My Monday adventure with planes, trains, and automobiles

Original caption: I decided to see if I could ...
Dominos falling. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

This post has nothing to do with science or climate, but it does go to illustrate how life gets more complex each day thanks to increased bureaucracy, and that you should take nothing for granted in the world of air travel today.

It is also an apology to the chair and attendees, of the Family Forest Landowners and Management Conference where I had been invited to speak today at 2PM. For the first time in my life, due to circumstances outside of my control, I had to bow out of a speaking engagement at the very last minute. My sincerest apologies to all of you there.

Where I live, air travel isn’t always easy, particularly since I have to drive 90 miles to the nearest major airport, Sacramento, and then board from there, which I’ve pretty much gotten down to a science, or so I thought until yesterday.

I think you will all find the following story of the Murphy’s Law domino effect in action quite amusing, and in retrospect, it is really the only way one can look at it now.

It all started out well enough, I even thought I’d be arriving at the airport early.

The first domino was me misreading the flight time before leaving for the airport, though I didn’t know this until a critical moment later. I thought it was 3:25PM, but I read the wrong page, and that was the departure time of my connecting flight. But being a broadcaster, where missing a deadline to be on-air is a fate worse than death, I always make sure I meet deadlines, so I planned to arrive two hours early because I’d known that the Sacramento airport had recently undergone a major renovation, and there might be some changes that affect me. I was right about that, I just didn’t know how much.

Second domino – I arrived at 1:25 PM at the Sacramento airport and discovered that the Southwest airlines terminal had been moved from the familiar and easy to use terminal A to the new glass and stainless steel cathedral known as the NEW terminal “B”, with the old one (also easy to use) having been demolished. So I drove around and reentered the terminal loop to go to the new terminal. I was looking for parking at the new terminal, and I drove around the loop twice looking for daily parking. I could see the daily parking lot for terminal B, remarking to myself there were few cars in it, but couldn’t seem to find the entrance. I decided to drive into the uber expensive hourly lot, and ask the gate attendant…I had plenty of time…or so I thought. The gate attendant explained that there was no daily parking for new terminal B, as it hadn’t been completed yet. My options for parking were the terminal A parking garage (which I’ve used almost every time for 10 years) or the economy lot out in the next county with a half hour shuttle bus ride that stops at every stop even if no people are waiting to get on/off. I opted for the garage, even though I knew it would be a long walk between terminals, but hey, I was two hours early, I had plenty of time. I’d planned for hiccups like this.

The interior of the new Sacramento terminal "B" complete with Harvey the rabbit. Image from: public CEO.com
I discovered that the new terminal B was like a visit to the Robert Schuler’s Crystal Cathedral in LA. Glass, metal, multiple levels, lots of light…and digital signage everywhere. Only one problem with digital signage and bright light from a nearly all glass building – they don’t co-exist well, and viewing angles on LCD screens mean you have to go in front of them to read them clearly, no cheating by viewing obliquely from afar is allowed.

Gone are the days when I could park my vehicle in the parking garage, walk about 1oo yards, check in, walk 50 yards, go through security, then walk another 50 yards and be at the gate. No, that simplicity is gone forever with this new hallowed glass and steel place of bureaucratic worship. It’s a hike.

The third domino came when I walked up to the check in counter to check my bag. And the attendant admonished me to not speak to her, but use the LCD touchscreen because she was “only there to apply the luggage tag”. I thought to myself “and you’ll be a replaced by a robot soon I’ll bet”. Completing the task, the LCD screen flashed up a red angry warning LATE CHECK IN – NO BAG GUARANTEE. Puzzled, since I had “plenty of time” I dared to make conversation again with the attendant and ask why this happened. Looking at me like I’m sort sort of idiot she curtly replied “Well that’s what happens when you check in 10 minutes before the plane leaves”. It was then to my horror that I discovered I’d misread the wrong flight time, and indeed I had only ten minutes to board. So I said, “there’s no way I’ll be able to make this, let’s just look at other options”. Again she replied, “Well you need to try, THEN we’ll figure it out if you miss the flight.”.

So now I was on a  mission, thoughts of a leisurely coffee and late lunch turned to panic in an unfamiliar terminal I’d never been to before in my life.

The fourth domino (and a couple of minutes lost) came when I started looking for the security gate…it turns out there isn’t any in this new aviation cathedral, but you now have to board a train to get to security and from there, the gate. Sigh, it used to be so easy at this airport.

The new train at the Sacramento airport terminal B

So another two-minute wait for the train…and now I’m down to six minutes left. The train takes a minute, thankfully security was not busy and there were only two ahead of me….but you know how it is, you have to walk that back and forth rope maze thingy to get the 25 feet to the checkpoint.

I get through the driver’s license/ID checkpoint and get to the baggage scanners…and proceed to tear off my belt, my shoes, keys, watch, ring, etc and pack it into the tray for the x-ray machine, something else I’ve got down to a speed science. I got that done, shoved in the trays, and then I saw it, yet another metal and glass behemoth – the full body scanner. I’d never used one before, but I figured “OK this will be quick, they are designed for speed, right”?

Wrong – the fifth domino was my wallet, which I’ve never ever had to remove before in any scanner I’ve gone through. along with the usual assortment of credit cards, I keep an ultra-thin plastic USB drive. It seems the new full body scanner decided it didn’t like that, and on the display put a big red dot on my butt while somewhere I was imagining the  robot from Lost in Space flailing it’s arms arms and shouting “DANGER DANGER! WILL ROBINSON”.

So I figured “no biggie”, I put my wallet in a bowl and run it through the x-ray right and I’m done right? Well, no. you see it seems my ticket was flagged due to my lateness and checking a bag, which apparently is one of those “signatures” that bad guys like to use because they want to spend as little time in the terminal as possible to minimize the chance that somebody might “finger” them.

So I get the red carpet treatment reserved for those special cases. Full body pat down, full body magnetometer wand, full body sniffer patch rubdown looking for GSR and explosives residue. Then some questioning, inspection of my laptop, and then when it is decided I’m not a threat, I get unceremoniously ejected like the Soup Nazi on Seinfeld where he yells NEXT!

So I look at my watch as I’m putting it back on and it’s a minute past boarding time now. I figured I’m toast, but hustle to the gate anyway. Naturally, gate B-18 is the furthest one away from security. And of course, the plane is gone.

I’m about to see the sixth domino fall.

So I ask (well, blather excitedly) the gate attendant “Wanda” about all this, harping a bit about security delays after she says to me “ I got the call from ticketing we waited as long as we could” I asked about alternate flights. It seems that the next two flights at 5:30PM and 6 something were tours of the western United States, going in the reverse direction I needed, down to Las Vegas, then to Salt Lake City, and then to Portland both arriving at Spokane after 11PM. I could get them on standby too. “Great, how about tomorrow?”. Well I could get there, but then I have an hour to gather bags and rental car, then drive almost another two hours from Spokane to Moscow Idaho where the forest conference was.

Déjà vu is a funny thing, right then I got a flashback about the last time I was flagged as a potential terrorist on a trip to Idaho, way back in 1985. US Marshalls were involved in that one. And this was before today’s heightened security theater.

I’ll share that story.

+++++

I had been demoing weather display equipment in Boise in the winter of 1985. In those days I lugged around an IBM-AT with a 16 color CRT monitor, and a separate broadcast quality Sony NTSC monitor in specially designed cases like musicians use for road trips. I was my own roadie lugging around over 100 pounds of computer equipment at a time when people lugging around such equipment was uncommon.

The IBM-AT personal computer, 8 mHz circa 1985 Image from: classic-computers.org.nz
I had been on the road for a week. Visiting Denver TV stations first, doing demos, I then flew up to Boise, where my system was damaged in transit. Rather than return home, I tried to rebuild in the field, using parts from a local ComputerLand store at exorbitant prices. 128K ram chips in stacked DIP packages in those days were hard to come by. They had a habit of failing due to the solder joints and vibration. So I spent the day repairing it, and then decided to postpone the demo until the next day, and sought a hotel room. As luck would have it the U.S Governors conference was in town, and there wasn’t a hotel room to be had. After hours of searching, I finally did locate one at a fleabag hotel downtown that gave far more meaning to the words “transient occupancy” that one usually thinks of when describing hotels.  The bed was one of those old one with a trench in the middle of the mattress and a wrought iron frame that looked like something my grandmother owned. The shower, ran hot and cold, mostly cold. I managed to get showered and shaved, but this was the middle of winter and I was chilled to the bone.

The next day I lugged the equipment over to the TV station and set it up. Gathered everyone, and started the demo. About 5 minutes in, the IBM-AT (8 mHz) crashed and gave me a BSOD. I rebooted, started over, same thing at the same point in the demo… I apparently still had some bad memory chip(s). So I asked for their indulgence of 30 minutes, tore the machine apart, reseated all the DIP memory on the motherboard and tried again. No dice. At this point, it was a lost cause. I had to abandon the demonstration.

Meanwhile, the Denver TV station I had called on a week earlier wanted a follow-up, so I had to fly back to Denver, lugging my dead equipment along. Another visit to a ComputerLand store first, more troubleshooting and parts replacement and it looked like I had it. So I went over to KUSA-TV and setup for the demo again…and did the demo, I got about 90% through and got another BSOD. I explained the equipment had been damaged in Boise, and what I’d been doing to repair it, but I could see they weren’t too trustful of the equipment. Remember then, computers weren’t widely accepted and broadcast TV equipment was single use discrete component design, all built like tanks. Tektronix and silver-solder and all that was the norm…because on-air failure during live TV was just intolerable. Nobody wanted a BSOD on-air.

I packed up and left, feeling miserable, and drove to the Denver Stapleton airport in my rental car. I was two hours early, I had “plenty of time”.

I dropped off the rental car and then had to wait a few more minutes for the larger of the shuttle buses that the attendant assured me had the room in the rear needed to accommodate my collection of three roadie cases plus luggage. No problem I said, I had “plenty of time”.

Imagine hauling three cases like this around
The van arrived, we loaded up and set off. In those days, the rental car areas were behind the hourly parking lots, and the van took some sort of twisted route through some side access for those, and ended up at automatic security gate where it let you out. There were about three cars ahead of us. When the car ahead of us made it to the gate. It stopped, and sat there, and sat there, and sat there some more. The shuttle bus driver honked. Nothing. So he got out to find out why this car was stopped. It turns out the driver in front of us had run out of gas. We couldn’t push the car with the shuttle bus due to bumper height mismatch, and we couldn’t push it by hand due to speed bumps and those reverse entry spikes and the driver didn’t want risk shredded tires.

Great. At least I had “plenty of time”. The shuttle bus driver calls for a tow truck on the radio. So we all sit around waiting, thinking this will just be a few minutes, a few minutes turns into a half hour, another call on the radio – “we’ll be there soon” comes the response. The half hour turns into 45 minutes, and I’m thinking up ways now that I can get my cases out (the biggest one has wheels) and push them the rest of the way to the terminal about 1000 yards away….but, before I can complete those thoughts, the tow truck finally arrives, and moves the car and we are on our way.

By this time I have about 30 minutes left before the flight, and I still have to check my beasts of baggage. The shuttle bus pulls up to the terminal, I flag a skycap, explain my situation and hand him $30. He said he’d handle it, and I had to go to the ticket counter to pay the usual excess baggage fees. So he tells me just leave them here, go to the ticket counter (visible through the glass) and he’d bring in my roadies cases to get it all settled.

So, of course there’s a line. And I wait, keeping an eye on my roadies cases through the big window, waiting for him to move it. My turn comes, but as I glance back, another skycap has the cases loaded on a cart and is headed down the sidewalk, away from the ticket counter. So I take off, flag him down, explain, and he says “well they were unattended”. I look around for the guy I originally tipped well, and he’s nowhere to be seen. I’m down to 20 minutes so I say to this skycap, pressing money into his palm while explaining, look please just bring it to the ticket counter for me?

So we hustle up to the ticket counter, wait again, I pay the fees, get my boarding pass and I’m off. I still have to get through security and to the gate. Security in those days was much simpler, but once again I got hung up at security because I had tools in my carry on bag…the tools I used to tear apart and rebuild the computer,  – I had forgotten to put back in the roadie case. It is the scourge of carrying computer equipment and tools and being late. So I explain, I show them my card and my brochures and why I’d be carrying computer tools. They pass me through, tools and all, since I obviously was not a threat, just some nerdy computer guy.

I’m down to ten minutes, and I recreated the famous O.J. Simpson TV commercial for Hertz where I’m dashing through the terminal to make my plane. And of course, as Murphy’s Law would have it, the gate I need is the one furthest away from the security gates. It must be an unwritten corollary to Murphy’s Law that the later you are, the further away the gate is.

I get to the gate, and they are just starting to close the door, but they saw my breathless panting state, unable to say much but “sorry”, took my boarding pass, and let me on.

Walking down the ramp, I’m congratulating myself for pulling this off against the odds, and I can’t wait to get home and get my computer working right again. I board the plane the stewardess directs me to my seat, which of course is the one way in the back next to the restroom (a consequence of being late). As I walk down the aisle, I notice the strangest thing – something I’ve never seen before or since. About a third of the overhead baggage compartment doors are missing. At first I thought they were just “up”, but they had tape across them. “Bizarre” I thought to myself, what next? So settling into my seat, I pushed the attendant call button and inquired with the stewardess about the missing baggage doors. She explained calmly that “the original aircraft for this flight had a mechanical issue and this was the replacement aircraft” I said, “yeah, but wouldn’t you call these missing baggage doors a mechanical issue”? She assured me everything was fine, not to worry, that “the supervisor has approved the aircraft”.

So I sat there, thinking about the run of bad luck I’ve had in the past few days, and visions of some mechanic under pressure to deliver an aircraft gets the call in mid maintenance and hustles this one into service, just running a line down the “approved” boxes on the check-sheet and signing it in the rush because he doesn’t have a choice. I’m thinking to myself, “I’m about to fly on an incomplete aircraft”. Further visions of nuts missing those all important tie down wires to keep them from vibrating loose also went through my mind. I decided right then, I didn’t want to fly on this aircraft.

So I got up, grabbed my carry-on bag and headed for the front door. I explained to the stewardess there that I had no faith in the mechanical integrity of the aircraft, pointed to the doors, and headed up the ramp.

When I got to the gate desk, I explained, said “sorry” again like 25 times, and said to please just have my baggage held at the destination. They said to “wait here please,  we are working on this”. “OK “I said and sat down. I watch through the window as the plane gets pushed away from the gate by the ramp tractor, glad I’m not on it. They disconnect the tractor…and the plane just sits there not moving. I’m thinking “A-ha!” they’ve got some other aircraft trouble, and I was sure that thought was confirmed when a few minutes later they hitch up the ramp tractor and pull the plane back to the gate.

I asked the gate agent, “why are they bringing the plane back, does it have mechanical trouble?’. She replied, calmly “no, they are going to get your baggage off the plane”, and then repeated to me again “please wait here” with a bit of urgency in her voice. I said “no that’s not necessary, just have the baggage held at the baggage counter at the destination and I’ll pick it up when I get the next flight.”. And she repeated “please, just wait here and we will get this sorted out”.

So I’m standing there, puzzled, and it hit me. And just about the time I realized why they were getting my baggage off the plane two guys in suits appeared on either side of me and asked “Are you Mr. Watts?”. “Yes” I replied. “Come with us, we need to inspect your baggage”. I asked “who are you ?“…and they showed me badges and stated they were with the US Air Marshalls. Great I thought to myself, “they think I’m a bomber or something”.

So they walk either side of me and escort me downstairs, into some non-descript room, and I get the questions…”Why did you get off the plane?” “What is in those big cases” etc. etc. And I proceed to tell the story much as I’ve told you readers.

They weren’t satisfied. They wanted to inspect the roadie cases. And they were wheeled in and I was asked to produce the key to the padlocks on them. I dutifully handed the key over to the agent, and he unlocked the roadie cases and opened the lids.

“See”, I said, “just like I told you, computers and monitors” and I produced my card and brochure again.

“You need to prove it to us Mr. Watts”, one agent said. “We need to look inside the cases”.

I said “Well you are in luck, I just happen to have tools for that right here in my bag”.

Sir, open them up.”

So I spent the next 15 minutes taking the cases off the IBM-AT and, pulling out the hard drive (which in those days was a 10 pound beast by itself holding all of 20 megabytes), and opening the cases to the monitors.

Finally satisfied that my story was true and that I was not any sort of threat, an agent said “you are free to go, but think twice before you get off an airplane again after you’ve checked baggage”.

Again after saying “sorry” about 25 times and thanking them for not hauling me off to jail, I reassembled my equipment, repacked it, and headed off with the beasts of baggage stacked and rolling on the 4 casters on the biggest case towards the door.

At this point I’m pretty toasted, and all I wanted to do was just hibernate in a hotel somewhere and have a few stiff drinks.

I headed for the ground transportation area, got another rental car, and rolled the beasts of baggage out to the curb waiting for the shuttle bus. The shuttle pulled up, the driver opened the door, and said “you again?”. So I sheepishly loaded up and explained to him what happened. He was guffawing all the way to the rental lot. I got a new rental vehicle, jammed all the road cases into the trunk and back seat, and took off to find the nearest hotel. I remembered seeing a Holiday Inn on the way into the airport, so I headed there.

One might think this would be the end of the story, but no.

Once I got to the Holiday Inn, I parked in the covered entryway, and went up to the desk, waiting my turn because there were two people ahead of me. I go to the desk, asked if there were any rooms available, and she said “we are nearly full, but you are in luck, we have one left.” . “Great! I’ll take it.”.

As I’m filling out the form, I hear this awful rumble, getting louder and louder, and turn around to see a veritable horde of motorcycles coming into the parking lot. Lots of gnarly looking folks were riding them. Looking back at the desk clerk, she sensed my astonishment at this sight and said “that’s why we are almost booked”.

I said, “Thanks, but after the week I’ve had, I’ve changed my mind.”.

So I drove to the next available hotel, asked if they expected any hordes of motorcyclists (they didn’t) proceeded to order room service (and several stiff drinks) and stayed there for two whole days, doing nothing but not worrying about anything with no plans to go anywhere. The computer remained packed.

++++++

So yesterday, recounting in flashback my previous troubles that originated in Idaho with computer equipment, live presentations, and air travel, and presented with what were ugly and untenable travel options, I decided that there are times one just has to know when to walk away from air travel, and I did.

Again, my apologies to the Family Forest Landowners and Management Conference.

Get notified when a new post is published.
Subscribe today!
0 0 votes
Article Rating
125 Comments
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Dr. Dave
March 21, 2012 12:41 am

I suppose we all have a few tales of woe related to airline travel, but it is hard to top those related by Anthony. I moved to northern NM 17 years ago (from Amarillo, TX) and had a new found love affair with air travel. I live just an hour’s drive from the Albuquerque airport. In the early days I could make it to the airport in about an hour, park in covered, short term parking (which was not exorbitant back then), check my bags, clear security in a jiff and settle in for a beer and a sandwich before I took a leisurely stroll down to the gate to catch a 1PM non-stop to Chicago. A few hours later I would be at O’Hare, pick up my bags and a rental car a couple of hours later I’d be at my folks’ house in SW Michigan to visit family and friends. The return trips were just as easy.
Airline travel became slower, more expensive and complicated every year since 1995. After 9/11 it became ridiculous. I think a trip to Michigan in the late 90s was the LAST time I ever flew anywhere for “fun.” Now I only travel by air when I HAVE to. I hate the entire experience. Air travel has become the modern day equivalent of riding a Greyhound.

Roger Carr
March 21, 2012 12:50 am

Surely the classic final word is “United Breaks Guitars”?

E.M.Smith
Editor
March 21, 2012 12:55 am

OK, read all the comments… Guess it’s OK to share a couple of airport stories (short forms…)
A few years back, I was working in Florida and the daughter was a Student Ambassador to England. She was to go, via Delta with a plane change in Atlanta, from San Jose to London. As it was my last chance to see her, and I was a ‘every few weeks fly home’ schedule, we agreed to meet in passing in Atlanta. I booked a well timed flight Orlando / SJ. I got to the airport about 6 hour early and got to discover all the joys of that place. Including the fact that my (American) flight was in a completely different building from her (Delta) flight…
But I got to her terminal OK (a few train and bus rides later).
THEN I got to explain to the clerk why I wanted in to a Delta terminal and had no Delta ticket. About an hour of discussions and escalations later, including my drivers license, my daughters birthday, and was I her legal guardian and was my spouse on good terms with me (my being in a different state and all) and …. Eventually I got into the terminal B, IIRC.
And a good thing too.
The Ambassadors folks had planned to have kids from all over the country merge there. So a dozen or so flights were to land, have 12 -15 ish year old kids dumped out, and they would be escorted to THE flight to England. There were 2 adults assigned to do all the escorting…
The planes, for a variety of reasons, got routed to different gates than planned and arrived at different times than planned. I joined the fray (along with another stray parent also en-passant) rushing from gate to gate, collecting kids, and delivering them to The One Gate.
I did get to see my daughter…
Then they started boarding the plane. One girl was still ‘in the air’ but we had been assured her flight was going to land ‘any minute now’. Then “last call” was issued. The Official Chaperon was already on board with the first 3/4 of the kids. The gate clerk was calling for the last few to board. I looked at the junior-chaperon and we talked to the gate clerk. “One is not here yet, but we were told you would wait. She’s landing now, per your folks”…. Her response: “We can’t wait, we have to finish boarding and depart”.
Me: “What about the young girl”?
Her: “We can just put her on the next flight.”
(couple of iterations as I’m aghast at the idea of sticking a young girl ALONE on an international flight to ‘wherever’ with ‘whoever’ to meet her at the other end…)
Sidebar: For efficiency, I’d put my drivers license in a clear carrier around my neck. Turns out, it looked rather “official” like an ID badge of some sort, and folks seemed to think I was somehow ‘official’ with the group. I used this to advantage at a couple of the gates…
The Idea formed….
All I needed was, at most, about 10 minutes. We’d been told the plane was on the ground and they were hustling gate-to-gate. I decided to Bluff.
Me: “I’m sorry, we can’t break up the group and leave one child behind. If you do not wait, we will need to deboard those on board and you can take a half hour getting their luggage unloaded; we’ll wait for the next flight. (I turned to the semi-official-junior-Chaparon) Don’t let them (wave at last half dozen) board.”
Now here’s the deal. You make a sales pitch, then YOU SHUT UP! The first one to speak loses… I said nothing, just looked at her. She started to say something, then stopped. She protested: But we can’t let it leave with people and luggage not together… But… I Just Looked, stone faced. Not a peep.
She turned to the stupervisor. They looked at me. They got on the phone to someone. About 4 minutes later they said “We can wait 10 minutes”. I said nothing. About 5 minutes later, the final girl showed up. Everyone boarded. I thanked the clerk for their “understanding and patience”… and left.
It was one small triumph, using their own rules against them.
Everyone had a wonderful flight, a great trip, and fond memories. Except me…
For reasons unknown, my ‘connection’ was not going to make it due to some storm or other moving in somewhere causing it to be cancelled. Back at the ticket counter (in Terminal A IIRC) I was told the only hope was a Delta flight… yes, in Terminal B. So over I go. A quick (free as it was their problem) reticket and I was on my way… but not home. By now it was about 7 pm.
I ended up routed to Chicago. There I got to do an O.J. run through the entire length far terminal to far terminal. I was traveling in sandals that kept flying off the feet at a run… eventually I just carried them. Part way through, my carry-on (the only bag I had) came unzipped… at a run the pile spread over about 5 feet. Stuff stuff… I got everything back in and continued running… Made it to the plane with about a minute before the door was closed.
It was nearing midnight. I got to San Jose airport about 5 am I think… By then I’d been up about 24 hours straight.
But I slept soundly, knowing that at least one family was not dealing with the news that their little girl was on some unknown aircraft, alone, headed to a foreign land…
……….
Oh, what the heck, story two:
California has very high sales tax. About 9% in the Bay Area. I was working at Apple. They bought some software from someone for about $5 Million. 9% of $5 Million is a big amount.
Due to the peculiarities of that particular tax law, a COPY of the software was not the taxable item, just the original media. So we “bought it” from our Oregon Sales Office (where there is no sales tax) and deposited the tape in a vault there. I was sent to go make a copy of the tape. (As the sales guys there did Macintosh stuff, not Unix tape copies…). No Problem.
A simple “fly up in the morning, dupe the tape, fly back”…
Well, the “copy” was not so easy. Finding a 9 track tape drive that worked, and did Unix stuff and figuring out what blocking factor and format and… But I finished in time for my 8 pm flight out… Called to confirm… flight canceled… Options? 9 pm via Seattle connection at 11.xx back to San Jose.. Booked.
Got on the plane. Land in Seattle at something like ‘near midnight’. Flight is just a tad late, so gets canceled. Can’t take off after midnight or some such… Sound ordinance…
I end up checked into a hotel next to the airport. I have from about 2 am to 5 am to “sleep” and then my 6:30 am re-re-booked flight… Needless to say, I don’t really sleep. If I “go down”, I’m likely to sleep 10 hours… Some food, a shower. Lay on the bed. Change cloths.
I am now wondering how I ended up 2 States away from home, wide awake at 3 am, in a hotel. When each flight had been assured to be “on schedule” and I’d been there “on time”…
I eventually got home “later that day” some 30 -40 ish hours after I first woke up…
I won’t share the story about Denver in Winter and ending up in some strange airport in California rather then spending the night sleeping in the chairs designed to prevent sleeping… but the rental car got me home from there… even though I had to go to the Other Airport to get my car and bags the next day… (checked through)…
And people wonder why I like to Drive everywhere now…

Don
March 21, 2012 12:58 am

Ha, great read, Anthony! Your pain is our pleasure. ;->
On my fourth trip to China in Y2K (just returned from my 15th a few weeks ago) I was fortunate to get a seat on the newly inaugurated United nonstop from SFO to Shanghai’s then brand new Pudong International (PVG).
Not! There were not enough passengers to cover the fuel cost, so they canceled the flight and bumped us to a Beijing flight with the promise that we would be met at the arrival gate by a United agent, escorted around Immigration and Customs, and put immediately on a flight to Shanghai where we would officially enter the country.
Not! After 12 hours or so of flying, no agent present at arrival. After half an hour or so of standing around, we Shanghai transit passengers began filtering through Immigration to the Domestic Departures hall, where we found a spot on the floor and camped out, hoping to gain official notice. Finally someone from Air China figured out who we were, gathered us up and took us through security to a domestic departure concourse where we waited a few more hours for something to happen.
Another airline agent, another private walking tour through the bowels of Beijing International to avoid yet another security queue, arriving at an obscure gate in an abandoned concourse where we boarded an ancient, musty DC-10 (Anthony’s mothballed plane story made me remember this) that had been scrounged from somewhere to take us on an unscheduled flight to Shanghai. After boarding, the doors were closed, then we sat and sat.. and sat… wondering what the latest holdup could be as grim tales of organ harvesting came unbidden into our minds. Turned out a young Chinese passenger was having fainting spells (probably from exhaustion and hunger) and the cabin and flight crew couldn’t decide what to do with her. They administered oxygen and tried a few other things, and finally decided to remove her from the plane. After waiting a long time for a stretcher to arrive, the flight crew took matters into their own hands and took the poor girl off using a kind of fireman’s carry technique.
Taxiing at last! Scary process as turning involved the use of brakes, and the brakes howled so loud that everyone had to jam fingers into ears to avoid serious pain. The bird took off and flew OK, however, even through a turbulent thunderstorm as we approached Shanghai, where we arrived several hours late. Worst travel segment I have ever experienced, even considering some multiday typhoon delays.

Mark N
March 21, 2012 1:05 am

I’m unhappy traveling by air! Now, road travel is great. And, it’s a unique experience in the USA if you have the time and pack wisely.

Zeke_D
March 21, 2012 1:13 am

Some of my most recent flights I enjoyed watching the maps on display showing locations being flown over.. and realizing that not many years ago planes were shot down by idiot governments for “violating” these air spaces.
Now the idiot governments just violate the passengers at the terminals. Progress?

Adam Gallon
March 21, 2012 1:14 am

You should try flying into the USA. A loathsome process! You’re looked upon as being a criminal, by the rudest, surliest bunch of canutes, who’ve ever been poured into a uniform.
In Florida, we had to heave our bags from the carousel, put them onto another one, then catch the shuttle tram, wait to retreave the bags again, before finding civilised people.
Anyone else we came into contact with, who were involved with customer service, were pleasant & polite. Airport staff were just gobshites!

Rational Debate
March 21, 2012 1:19 am

Anthony & moderators – I’d just tried to post a comment, and for the first time got shifted to a screen that said my email addy is associated with a wordpress account/gravitar, and that I needed to use the back button and log in!! I hit the back button, and my comment is gone.
Is there any chance you can find and post the comment? Would it have gone into the spam filter/bucket? Why is wordpress suddenly requiring us to log in just to post a comment when it never has before? I’ve had the wordpress account for ages now, but almost never log in…
It forced me to log in before I could post this also.
{ Near as I can tell, it doesn’t make it to the queue then. -ModE}

Rational Debate
March 21, 2012 1:21 am

And of course now it is automatically posting using “Rational Debate” as my handle too, instead of allowing me to enter “Rational Db8.” What the heck is wordpress doing???
[It does what it does. Maybe cosmic rays… -ModE ]

Rational Debate
March 21, 2012 1:31 am

Sigh. Thanks for checking ModE. Any idea if this is a chance random thing, or is this a new wordpress ‘feature’ that’ll force us to log in before we can post from now on?
[ Near as I can tell, it’s a new WordPress security feature being ‘debugged’. It may stay, or go, depending on who knows what. WordPress has informational pages, somewhere, that might be useful. -ModE ]

Steve (Paris)
March 21, 2012 1:42 am

Paris CDG 1 is a fantastic circular terminal – if you get lost just keep walking and you’ll come to the right place. Parking is in the same building and the buses pull up close to the counters. CDG 3 is mostly for budget flights but also very easy to access and ‘navigate’. The mighty gleaming new Terminal 2 is horrific – linear so get it wrong and you’ll march for miles. Also mostly Air France so strike blighted and surly.
Surely the oil companies that finance this blog could spring for a NetJets subscription for Anthony? Then again NetJets is owned by Warren Buffet, so he probably wouldn’t be welcome (Buffet also has a large chuck of GE, which is structured to tap into Green Fear).

climatereason
Editor
March 21, 2012 1:53 am

Anthony
Bad luck! But it raises interesting questions as to how complex we are making life and how much time we spend on doing things that were once simple or we didn’t need to do at all. Nowhere is this more true than the internet/computers which I think pose a much greater danger to human life than agw. Let me explain.
Over the last couple of months I’ve had quite a few problems using WUWT. Biggest problem was when I just couldn’t enter the ‘leave a reply’ box in order to make a comment. When that eased the site had decided to become italicised-as you recently blogged about..
My internet connection was also becoming very fragmented and slow. Probable reason an increasingly crackly telephone line disrupting the flow. A phone call to the phone co, made with difficiulty, took me to a call centre in India where the operatives already difficult to understand accent was accentuated by my crackly phone line and their apparently standing in a tin room in a rain storm.
They assured me nothing was wrong with my line . I asured them it was . After a third call to helpful people whose accent was no easier due to their now havng apparently migrated to working in an echo chamber, I managed to get an appointment from the Telephone line co for four days hence within a four hour window. .
Engineer arrived (first appointment of the day-hurrah!) complete with cherry picker to go up the pole (health and safety) who checked the incoming lines-all clear-the fault must be within the house. The second operative now disappeared to pick other cherries- no doubt at Joe Romms house- whereby the first engineer deemed it impossible to go up a ladder without his operative, trained in ladder holding. So we had to wait for a new second operative, but in the meantime we opted to investigate the loft where the problem seemed to be the deterioration of the original (30 year old?) cabling.
To fix this a new piece of line was required to run inside the house from the eaves to the point inside the loft. Eventually the ladder holding expert arrived enabling the piece of cable to be poked through the eaves, which through lying flat out I managed to hook with a hi tech wooden pole with a piece of wire on the end. Eventually all was connected and everything worked.
Until 2 days later-today-when the internet is intermittent and slow… A phone call to India is required. I don’t know if I can face it. A trip to Real Climate seems preferable.
However, the serious point is that over the last 10/20 years we have come to rely so much on computers/internet and complex highly tecdhnial systems that few people understand. Our information is increasingly be held in the Cloud rather than on our computers. What happens to this pack of dominos when there is a serious solar flare or a concerted hacker attack to our convoluted systems?
Result. No computers. No internet. Tills in shops stop working. Drinking water isnt pumped, sewage isnt treated. Goods aren’t delivered to shops. Electricity and other services are disrupted. Petrol can’t come out of the petrol station pump. Money remains in the cash point. Result: Chaos and social breakfown in a couple of days. Forget AGW-our fate is tied to the smooth functioning of our increaingly complex world and it won’t take much for the dominos to fall.
(ps The phone engineer was brilliant throughout the two and a half hours he was here)
tonyb

kadaka (KD Knoebel)
March 21, 2012 2:03 am

From Rational Debate on March 21, 2012 at 1:19 am:

Anthony & moderators – I’d just tried to post a comment, and for the first time got shifted to a screen that said my email addy is associated with a wordpress account/gravitar, and that I needed to use the back button and log in!! I hit the back button, and my comment is gone.

A bunch of people have complained about the login problem. I have my little wordpress proto-blog, but with my ISP I have 8 or so possible email addresses so I made one before registering that’s only for wordpress. So it hasn’t affected me.
Try making another email address, going into your wordpress account and set that as the contact email, see if the problem goes away.

Rob
March 21, 2012 2:10 am

LOL
” It was then to my horror that I discovered I’d misread the wrong flight time,”
Actually, it sounds like you read the wrong flight time perfectly well.

March 21, 2012 2:18 am

There is an addendum to Murphy’s Law.
O’Toole’s Addendum states ” Murphy’s Law usually is optomistic.”
I guess all the above confirm this.

March 21, 2012 2:40 am

I have to confess…I couldn’t finish the stories. My stress level started building up and up as I read along, with flashbacks of all my plane trips and ill-timed computer failures flitting before my eyes. I started skipping parts before deciding that I just can’t do it. I won’t do it. I don’t have to read it all. I live in the free world; no one can make me. So, there. Sorry, Anthony.

David L
March 21, 2012 2:41 am

Your story confirms my conviction that if your destination is within a 12 hour drive, you drive. Anything further than thaf, or over large expanses of water, then you go ahead and subject yourself to the horrendously wastefull process of flying.
Once I took a business trip from Central PA to a town north of Atlanta GA. I left my house at 4:30 am to start the process. After a flight, delay in DC, another connecting flight, sitting on the tarmac, and rental car from the Atlanta airport through horrendous rush hour traffic we arrived at our hotel at 5:30 pm.
Months later we had to take a heavy piece of equipment to the same location. My boss asked how we were going to deal with the airports with this equipement. I said “simple, we’re not. We’re taking the company van”. So we left at 6:30 am (you are free to leave when you want when you drive) and arrived at our Atlanta hotel at 6:30pm. The drive was nice. We stopped for lunch, we even stopped to check out a fireworks store, And we didn’t have to experience the Atlanta rush hour traffic.
I personnally try and take a train if possible, followed by a car, and only when no other option will work I fly. It’s not a fear of flight but rather a realization that it’s an incredibly wasteful process that eats up your entire day no matter how far the flight, because the air time is the smallest fraction of the whole end-to-end process.

David L
March 21, 2012 2:51 am

As per my post above, seems Chico to Moscow is 739 miles. Provided 70mph that’s a little over 10 hours. Factor in lunch, some necessary breaks, is it 12 hours? In my world that means I’m driving and forget the airport nonsense.

E.M.Smith
Editor
March 21, 2012 3:04 am

@TonyB:
At the library today. Asked for help looking up a book (“State Of Fear”) as the screen was giving me “404 Error”…
Long story short: Something in network land was being cranky so NO computer in the library could look up where a book might be. The system is “county wide” as all books are shared in all the libraries in the county. (or maybe wider area…) The “librarians” had no idea where any book might be without the computer to tell them.
After a good 5 minutes, I was told “I think we’ll have to call I.T. support”.
I left the library, went to Barns and Noble and bought it for $10 (and got a Starbucks coffee to boot!) in less than 5 minutes. The clerk said “It will be in fiction” and we walked over, they pulled it off the shelf and handed it to me. IIRC, the shelves are sorted by author and we both knew who that was 😉 I walked to the in-store Starbucks and ordered, was asked if I was buying the book, and both were rung up together.
Don’t know how the library made out. Maybe I’ll check them again in a few days…
( I am becoming more convinced that the CGR / CME / Whatever gremlins are working overtime… and any day now Life As We Know It will come crashing down. Heck, I may even have to learn how to make coffee without a computerized coffee maker… something about hot water and coffee grounds… 😉

March 21, 2012 3:05 am

bobby b says:
March 20, 2012 at 7:49 pm
Someday, should you ever have a thirteen-year-old son during a period of time when you are traveling frequently by plane, and your son reads some book that describes how someone had a jolly good time by cutting a piece of aluminum foil into the shape of a gun and placing it inside of a book that someone else would be carrying in their carry-on luggage…
———————————
A book by Trevanian, pretty sure it was the The Eiger Sanction.

David L
March 21, 2012 3:18 am

@E.M.Smith on March 20, 2012 at 11:43
AMEN Brother!!!! My thoughts exactly!!! I wish I would have read your comment prior to my original post. I could have simply referenced yours with “IBID”

Matt
March 21, 2012 3:34 am

I once ended up chatting to a guy who missed the same flight as I did. He told me how he had built in “buffers” for every step going to the air port, so to make sure he would have plenty time to get there, no matter what. — But he still missed the flight. The reason: He went to the wrong air port first, and then all his buffers weren’t enough to manage the transfer from Luton to Stanstead in time 🙂

March 21, 2012 3:37 am

Zac says: March 20, 2012 at 5:22 pm
And you think you have problems? Why is it impossible to unplug earphones from a phone, carefully wind them up, put them in a safe pocket, yet when they are next taken out they are in a tangled bunch of knots that takes ages and much mental torment to sort out?

Ah ah! Of course I have that problem with, say, computer cables and transformer wires. Quietly left to themselves, they spontaneously develop incredible, creative knots and just get mutually entangled after you left them well separated.
Finally, a few months ago I heard of a paper demonstrating that space-time followed the Navier-Stokes equation, which hints at possible chaotic behavior. Voilá! All makes sense. 🙂
It can be worse than we thought, though. What if CO2 induces chaotic behavior in space-time? Can we get knots in our hair by 400 ppm?

March 21, 2012 3:44 am

Pamela Gray says: March 20, 2012 at 6:27 pm
Give me a jeep, a nearby river, a rod and reel with a fresh worm on the end, and I’m good. And if’n it’s the first fish of the season,

Interesting that you mention it, as I was considering that I gave up fishing, on retrospect, precisely because of the Navier-Stokes equation. (See above.)

DaveF
March 21, 2012 3:47 am

Reading all these stories makes me wonder if it isn’t time for the USA to invest in Bullet or TGV trains.