Movies

  • Freeway
  • Legally Blonde
  • Walk the Line
  • Pleasantville

Average Rating: 4.5 out of 5 based on 280 user reviews.

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Vilnius, Lithuania
April 30, 2011 

Baltic Ballet Group
Baltic Ballet Group

This morning Cousin John picked me up and took me to the sparkling building where he lives with his wife Milana and new baby Vivienne.

Vilnius was exactly what I wanted it to be.  I’ve long wanted to visit the Baltics, and so far they haven’t let me down.  Vilnius is a city of 600, 000, and the old town simply sparkles in the clear Baltic sun.  It was chilly but not cold.

The city is absolutely crawling with beautiful old churches, mostly Catholic (Milana says that Lithuanians are even more religious than Poles).  But there are also the inevitable Russian Orthodox structures as well.

The main Cathedral has the coolest bell tower I think I have ever seen.  It looks like what would happen if a tradtional  bell tower and a lighthouse had a baby.  It’s just not like any campanile I’ve seen before.  Tragically, I didn’ tmanage to get a picture of it, so I’m going to cheat and grab one off the interwebs. 

I've always had this weird love for "proletariat" art.
I've always had this weird love for "proletariat" art.

We took a lovely walk around town on Saturday afternoon.  

Saturday evening we parked little Viv with John and Milana and I went off to the ballet.  It was a performance by the Baltic Ballet Group and the piece was called Depeche Mode: Another World.  We loved it.

The town turned out with a huge parade welcoming my visit.
The town turned out with a huge parade welcoming my visit.

Cities with the Best Looking People

  • Los Angeles
  • New York
  • Rome
  • Milan
  • Paris

Average Rating: 4.8 out of 5 based on 204 user reviews.

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Brussels/Frankfurt/Vilnius
April 29, 2011 

Distance traveled today:  965

Total distance traveled:  8859

R.I.P. Mechanical Typewriter

The final factory in the world which was making mechanical typewriters – in Mumbai, India – has announced it’s not going to make them any more.  Manual typewriters will go the way of the buggy whip, the slide rule and Don’t Ask, Don’t Tell.vilnius_sign

I learned to type on a monstrous, heavy, old battleaxe of a manual typewriter of  my father’s.  By my junior year in high school, I had figured out that  touch-typing was a requirement for life as a modern adult, but I couldn’t  picture spending an entire semester of school in a boring typing class.  So I  went to the typing teacher, introduced myself, and borrowed the typing training  book from her and took it home and taught myself.  One of the smartest things  I’ve ever done.  Of course, I didn’t get really good at typing until 1984 when I  bought the very first Macintosh.  Which, by the way, cost $2, 400, had no hard  drive and could hardly do anything.  But it was SO COOL.

///

Vilnius is wall-to-wall gorgeous churches
Vilnius is wall-to-wall gorgeous churches

Today is my last day in beautiful Brussels!  I’ve really enjoyed my time here and I am sure I could spend far more time exploring this lovely, friendly, and easy-to-navigate city.

I’ve also truly enjoyed working with the people in the Brussels office and I hope I get to cross paths with them again!

But now it’s off on the next leg of my adventure.  Early this evening I fly to Vilnius, Lithania, were I will spend the weekend with my cousin John, his wife Milana and their new baby.  It will be the farthest east I have ever traveled (beating Budapest) but not the farthest north (that’s still Inverness, Scotland). 

///

I got into Vilnius, the capital of Lithania, at about midnight.  The plane was a few minutes late, and my tired cousin John met me and drove me to my hotel.

John,  Milana and Vivienne live in this groovy building in the middle of Old Town.
John, Milana and Vivienne live in this groovy building in the middle of Old Town.

Most Northerly Places I’ve Been

  • Quebec City, Quebec, Canada
  • Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
  • Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
  • Inverness, Scotland, UK

Average Rating: 4.9 out of 5 based on 238 user reviews.

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Brussels
April 28, 2011 

Game Freak!

"Remember all those wild Bible stories I always told you were true?  Well,  actually,  to be honest,  it's not very likely that they are true  And I pretended to be sure they were true when I'm really not.   So that was kind of dishonest of me.   Sorry about that."
"Remember all those wild Bible stories I always told you were true? Well, actually, to be honest, it's not very likely that they are true. And I pretended to be sure they were true when I'm really not sure. You see, believing something is true isn't the same as it being true. So that was kind of dishonest of me. Sorry about that."

People think I’m a game freak.  This is mostly because I always tell them that I’m a game freak.  And it’s true.

I don’t from the truth.  I’m proud of being a gamer. I’ve met great people through computer, video and board gaming.

I am convinced I would have gotten involved in gaming much earlier than I did if I had been born five years earlier.  Many of the guys who invented the gaming industry are exactly five years younger than me.  Men like Richard Garriott, from Houston and Austin, who came up right after I did. 

"Hang on .  .  .  I think I've finally figured out what we can call our new energy drink!!"
"Hang on . . . I think I've finally figured out what we can call our new energy drink!!"

Why is that five years significant?  Because when I was still living at home as a kid, the home video game console industry was still quite primitive.  We’re talking Atari.  Colecovision.  Intellivision.  It was easy to ignore.

triumphThen when I moved away from home, I ended up in New York.  And in the early 1980s, Times Square had these fantastic video game arcades.   I spent thousands of hours in them, playing Q*Bert, Qix, Arkanoid, Crystal Castles, Dragon’s Quest, Space Ace, Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom (“Soon Kali will rule da world”), and others.  At this point, the home video gaming systems were getting better.

View from my office window in Brussels
View from my office window in Brussels

But I didn’t realize it.  When I saw the early Nintendo system, and saw friends playing Super Mario Brothers on it, I thought, “That’s a stripped-down version of what I play in the arcades.  I’m having the higher quality experience.”  And I turned my back on the consoles.

Mistake.  The thing is, I was right at the time.  But the situation soon changed.  Games like the Ultima, Wizardry, Zelda, and Metroid series began to change everything.

But I missed it.

I didn’t get back into gaming seriously until the end of 1998, when I finally got a nice home computer.  One hour with Riven: The Sequel to Myst and I was hooked forever.

At first, all I played were adventure games, like Riven.  Soon I began expanding to other genres, most notably role-playing games. 

The thing is, adventures were the shortest games.  That, combined with the feverish pace I played – I literally counted the hours at work until I could run home and fire up Sanitarium or Broken Sword – meant that for the first few years I completed far more games per year than in later years when I was playing a higher percentage of non-adventures.  Check out how the numbers dwindle:

Games finished by year

  • 1999 78
  • 2000 69
  • 2001 36
  • 2002 25
  • 2003 25
  • 2004 31
  • 2005 9
  • 2006 15
  • 2007 12
  • 2008 18
  • 2009 33
  • 2010 11

 

I can’t believe I completed seventy-eight games in 1999.  Amazing.  Now, because of World of Warcraft, I finish very few games per year.  But I still spend a huge percentage of my leisure time gaming in one form or another.

I understand that not everyone can be a game freak like me.  But I feel bad for people who refuse to even try them.  They’re really missing out.  Games now are an extremely sophisticated, interactive, frequently beautiful form of entertainment (and even social interaction).  To ignore games completely is like being an American in the 20s or 30s and refusing to go the movies:   You’re missing the best popular culture and technology have to offer.  So there.

The ONE EXCUSE I will accept is the one my friend Amy gives:  “I know if I started playing them I would love them too much and play all the time and my life would be ruined.”

But for all of you Phillistines out there who turn your noses up at a hobby you do not understand – a thrilling, beautiful world of fantasy, science fiction, war, strategy, adventure, and storytelling – it’s your loss, pal.  We’re having way more fun than you.

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