Thursday, February 12, 2015

Israel

[Preface: The following journal writing of a one week journey in Israel in February of 2014, is presented here completely unedited, as it is written directly from my Sixth journal book. It is [13] hand written pages.]

   I already forget what time we left our apartment to head to the airport, I think it was sometime between 3:30 and 4PM - it was before 4PM. We had to gas up the car first. The Friday late afternoon traffick was horrible - gridlocked. I believe it took us about an hour and a half - to just under two hours to get to Gardermoen. Our flight was scheduled for 7:40PM. The layover was in Zurich. The flight was just over two hours, we landed in Zurich at 10PM, we had to go through passport control and take a shuttle train to a different terminal. The connecting flight to Tel Aviv was to go at 10:45PM. We had just made it to the gate in time to board. The flight from Zurich to Tel Aviv was about three and a half hours. We landed in Tel Aviv at 3:30AM. We went through passport control and got our luggage, we had booked a rental car with Thrifty - when we got to the Thrifty service counter at the airport there was a customer - a guy in front of us, this guy was going through all kinds of problems and arguments to get a car rented. It was a bit of a fiasco and taking a long time. The guy working the service counter just put us on a shuttle van which took us straight to the Thrifty rental office and where we had to pick up the car. When we got to the rental office the woman we dealt with seemed kind of rude and she couldn't find our booked reservation for the car. But we finally got it all straightened out and got our rental car. I think by now it was around 5:30AM.
   From Tel Aviv it was a four hour drive South to Eilat. The route was the highway 40 South - through the barren yet majestic Israeli desert, to the 90 South. At around 9:30AM that Saturday morning we made it into Eilat. We checked in at the Motel Tsabar. That late morning into the early afternoon we laid at the beach - at the Red sea. We could see over the border to the country Jordan. The day was windy, and the water of the Red sea was too cold to swim. We fell asleep for a few hours - sunbathing. For the rest of that Saturday afternoon and on into the night, we just took it easy - checking out Eilat and having dinner. Saturday night the rain came - pouring. When we got back to the hotel from dinner there was an ambulance and the police at the Tsabar - but we never found out what had happened. It rained all day on Sunday. We couldn't go to the beach. We decided to hit the shopping malls and maybe to see a movie. As we were leaving the hotel, I noticed that the passenger rear tire was almost dead flat. We drove to a gas station to put air in the tire - we could hear the air leaking out, so we had to find a mechanics garage to get the tire fixed. We had full insurance coverage on the car so we didn't have to pay for the repair. This took some time. After all that we hit a couple of malls and ate lunch. The rest of Sunday was a bit uneventful, the rain lasted all day. We checked out of the Tsabar on Monday morning, and headed North on highway 90 for Jerusalem. More driving through the Israeli desert - but this time along the coastline of the Dead sea. In the early afternoon we stopped off for a few hours to relax and swim in the Dead sea. This was quite an experience. At around 4PM we got into Jerusalem. The hotel Commodore where we were staying at was in the Muslim quarter, the map we had from the Thrifty rental place was cut off right at the Muslim quarters and we got a little lost. We stopped to ask for directions and the folks we asked had no idea. People were telling us we were far away from where we needed to be. One lady even told us that our map wasn't even a map of Jerusalem. But we ended up getting it all sorted out and made our way to the Commodore. The hotel was at the base of Mount of Olives and about a thirty minute walk into the city center and old city. That first Monday evening in Jerusalem we walked around the old city, snapped some photos, drank wine in a pub Elin had found, and ate dinner at a vegetarian café we found in the city center.
   Tuesday February 18 - after breakfast we made the half an hour walk to the old city. We walked around a lot checking out the old city, I shot lots of photos, we went to the Western Wall (The Wailing Wall), we checked out the Virgin Mary Birth Place Church, we went inside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre - saw the tomb of Jesus and the stone - slab bed his body was laid to rest after he was crucified. We explored a lot in the old city, walked the narrow street ways, checked out the markets - mostly walking around the Jewish and Muslim quarters. In the Jewish quarter we ate a lunch of falafel and hummus, drank beer at a café.
   On Wednesday we took a bus to Bethlehem - (Palestine). We only spent a few hours in the afternoon in Bethlehem. We went to the Church of the Nativity (The Nativity Church) and saw the birth place of Jesus. We also saw the Christmas Church and the Virgin Mary's Church for the Syrian Orthodox. We ate lunch ate a café. When we left Bethlehem - the taxi driver that took us back to the bus station drove us by the graffiti laced wall of the West Bank dividing Palestine and Israel. We stayed in Jerusalem pretty much the entire week, except for those first two days of Eilat.
   Monday February 17th late afternoon to Friday the 21st - late night - that was all Jerusalem. Wednesday afternoon - after Bethlehem, all of Thursday, and Friday was all pretty much the same. Elin and I would make the thirty minute walk from the Commodore into the city center and the old city, we would walk around the old city, I shot photos, we would check out the markets, eat at cafes - mostly in the Jewish quarters of the old city and city center so we could drink wine or beer. In the Jewish quarter in the center we found a good vegan café - Village Green. We explored Jerusalem as much as we could - we saw a lot and did a lot, but there was also a lot we missed. Between Thursday night and Friday morning we were trying to figure out what we were going to do - our flight home from Tel Aviv went at 5:30AM Saturday morning the 22nd - we thought about checking out of the Commodore on Friday morning and going into Tel Aviv for the last day - to get a hotel at the beach there. Then we thought about going back to the Dead sea. We ended up staying in Jerusalem, at the Commodore but just relaxing, taking it easy, resting and sleeping a bit. Some time between 6 and 7PM we heard a lot of commotion and noise in the street in front of the Commodore - there were fireworks blasting off - it was a Muslim wedding. At this point Elin and I were also trying to figure out what we were going to do for dinner. The both of us really didn't want to make that thirty minute walk into the city center, and the only food spot closest was a pizza place a few blocks away. I jokingly said to Elin that it would be crazy if we went downstairs and got invited to the wedding dinner. We just figured on going to that pizza place. When we got down in the hotel lobby the hotel manager stopped us and asked us if we had eaten dinner yet, we told him that's what we were going to do - go get dinner, he and some of the others from the wedding told us we could join them, that there was plenty of food. My joke to Elin turned out to actually happen. There was a real nice buffet set up. So our last night in Jerusalem we had a nice free dinner at a Muslim wedding. After dinner we went back up to our room to sleep for a few more hours. We were back up at 11PM, took showers, packed up our luggage, and by midnight we checked out of the Commodore, leaving Jerusalem to head back to Tel Aviv. By the route of highway 1, it took us about forty minutes to get to Tel Aviv and the airport. We gassed up the rental car and took it back. By 1:30AM we were at the airport and all checked in. Our flight to Zurich was scheduled for 5:30AM, so we had about four hours to wait. We sat down and fall asleep for some time.
   Around 8AM we landed in Zurich. We took the train from the airport to the main station - we had booked a room at the Ibis hotel which was suppose to be right in Zurich - in the city, but it turned out to be in a smaller town called Adliswil which was a bit outside of Zurich. We had to take another train from the main station to Adliswil. So we get into Adliswil, and now we had to find the Ibis hotel, at the station we found a map of the town and by the look of the map, the hotel was still kind of far away. I had to call the hotel. The woman I talked to from the Ibis told me that we had to take a bus. This created a major problem. Our flight home from Zurich to Oslo was early the next morning - Sunday the 23rd at 6:55AM. We found out from the info counter at the main station that the first earliest train from Adliswil to Zurich main was at 5:30AM, and by the time we would make the connecting train from the main station back to the airport, we would be at the airport at 6:15AM. This would not work at all. By now Elin and I were very over tired and very hungry. We skipped out on the Ibis and took the train back into Zurich. Now we were back at the main station. We went to the tourist info center at the station, they helped us find and book another hotel - the Hotel Alexander - which was only about a couple of blocks away from the station in the old town center area. I think by now it was sometime between 12PM noon and 1PM. We checked into the Alexander then went out to get something to eat. We ended up at a restaurant right across the street from our hotel, and had pizza and wine. After we ate we walked around the old town area for a bit - shot a few photos, then went to a grocery store and bought some beer, and went back to the hotel to rest. Later on that Saturday night it poured rain. We slept. We were up at 4AM Sunday morning, checked out of the Alexander, and walked the couple of blocks to the train station. It was cold and still raining. The very first train to the airport was at 5AM, we had about a half an hour to wait. For money, we only had some coins left - I think it was around 1.20 or 1.30 Swiss Francs, we hit up a little vendor stand to get a cup of coffee but we were some change short - didn't quite have enough. We told the guy exactly how much we had and he hooked us up, selling us a small cup of coffee for what coins we had left. Elin and I shared the small cup of coffee. The train only took fifteen minutes from the main station to the airport, so by 5:15AM we were at the airport. We had a good amount of time to check in and make the flight. It all started out on schedule, we boarded the plane, but ended up getting delayed for a half an hour.

Germany: Berlin [Part II]

[Preface: The following journal writing of a weekend excursion in Berlin, Germany in September of 2013, is presented here completely unedited, as it is written directly from my Fifth journal book. It is [9.5] hand written pages.]

   Next travel agenda: Berlin, Germany - for the third time. Guy's weekend in September '13, with Elin's brothers Andreas and Christian, and Kjell Arne, and three others who I have not met.
   It's the first of September, a Sunday evening, 8PM. I'm flying out on Ryan Air from Rygge airport, on Wednesday September 4th at 10:30AM. I'll be in Berlin just after noon. I'm there until Sunday September 8th - my flight home leaves at 9PM - so I'm basically going to be in Berlin for five days. Christian and his friend David who is British, Andreas and his friend Kjell Arne, with two more guys are driving down from Southern Sweden in a mini-van that they all rented. They won't be getting into Berlin until Thursday evening (Sept. 5th) around 6PM. So, I will have about a day and a half there alone - and again also on Sunday (Sept. 8), they will all leave to drive back home that Sunday morning and my flight goes at 9PM that night. I'll have pretty much all day Sunday in Berlin alone too. Almost three days alone in Berlin! The Arcotelvelvet hotel where they all are staying at was completely booked up, so I'm staying in a hostel called Generator - it's on the same street as the Arcotelvelvet, some blocks away. This may get interesting.
   Right now it's just a few minutes over 8AM, it's Wednesday the 4th, my friend Knut drove me to the airport - I was here at 7:30AM - two and half hours to wait. I'm all checked in. I bought a few magazines for the flight, and now here I sit in an airport café. The night before, Elin and I went to bed at 11PM but it took me a while to fall asleep. I laid in bed thinking, words for another poem ran through my mind - (I need to remember, get them together and written.) - I guess for the first time ever really, I really thought about LBK and his stories of solo European journeys and adventures. I had to admit to myself I was nervous about this trek. I thought...about - how LBK did quite a lot of solo journeys...to travel alone. I know I should be fine, everything should go OK. Hour and a half flight - the plane was not so full, I took a window seat right behind the wing and ended up having the row to myself. Somebody - one of the ladies sitting either in front of me or behind stank real bad - like she needed a shower. The plane landed just before noon, took the train from the airport, making one connection change...I thought I was going to have to go all the way to the main big central station but I double checked the route map on the train and realized I could jump off one stop before. I walked a couple of blocks and found the Arcotelvelvet where everyone else is staying. I went in there to double check it was the right hotel and to ask directions to the Generator hostel where I was staying. It was just a block away. I went to the Generator to check in but my room wasn't ready, so I left with my backpack, walked a block or so up the street, found a café and ordered a beer and a pizza. An hour later I went back to the hostel and got checked in, I had to buy a lock for 3 Euros for the luggage locker in the room, I dropped off my bag, grabbed my camera, and headed out walking the city streets of Berlin. I shot graffiti and street art shots, found a skate shop called Titus, sat at a café across the street from the T.V. tower drinking a one liter glass mug of beer. At the café I met a guy named John, he was from Sarasota, Florida, had been living in Amsterdam for a few years, and just moved to Berlin to study. I walked around and shot some more photos. The evening was coming on, I went back to the hostel, to the room to rest and see if any of the other people who were staying in the room were there. The room had four sets of bunk beds for eight people. I got back to the room and there was one guy, Mario, he was from El Salvador but lived in Australia. We were talking for a while then I went down to the hostel café for dinner. When I got back up to the room Mario was still there with three more of the people staying there - a guy named Marcus from Stockholm, Sweden and two French girls who I didn't get their names. We all talked for a little while then Marcus and the two French girls left, Mario fell asleep, and I rested for a bit. There were two other guys staying in the room as well, but I haven't really met or talked to them yet. Sometime between 8:30 and 9PM I got back up and went down to the hostel bar. Drinking beer, sitting at one of the sidewalk patio tables in front of the hostel - I met some folks from Ireland, three guys and a girl - Ryan, Steve, Craig, and Sara. We drank, talked, and made fun of the hookers that worked the street in front of the hostel until about midnight, then I called it a night and went back up to the room to sleep. I didn't sleep so good that Wednesday night.
   The next day - Thursday - I spent about four hours of the day from late morning to mid-afternoon again walking the streets, shooting photos and checking out the city. I started the day with a coffee at a café around the corner from the hostel, I went to Check Point Charlie which took about thirty minutes to walk there, then I went to the Holocaust memorial, then to the Topographies Des Terrors museum. It was around 3:30PM when I got back to the hostel. At the hostel café I had a late lunch with Mario, drinking brews and talking travels. I went back up to the room to rest and wait for the guys to get into town. Around 8:30PM I went to their hotel and waited for them in the lobby. We took the subway into the West Berlin side for dinner and pub hopping. A night of drinking. (The group was me, Christian and his friend David, Andreas, Kjell Arne, Martin, and Fredrik.)
   On Friday I met the guys at 9:30AM in the Arcotel lobby. We went for breakfast, then Kjell Arne and Christian took off to go meet with one of Kjell Arne's friends for a few hours. Andreas, David, Martin, Fredrik, and I spent the early afternoon walking around East Berlin. We walked by the T.V. tower, went to the Brandenburger Tor, hit the DDR museum. By 1PM we all met back up at the Arcotelvelvet, we had a 2PM scheduled tour of the Berliner Kindl brewery. Back on trains, subways, and trams. The brewery tour was sweet. It cost 9 Euros and included sampling brews in the brewery pub. We all got wasted. The Friday night was dinner and more pub hopping - lots of drinking as usual.
   Saturday was the typical start, I met the guys at 9:30AM in the hotel lobby, we went for breakfast, then hit the city. The main thing we did on Saturday was hit up the Teknik museum - (Technology museum). It was well worth the 6 Euro admission fee. The place was huge. It was everything from early German technology - computer, film and photography, chemistry and medicine, auto and trains, textile, beer brewing, airplanes and boats, communications, just so much. It was awesome. We spent a few hours there. Berlin Saturday night life - dinner and pub hopping.
   The last day - Sunday - I was up by 8AM, I got dressed and packed all my stuff back into my backpack, I checked out of the Generator Mitte hostel, put my backpack in the luggage room for the day, I met the guys at 9AM for breakfast at the café next door to the Arcotel, and by 10:30AM they were loading up their gear into their rented van and taking off to head home. We said our goodbyes, shook hands and hugged, wishing safe journeys home. Once again I still had the Sunday afternoon alone in East Berlin. My flight home was at 9PM, I planned to take the 5:20PM train back to the airport - it may have been a bit early but I liked giving myself the time at airports - checking in, security checks, etc. So I had about six and a half hours of the day. I stopped back at the hostel to go to the luggage room and get my camera and jacket from my backpack, then headed straight to the T.V. tower. It was a fifteen minute walk. Two hundred and three meters above East Berlin with a 360 degree view. The ticket was 12.50 Euros. I only stayed up in the tower for about a half an hour - shot photos of the city and sat at the bar drinking a brew. I left the T.V. tower and walked the thirty minutes to the train station, I wanted to take care of the tickets arrangements right away. I got my ticket and a train schedule, then walked ten minutes back to the hostel. It was twenty minutes over 1PM, I had about four hours left. I sat at the hostel café drinking beer and writing. Now I felt like Kerouac or Bukowski.


Afrika: [Round Two] Tunisia

[Preface: The following journal writing of an eight day holiday in Tunisia, Afrika  July 8th to 15th, 2013, is presented here completely unedited, as it is written directly from my Fifth journal book. It is [11] hand written pages.]

Afrika - Round Two
   Six months later, Summer 2013...(July 8th to 15th) Elin and I spent eight days in North Afrika, in Hammamet, Tunisia on the Mediterranean. We did this trip charter style, it was our first time doing a charter trip and it'll probably be our last. But we did get a real good cheap price for the flight and hotel, but we didn't have all-inclusive. We left Gardermoen - Oslo on a Monday, our flight was scheduled for 2:55PM but ended up getting delayed for almost two hours. It was about a four hour flight to Tunisia. It was pretty late by the time we checked in to our hotel the Residence La Paix. There we had a studio apartment style room. We dropped our bags off in the room and went to find a restaurant for dinner. We walked a few blocks and ended up at a place called L'Aquarium. We ordered a bottle of red wine, I had a plate of grilled vegetables - sun drenched ripe flavorful tomatoes, onions, eggplant, zucchini squash - it reminded me of the grilled vegetable plates I got in Greece and Albania, except here the plate portion amount was smaller. Elin wanted fish - and she thought she ordered fish but the waiter got things mixed up and she ended up with shrimp instead, and the shrimp plate only had five shrimp on it, also which Elin said the shrimp wasn't so good, didn't seem so fresh. The bill was 88 Dinar, which we found out pretty quickly was over priced for a dinner of such small portions and not so good food.
   The next day - Tuesday, we somehow woke up early at around 7:30AM, but we laid in bed - falling back asleep but not for so much longer, maybe another hour or so. We found out it was only about a fifteen minute walk into the city center area of Hammamet, and to the Medina - (market area). On the walk into town we stopped off at a small sidewalk café - Café Queen - that was owned and run by a young boy and his father, we had breakfast there - croissants, coffee, and fresh made orange juice. We walked around the town center area and by the Medina, we found a bakery and bought a couple of loaves of fresh bread, stopped by a small grocery store to buy cheese, pasta - spaghetti, salt, bottles of water and pineapple juice, and we found a small vegetable stand where we bought fresh tomatoes, onions, zucchini squash, green peppers, garlic, and olive oil. We hit up that vegetable stand a few times - almost an average of every other day. Everyday for breakfast we had coffee, juice, and fresh homemade bruschetta from the bread from the bakery - we toasted the bread right on the hot burner plates of the stove - cut up the fresh tomatoes, sliced the garlic, and added the olive oil and sea salt. It happened to be Ramadan during the week we were there - Ramadan is a Muslim tradition when the Muslim people fast for one month during the day, and they eat around dusk/sundown at about 7PM, they go to the Mosques and pray - prayer chants are broadcast on loud speakers from the Mosques and can be heard all over the city - it reminded me of when we were in Albania. Since it was Ramadan, during the days pretty much all of the restaurants or cafes were closed all day long. Most of the markets, the Medina, and other places were open until 7PM, then everything would close down and people would go home to eat. Everything would open back up again around 9PM - restaurants and cafes. So for about two hours - 7PM - 9PM - it was like a ghost town. The streets were dead. Hardly any traffick, everything closed up, no one walking the sidewalks, in a way it was kind of creepy. I thought it was a bit interesting to be there, in Tunisia, an Afrikan - Muslim country, during Ramadan, to experience the culture - but in the same it was also a little frustrating since we were on holiday and wanted to eat out at restaurants more than we got to do so. When we did eat out, we had some late night dinners - usually between 9 and 10PM. So most of our lunches and dinners we cooked at our little studio apartment room at the hotel. And just like how we made fresh bruschetta for breakfast everyday, our lunches and dinners were pasta - spaghetti, with fresh homemade tomato sauce with onion and garlic, we would fry up the fresh zucchini squash, and also have the fresh bread from the bakery. Those were pretty much our meals everyday, yet it didn't seem to get old or boring to eat bruschetta for breakfast and pasta for lunch and dinner - (reminding me of Kerouac's On The Road).
   July 10th, that Wednesday in the afternoon we took a taxi to the train station with the plan to take the train (Northwest) to the capitol city of Tunis. When we got to the train station we had the taxi driver wait, the station was dead - no one was around, the taxi driver helped us find and track down someone who worked there - it took some time. There were no more trains that day running to Tunis, so we wanted to buy tickets for the 10AM train on Thursday. The guy working at the station couldn't get the computer to work right so we couldn't pre-order the tickets. We just had to wait until the morning. We woke up early - on time on Thursday morning, we thought - had the idea that maybe the train station would be crowded in the morning and there could be a long line. The taxi got us to the station around 9:15AM, and again it was dead. No long line. We had planned on staying one night at a hotel in Tunis and going back to Hammamet on Friday, so we had packed some clothes in Elin's rugsack backpack. We had forty-five minutes to wait. The train ended up being an hour late. We didn't leave the station until 11AM. It was about an hour train ride to Tunis. When we got to the station in Tunis, we went to the information desk to ask about hotels with swimming pools in the city but it turned out that none of the hotels in the city center had pools. The lady working the desk told us we should go to Hammamet, which was already where we were staying. So we decided not to stay the night in Tunis - just spend the afternoon. The station had baggage lockers, so we rented one and put Elin's rugsack in a locker. Then we realized we needed to go back to the ticket counter to buy return tickets and check the train times back to Hammamet. The last train back was at 3PM. Basically, we ended up having only about two and a half hours of that Friday afternoon in Tunis. We took a taxi straight to the Medina. As we were crossing the street some kind of altercation - argument broke out between a taxi driver and another driver, it was almost a fist fight, lots of yelling, the cops showed up to break it up. The building near the Medina was under some kind of construction, there were fences and razor wire all around, with police and armed guards - military style. It seemed crazy. The Medina was huge, crowded. We walked around, did our shopping. We bought a few ceramic - pottery bowls, a couple of carpets, a nice leather bag, and Elin was trying on some leather sandals - she wasn't sure at first if she really wanted to buy them but then one of the straps on the sandals she was already wearing broke, so she had no choice but to buy new sandals. I only got a chance to shoot a few photos, not as much as I wanted to. Not because I was afraid to take my camera out in the crowded Medina, but because we had kind of a lot of bags to carry from the shopping we had done. We left the Medina and hailed a taxi around 2:40PM and made it back to the train station with just enough time to get the rugsack from the locker and catch the 3PM train back to Hammamet. (Now, I really can't remember if it was on Friday or Saturday...it may have been on Friday.) Anyway - in the evening, sometime between 5 and 6PM we took a taxi to Nabeul. We wanted to check out the town and Medina there. Right after the taxi dropped us off and we started to walk around, we kept getting hit up by other taxi drivers telling us it was not a good time to be in Nabeul because everything would be closing up soon for Ramadan - they kept asking us if we wanted to go somewhere else. We walked around the town center for a little while, it was close to 7PM and everyplace was starting to close up for Ramadan, we found one café that was staying open but they weren't making everything that was on the menu. They were only offering couscous, salad, and brick - which is traditional Muslim - Tunisia, it's almost like a quesadilla type with chicken, veggies, cheese. We ate there. We both had salads, shared a bowl of couscous, and Elin had a brick. The café got crowded with people eating their Ramadan dinner. There was a Mosque a few blocks up on the same street as the café, as we ate we listened to the prayer chants from the Mosque, it was peaceful. After dinner we went to another café for coffee, then we went to the Medina. We ended up buying some more ceramic pottery bowls.
   The remaining few days in Hammamet we just relaxed, sitting at the beach, sunbathing, swimming in the Mediterranean sea, drinking beer. Our last morning at the La Paix we decided to check out the breakfast buffet - (now, as I wrote at the beginning of this story, this was a charter trip but it was not all-inclusive) - of course we knew we would have to pay for the breakfast - which turned out to be not good at all - in the end, we ended up skipping out on the breakfast check - not paying.

Wednesday, February 11, 2015

Afrika: Tanzania and Zanzibar Island

[Preface: The following journal writing of a two and a half week excursion in Tanzania, Afrika from December 29th, 2012 to January 16th, 2013, is presented here completely unedited, as it is written directly from my Fifth journal book. It is [26.5] hand written pages, plus [3] pages of reference notes.]

   *Quick reference notes:
Istanbul, Turkey and Tanzania Afrika: Jan. 2013.
Sat. Dec. 29, 2012: fly from Goteborg Sweden airport (7:10PM). Arrived in Istanbul - sometime between 10 & 11PM, to Novotel hotel.
Sun. Dec.30, 2012: afternoon in the city of Istanbul - (approx. 6 hours). Evening flight from Istanbul, Turkey to Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania (7 hour flight). Arrived in Dar Es Salaam 4AM - with 1 hour to get through passport control & customs (now 5AM - taxi 30 minutes outside of Dar Es Salaam to Beachcomber hotel, finally go to bed around 6AM - sunrise.)
Mon. Dec. 31, 2012 to Wed. Jan. 2, 2013: stayed at the Beachcomber - Dar Es Salaam. New Year's Eve party - dinner, fireworks. Check out the street markets.
Wed. Dec. 2, 2013: Dar Es Salaam bus station - bus to Morogoro (about 4 or 5 hours, I think), took Dala Dala - (city bus) from Morogoro bus station into center of Morogoro. Morogoro - 2 night, 2 day at Oasis hotel. (Wed. & Thurs.)
Fri. Jan. 4, 2013: check out of Oasis hotel (6AM). One and a half hour van ride to safari - Vuma Hills: Mikumi National Park. Stayed 1 night at Foxes Safari Camp. Safari.
Sat. Jan. 5, 2013: half day safari trip, and back to Morogoro - to Oasis hotel. Stayed 2 nights in Morogoro. Checked for train to either Dar Es Salaam of Tanga, (no train - only 2 trains a week - next train was that Tues. 8th, then Fri. 11th.)
Mon. Jan. 7, 2013: checked out of Oasis. Took hotel taxi van to bus station for bus to Tanga - 2 buses, only go once a day at 9AM, both buses full - couldn't go to Tanga. Oasis hotel van drove us back to Dar Es Salaam, to the ferry port. Took ferry to Zanzibar Island. 1 night in Stone Town, at the Abusa hotel.
Tues. Jan. 8, 2013: took a taxi from Stone Town to the East coast side of Zanzibar. The village of Jambiani, stayed at the Visitor's Inn - 5 nights, Tues. 8th til Sun. 13th.
Thurs. Jan. 10, 2013: Elin and I went snorkeling - my first time, (I got stung by a jellyfish.) I helped hoist the sail, and we both got to steer the boat. (Political - leaders conference at the Visitor's Inn.)
Fri. Jan. 11, 2013: boat race - big event for Jambiani.
Sat. Jan. 12, 2013: check out of Visitor's Inn, leave Jambiani village and go back to Stone Town until Tues. 15th - (2 nights in Stone Town.)

   I really want to start this story about two weeks earlier, before the travel to Afrika begins. This part of the story - in mid-December may not be so exciting or eventful, but for me personally it was a short period of frustration and aggravation which I want to share and get off my chest. So anyway, my wife and I - our second car, a Hyundai Atos has had this problem of not starting up, sputtering, running rough, and stalling out whenever it's damp and wet outside. It only does this when damp and wet - Summer or Winter, hot or cold out, and it's acted this way for the two years we've had the car. So, it's mid-December and the Atos was dead, it wouldn't start up at all. I had it parked near the center of Son by these apartments and the Europris. It sat there for about two weeks. The Christmas holiday break came, Elin and I had five days off from work and we went to her folk's house in Toreboda Sweden for the holiday. It was Wednesday December 26th, Elin and I had to go back home to Norway for two days of work (Thursday the 27th and Friday the 28th) - we would be driving back to Sweden, to her parent's house that Friday night after work - our flight was to leave December 29th, Saturday evening around 6PM. So, on that Wednesday as Elin and I were packing up the Volkswagen to head back to Norway for two days, her dad Egon tells us to rent a trailer so we can tow the Atos back to Sweden on Friday night. Elin's parents thought it was a good idea, and Elin went along with it - agreeing. Over all I knew it could be a good idea, to take care of the matter as soon as possible, to rent a trailer and tow the Atos back to Sweden on Friday night, but I also knew the whole deal wouldn't be as easy as said and would be stressful. I really didn't want to do it - especially right before leaving on such a trip. But it was three against one. I knew I could have no say in this. (Elin's cousin is a mechanic and owns his own shop. He told us he could fix the Atos for real cheap - cash, paid "under the table".) So we rented a trailer, and towed an empty trailer back to Norway that Wednesday night. We parked the trailer near the Atos - in the center near those apartments and the Europris. The next evening, Thursday, after work I had to get the Atos loaded up onto the trailer - ready for towing on Friday night. I got help from our landlord Frank, my friend Kristian - who is also Frank's son-in-law, and my friend Andre. The Atos was buried in snow so Frank and I went down with shovels to dig it out as we waited for Andre and Kristian to show up to help. Frank and I got the car dug out and my own curiosity got to me, I wanted to try to start the Atos up - in which it did. It started right up first try with no hesitation, no sputtering out or stalling. It was running solid. I let it run. By now Andre and Kristian showed up, and the four of us got the Atos loaded up onto the trailer. Friday evening - Elin and I got the trailer hitched up to the Volkswagen pretty quickly and with no problem, that is until we tried to pull out, driving the VW, actually towing the Atos. There was still a lot of ice on the ground and the VW couldn't gain traction and wasn't powerful enough to tow the trailer with the Atos on it. We wouldn't be able to tow the Atos. I got up on the trailer, got in the Atos, again it started right up with no problem. We figured we'd have to get the Atos back off the trailer and just drive it to Sweden, and tow the empty trailer with the VW. The metal latches of the straps around the tires of the Atos that help hold it stable on the trailer had frozen, so we had to cut them off. After all this stressful hassle we got the car back off the trailer. Elin drove the Atos, and I took the VW towing the empty trailer. The main road going out of Son is kind of a steep hill, the road was wet but there was no ice - the VW was barely strong enough to tow the empty trailer up. I had it in first gear and was racing the motor, which I knew wasn't good. When I tried to shift into second I almost lost it, and had to drop back into first gear fast. There was no way at all the VW could have made it up that hill if the Atos would've been on the trailer. It was real late, I think around midnight when we got to Elin's parent's house in Sweden.
   Saturday December 29th - it was a two hour drive to the airport in Goteborg, Elin's mom Ingrid figured we could leave the house at 2PM, our flight was at 6PM, and we also had to drop the Atos off at Elin's cousin's shop. Elin and I got a bit stressed on the time. We dropped the Atos off at the shop, and left there for the airport basically right at 2PM. We got to the airport in Goteborg around 4PM. The baggage check-in line wasn't real long but the girl working the counter was very slow. We made it with only about thirty or forty minutes till boarding time. Our first stop was Istanbul, Turkey. It was about a three hour flight to Istanbul. We had basically a day layover in Istanbul. It was around 11PM when we got to the hotel, so we took showers and went to bed. The next day - Sunday December 30th, we had about six hours in Istanbul. We took a taxi from the hotel into the city. We took a tour of a Mosque, walked about the city streets and markets, and drank Turkish coffee in a café. Photos were shot. Then it was back to the airport. We got to the airport an extra hour too early, which was my fault. I had looked at the time wrong on my boarding ticket, mistaking the boarding time for the take off time. We ate dinner and had a few beers. It was a seven hour flight from Istanbul, Turkey to Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania, Afrika.
   We landed in Dar Es Salaam around 4AM, it took us about an hour to get through passport control and get our bags, and we got to our hotel - the Beachcomber around 5:30AM. It was almost 6AM and the sun was rising when we went to sleep. We stayed two nights at Beachcomber. We were there for New Year's Eve. For New Year's Eve the Beachcomber held a big party with a huge dinner buffet set up. There were a lot of people who showed up, there was a show with traditional Afrikan music and dances, people swam in the pool, and of course at midnight the fireworks went off. Across the waters of the Indian ocean we could see the fireworks out over the city of Dar Es Salaam. There really wasn't much of a beach at Beachcomber, so we couldn't swim in the Indian ocean there. The few days we were there we just sunbathed and swam in the pool - hanging out, relaxing and drinking beer. Elin and I did take a motorcycle taxi into Dar Es Salaam one afternoon to check out some street markets. (The motorcycle taxis in Afrika are like the Tuk-Tuks in Asia, but in Afrika they call them three-wheelers.)
   On Wednesday the 2nd of January 2013 we checked out of the Beachcomber, took a taxi to the bus station in Dar Es Salaam - the bus station was complete hectic chaos, a lot more so than the bus stations in Asia. I can't remember how much the bus tickets cost, but we ended up paying an extra 5,000 Shillings for our bags - which was most likely some kind of scam. We were headed inland - East, to Morogoro. It was about a four hour bus trip. From the bus station in Morogoro we had to take a Dala-Dala (smaller city bus) into the center of Morogoro. At the station - more hectic chaos, the people were friendly and helpful - telling us which Dala-Dalas to take to get into the center of Morogoro, they fill the Dala-Dalas, packing in as many folks as they can, we had bus drivers surrounding us, offering better prices than the next guy, baggage porters grabbing at our backpacks, all trying to get us to take their Dala-Dalas. We got into the center of Morogoro and got a taxi - we had no hotel reservations and didn't really know where to go. Everything was on the fly. Our taxi driver took us to a hotel called the Oasis, which turned out to be walking distance from the center. We spent two nights at the Oasis in Morogoro. The backdrop scenery at the Oasis was amazing - a beautiful lush green mountain range. We walked about the town, taking photos, and we checked out the old post office - sending out some postcards to family and friends. (I have this old retro 1960's leather camera case I use for my Canon G10, I bought it in the Summer of 2011 in Shoreditch - London at a street market, the stitching was coming out and it was starting to fall apart. As we walked around Morogoro we passed by a lot of street vendors doing shoe repair and leather work. I ended up getting my camera case fixed - re-stitched for 2,000 Shillings, I tipped the guy an extra 500.) At the Oasis we booked a two day safari with a one night stay at Foxes Safari Camp at Vuma Hills in the Mikumi National Park. We got up around 5AM Friday January 4th - morning and checked out of the Oasis, the hotel had a taxi van scheduled to take us to Mikumi National Park at 6AM. It was about an hour and a half drive to Mikumi. On the main two lane highway road as we came into the Mikumi park area we had already started to spot giraffes, impalas, wild pigs (warthogs), and a small herd of elephants with a baby elephant crossed the highway. We got to Foxes Safari Camp - Vuma Hills and checked in. Foxes was expensive - $140 U.S. per night. The place was actually in part of the jungle of the Mikumi National Park, there were no fences around the compound so there was the possibility of the wild animals coming into the camp. The rooms were big tents set up on wooden platforms raised up off the ground. They had front porch areas with a small table and two chairs, the inside of the tents were done up very nice, we did have full bathrooms with a shower in the tent. The camp didn't have full electricity, they had generators that they only ran from 6PM to 10PM. The older lady that ran Foxes camp gave us flashlights to use after dark and told us that (after dark) if we went from the restaurant/bar back to our tents or from our tents to the restaurant that we had to have a guide take us - the guides were Afrikan Maasai warriors armed with only a machete and spear - we figured they would at least have a gun, a rifle or something more than just a spear. It was still pretty early in the morning, we put our bags in our tent and Elin and I went over to her parent's tent to have breakfast. The Oasis hotel in Morogoro had packed a breakfast for us - we had bread with butter and fresh fruit jam, and fresh fruit - passion fruit, oranges and bananas. After our breakfast we got back in the van with our driver and a guide from Foxes and headed out on our safari. We saw monkeys, baboons, giraffes, elephants, warthogs, water buffalo, hippos, crocodiles, impalas - we saw so many impalas that they became boring. We were out on our morning safari for just a few hours. We went back to Foxes camp for lunch and rested for about an hour, then we loaded back up in the van and headed back out for another few hours in the afternoon. In the afternoon we saw (three) lions. Lots of photos were shot. In the late afternoon when we got back to Foxes camp, Elin and her parents took a swim in the small pool and I lounged poolside - we all relaxed for a while and drank beer. At dinner time - it was dark by now - Elin and I met her parents down at the restaurant, she and her mom drank beer, and Egon and I had vodka with fresh apple juice. As we had our drinks waiting for dinner to start we fed pieces of fresh bananas to a bunch of bushbabies - small nocturnal animals, and on the ground below the wooden deck of the restaurant the camp staff threw out scraps of food into a pile to feed wild animals - we saw wild jungle cats and badgers. We drank wine with dinner. 5th of January - Saturday morning, we woke up, took showers, had breakfast, checked out of Foxes camp, loaded up the van and headed back out for another short - couple of hours - safari, then we went back to Morogoro, back to the Oasis hotel. We stayed another two nights at the Oasis. Egon had the idea he wanted to take a train someplace, Ingrid found out there was a train station in Morogoro. The train station was only about a couple of blocks from the hotel - like a five minute walk. I think it was Sunday when we walked down to the station - it was closed. There were some people lurking around at the station. Ingrid had her map out and we got approached by one guy, he asked us where we wanted to go - to take a train somewhere. We told him we wanted to head someplace where we could find beaches, or maybe take the train back to Dar Es Salaam...either way, it was Sunday, the station was closed, and he told us the train only ran on Tuesdays and Fridays - so we were out of luck on taking a train anywhere. He told us he was from a town called Tanga, it was North and on the coast - also not so far from the Kenya border. He told us there were some nice beaches in Tanga, and that there were also buses to Tanga. There were only two buses daily from Morogoro to Tanga, and both buses left daily at 9AM. It would have been about a four or five hour bus ride to go from Morogoro to Tanga. We went back to the Oasis and told the hotel manager we wanted the hotel taxi van to take us to the bus station that following Monday morning - the plan now was to take a bus to Tanga. He asked us why we wanted to go to Tanga, that there was nothing in Tanga, he said it was a dead town. We checked out of the Oasis on Monday morning - the 6th, the hotel van had us at the bus station by 8:30AM, but both of the 9AM daily buses to Tanga were already booked - filled - no tickets left. So we couldn't get to Tanga. We made the decision to head back to Dar Es Salaam, and take a ferry over to Zanzibar Island. It turned out that the Oasis hotel van was also going to Dar Es Salaam - the hotel was picking up some other tourists at the airport. So we got a private taxi van ride back to Dar Es Salaam to the ferry port. The port was chaotic like the bus stations. Porters all over the place, grabbing at our bags, wanting to help, asking for money - tips to carry our backpacks. At the gate we had to show our passports and ferry tickets - handing them through the bars of the gate, then when we got the OK - they would barely open the gate, giving us just enough space to get through with our bags. The ferry took two hours from Dar Es Salaam to the port at Stone Town Zanzibar Island. It was hectic and more chaos at the port in Stone Town, we had to fill out customs cards and get through passport control. We walked a couple of blocks and went to a bar/restaurant for a small lunch and beer. The place had a full menu but when we went to order, the waitress told us the only thing they were actually serving was pizzas. So we all ordered pizza. It turned out to be the most flavorless pizza ever - it was just no good at all. We only stayed one night in Stone Town - at the Abusa hotel. The Abusa was amazing, beautiful - the décor was kind of Victorian, very antique style. That night Elin and I went to dinner just ourselves, without her parents, and we walked around Stone Town for a bit.
   The next day, Tuesday morning, we checked out of the Abusa and took a taxi van to the East coast side of Zanzibar. We checked into the Visitor's Inn, in the beach village of Jambiani. Visitor's Inn was a Muslim owned and run hotel so it was a "dry" hotel, no bar, no alcohol - and there was some sort of political conference going on at the hotel, there were politicians all over the place. We stayed in Jambiani for five nights. We had sea view bungalows right on the beach, and right next door on the other side of a concrete wall was a beach bar, and not far at all up the beach was another hotel and bar spot called Garden Bar. So we had two bar spots very close by. The days and nights in Jambiani were very mellow, relaxing. We sat on the beach, sunbathed, drank beer, and swam in the Indian ocean. The water of the Indian ocean was very tropical - that greenish-blue, almost like in Asia, but the water was very warm. It was almost not so refreshing to swim in. The 10th of January, that Thursday, Elin and I went out snorkeling to a coral reef not too far out from Jambiani. It was my first time snorkeling. The boat our guide took us out in was this wooden boat - it looked hand carved and homemade - it probably was, it looked like it was made traditional style, like maybe how they have been making the boats for centuries, all the boats in Jambiani were like this. I had to help our guide hoist up the sail and on the way out to the reef, Elin worked the rudder - steering the boat. I steered the boat on the way back to shore.
   The next day on Friday, in the afternoon, the small village of Jambiani was jumping with excitement, there were people everywhere, almost every boat it seemed was being pulled into shore by the Garden Bar, they were lining the boats up, a huge crowd was gathered, people everywhere. It was a big boat race. It was awesome. The following day, Saturday the 11th of January was Zanzibar's Independence day, but there were no big parties, or fireworks, or any kind of celebrations. No one seemed to care. It was just another day. Sunday the 13th was our last morning in Jambiani, we checked out of the Visitor's Inn and took a taxi van back again to Stone Town. We stayed two nights in Stone Town. Those last couple of days and nights on Zanzibar in Stone Town we walked around the town, checking out the markets - basically getting lost amongst the maze of narrow streets and alleys, we checked out the old fort, hit up cafes and bar spots - drank beer, lounged at the pool of the Dow Palace hotel where we were staying, and I shot some photos.
   The 15th of January, a Tuesday, we checked out of the Dow Palace and left Zanzibar Island, taking the ferry back to Dar Es Salaam. It was after noon, some time around 1 or 2PM, we took a taxi from the ferry port to a hotel in the city of Dar Es Salaam. We took a hotel with a swimming pool. Our flight home was scheduled very early Wednesday morning the 16th at 4AM so we really only needed the hotel room for that Tuesday afternoon - into the night. We would check out around midnight or 1AM Tuesday night/Wednesday morning. At the check-in desk Ingrid and I said we only wanted one room with two beds for the four of us, but since there was four of us, the hotel staff didn't want to give us one room to share. They wanted us to take two rooms. After several minutes of me and Ingrid explaining our situation - how we didn't need the room over night, that we would be checking out around midnight, they finally let the four of us take just one room to share. We got to the room...the two twin sized beds were thee smallest twin beds I had ever seen. We all changed into our bathing suits and went to the pool. The pool was on the third floor - rooftop patio style, and over looked an alley streetway. We swam and sat poolside drinking beer. I stood at the railing and looked down - out over that alley and street. At the end of the alley, across the street there was a big market area, I saw live chickens in cages - in rows and stacked. In the alley - a guy washed his car, another guy slept - taking a nap just outside his apartment with the front door open - laying on the ground on pieces of cardboard as a mat-bed, and another guy was washing his motorbike - he had a wash bucket and a wash rag, when he finished washing his motorbike he took his shirt off and washed it in the wash bucket then laid it over the bike to dry, then he rolled his pants up to just below the knee, and proceeded to take a sponge bath with the rag and from the wash bucket he just used to wash his motorbike - and not changing out the water. He didn't take his sandals off either. He dunked his feet in the wash bucket, took the wash rag and scrubbed his feet and sandals, washed down his pants and the rest of his body. On the way back to the room the elevator got stuck - between floors. I had never been stuck in an elevator before. At first I stayed calm and didn't really get nervous or panic, but the elevator was extremely small, especially with the four of us in it. Elin started to feel very claustrophobic and got nervous, so this made me start to feel more uneasy. We had to hit the alarm bell two or three times before anyone came to help. Yet, we were only stuck in the elevator for no more than ten minutes. When we finally got into the room we discovered the air conditioning was not working, and it was very hot. We were all sweating real bad and it was miserable. We went down to the front desk to complain and asked to be switched to another room. We did get a new room with working air conditioning, but it took quite some time. The bad part about the second room was the sound didn't work on the T.V. - and at that point that's all I wanted to do was relax and watch T.V. It was dark outside now. I think it was around 8 or 9PM - maybe even a bit later. Everyone - Elin and her parents, were starting to fall asleep, I was drained out - exhausted as well. I wanted to sleep too. But those twin sized beds were so damn small...Elin over took the bed and pushed me out, and Egon was snoring so damn loud that I couldn't even figure out how Ingrid and Elin could sleep. I actually felt like I was being driven insane, no lie. I was so over tired, sleep deprived, I had a terrible headache from Egon's snoring, I was pacing back and forth - walking in the very small hotel room, I sat on the edge of the bed in which I accidentally awoke Elin which in turn ticked her off and she snapped at me a little, I sat in the chair that was next to the bed Ingrid and Egon slept in - tried to sleep sitting up but the chair was in direct line under with the air flow from the A.C. so I got cold, and again with Egon snoring. I even thought of sleeping in the bathroom - in the bathtub, but there was no tub. It was just a shower stall. I went back to pacing about the small room. It was very late at night, I even thought of leaving them a note saying that I went out for a late night walk around Dar Es Salaam and that I would be back in time to go to the airport. But I didn't leave. I just paced back and forth, exhausted, going insane, listening to Egon snore as Elin and Ingrid slept. And this was our last night in Tanzania.

Germany: Berlin [Part I]

[Preface: The following journal writing of a weekend excursion in Berlin, Germany in September of 2012, is presented here completely unedited, as it is written directly from my Fifth journal book. It is [10] hand written pages.]

   I'm going to call this one - The Gray Shoelace Travels...(I tied a gray shoelace to the handle of my small black suitcase to mark it - instead of a name tag.)
   It was quite late on a chilly September Wednesday night - around 11PM. I was twenty minutes early - Elin had dropped me off at a bus stop in Moss - the Mosseporten stop for the Go-By-Bus, she planned a surprise four day weekend journey for me. The bus came at 11:20PM.
   (Time lapsed - I lost some thoughts....) Weeks have gone by, picking back up the pen, unfinished rambled drunken thoughts on the Berlin weekend from the previous page - with a pause to write a poem, inspired from reading Bukowski's poems.... I already had it in my head, I knew there probably wouldn't be so much to this story - that weekend was a long bar-hop drunk.
   I loaded my small black suitcase with the gray shoelace into the baggage compartment under the bus and got on. The late night bus was packed, I took a seat next to some guy sleeping. I had my skateboard standing propped up between my legs leaning against the seat in front of me, my small Krooked green military style sidebag rested on my lap, I stuck my pillow behind my head, popped a snus, put on my headphones and iPod - started with going through some Hip-Hop then to Metal - Iron Maiden and Slayer. I tried to sleep most of the way for the five and a half hour bus ride to Helsingborg Sweden. The bus made stops along the way - Sarpsborg Norway, Udevalla Sweden around 1:30AM, Goteborg Sweden around 2:30AM, and I was in Helsingborg around 4:50AM - twenty minutes early. I really didn't know what was in store for me that coming weekend, or who I was meeting up with, well that is until I arrived in Helsingborg. I stayed unsure, but also figured I may be meeting Elin's brother Christian, and so there I sat - just after 5AM in a cold dark September Thursday morning on a wooden bench at the bus station in Helsingborg Sweden - and Christian comes walking up across the parkinglot, we hugged. He took me on a short tour, driving around Helsingborg then we went to his house. The sun was rising now. He and I sat at the kitchen table drinking coffee and talking, shortly after in this very early morning his wife Charlotte with their two kids Mandis and Alba, followed by - to my surprise, Elin's other brother Andreas came downstairs. We all drank coffee, ate breakfast, and talked. Late in that morning, Andreas's friend Kjell Arne showed up. The four of us loaded up our luggage into Kjell Arne's car and off we went starting our weekend journey. Our first stop was still in Helsingborg at the factory of Koenigsegg - which is a Swedish based, built custom sports car, some of the employees at Koenigsegg are glass customers of Christian's, and we got a private tour of the factory. We left the Koenigsegg factory, and it was back onto the highway. Down through Copenhagen, Denmark, we drove on. We had to take a ferry next. The ferry ride was an hour and forty-five minutes. The ferry left the port in Southern Denmark around 3PM, and this is where I found out we were headed to Germany - to Berlin, but I was still not sure if anyone else would be meeting up with us. We ate lunch at the café on the ferry - the food wasn't so good. The only thing vegetarian was the french fries, which tasted like fish. We drank a couple of beers, and bought more alcohol in the duty free shop on the ferry. Close to 5PM we got in to the port in Germany, and it was another two to three hour drive into Berlin. I don't really remember - I think it was sometime between seven and eight PM when we got into Berlin, to our hotel. The hotel was called the Ambassador. There was a nice small pub right across the street from the Ambassador, that pub became our local spot for the weekend. We started and ended our days and nights of drinking and bar-hopping there. So many good pubs and restaurants in Berlin. (I had the thought that my friend Andre may show up. The whole weekend trip was after all a surprise, and Elin did tell me I could bring my skateboard if I wanted...days before, Andre had told me that he was going to be somewhere in Germany on business but that he was bring his board too, so I got the thought he could be in on the surprise and show up. He didn't.) We had three nights and two days in Berlin. It was a Thursday night, full day on Friday - Friday night, full day Saturday - Saturday night, and we left mid-morning on Sunday. Between Friday and Saturday we went to Check Point Charlie - the Check Point Charlie museum, some old church in the city center - the remains of the old church bombed out from World War II, the Bauhaus Arkiv - (which cost 7 Euros entrance and was a lot smaller than we thought it would be...we all agreed it really wasn't worth 7 Euros.), the East Side Gallery, the T.V. tower - but we didn't go up into the tower - Friday it was closed, and when we went back on Saturday, the line and wait was too long. Everything else in-between was random sight seeing around Berlin, walking about the city streets, subway rides, restaurants and pubs - drinking and more drinking, photos were taken. The mornings after breakfast at the hotel Christian and I would take shots of Underberg to start the days. Saturday night - in complete drunkenness - on the way back to the hotel, we stopped off at a grocery store to buy snacks and some more alcohol - I bought more Underberg and a bottle of 66% Absinth. So much drinking that weekend. In the mornings the four of us were hungover and haggard. It would even out in the early afternoons when we would start drinking again, and get food. - Sunday mid-morning we ate breakfast and checked out of the Ambassador. We loaded our luggage back into Kjell Arne's car and it was back onto the Autobahn for that two to three hour drive to the port to catch the ferry back to Southern Denmark. Kjell Arne had booked for the 3PM ferry, but we got to the port a bit before 1PM - with time to catch the one o'clock ferry but it was full booked, so we couldn't take it. We had to wait for the 3PM ferry. We had two hours. We went to the duty free shop at the port, the guys bought more beer and other alcohol to bring home, and the gas station next to the duty free shop had a small café - we ate lunch there. Then it was back on the ferry for an hour and forty-five minutes. We didn't drink any beer on the ferry ride this time. The four of us laid out on the floor of one of the observation decks under the windows to sleep a little bit. I woke up to find myself alone, I had to find the guys. Off the ferry, Southern Denmark, back driving on the highway - through Copenhagen, and back on into Southern Sweden. We got to Christian's house around 8PM. We all sat at the kitchen table drinking coffee, eating, and talking about the weekend and life. We said our goodbyes, gave hugs, then Andreas and Kjell Arne left - heading their ways home, I still had a few hours until Christian had to take me back to the bus station in Helsingborg. My bus home was scheduled for 11:40PM. I laid on the couch resting, watching T.V., taking a few more small shots of Absinth, and chatting with Christian and Charlotte.
   The bus was packed - mostly with high school kids, I took a seat next to some girl who was sleeping - she stank real bad like she needed a shower...the kids were noisy, talking, changing seats, just all over the bus. I put my headphones and iPod on and tried to sleep as much as I could. I brought two of the small shot bottles of Underberg on the bus and drank those during the journey home. Once again five and a half hours on the bus. I was at the stop at Mosseporten about fifteen minutes early, Elin was to pick me up around 5:30AM - it was Monday morning, I sent her a text message, took a piss behind the bus stop shelter, and waited for her. We got back to our apartment, she had to finish getting ready to leave for work - we both had to work that Monday. I went back to bed and got a few more hours of sleep before I had to catch the 10AM bus to work.

Tuesday, February 10, 2015

Greece and Albania

[Preface: The following journal writing of an almost three week journey in Korfu Island Greece and Sarande Albania in the Summer of 2012, is presented here completely unedited, as it is written directly from my Fifth journal book. It is [42.5] hand written pages.]

   How to start? Where to start? It's ten days into July, Elin and I are in Greece on the island of Korfu - this entire area as a whole is called Kerkyra.
   We started out with looking into going to India, that turned into Afrika - Zambia, then Turkey, even going back to other parts of Asia, yet - now, here we are in Greece, and we also plan to take a ferry over to Albania. We have just about three weeks. The flight was three and a half hours. We left Gardermoen - Oslo very late on a Monday night. In fact our flight got delayed. We arrived in Korfu around 4AM, the Bella Vista Beach hotel, where we had booked a studio apartment, arranged for a taxi to pick us up at the airport. The taxi cost 25 Euros. It was around 5AM by the time we checked in and went to sleep. We only slept for four hours or so, we got up a short while after 9AM - the breakfast at the hotel was done at 10AM and we wanted to eat. The breakfast was amazing, everything was fresh - the juice, fruit - two kinds of melon, a spread of feta cheese, cucumber and tomato, yoghurt with honey, bruschetta (toasted bread with oregano and feta and tomato). After breakfast we walked across the road to the beach. In the early afternoon heat of the Mediterranean sun we walked a couple of blocks up and down in each direction from the hotel - along the narrow street that seemed to be the main avenue. The passing cars went by fast - almost a bit sketchy, the sidewalks were almost non-existent - when there were sidewalks they were very narrow and a lot of the time very short. We went to a small grocery store and bought four cans of Greek beer, ate lunch at a real cool sidewalk - patio style restaurant, I snapped a few photos of the street scene, the buildings were very run down, almost falling apart, old, abandoned, bars and restaurants shut down - out of business, windows boarded up and covered with old newspapers, empty. We were in a village called Benitses. The backdrop was a scene of beautiful landscape of mountains, luscious green with cypress trees, we could see a few small houses far up on the mountain sides and what also looked to be (possibly the ruins) an old church. The studio apartment we had at Bella Vista was on the second floor, we had a nice cozy balcony that over looked a small garden, there was also the dried out ditch - remains of some sort of creek river or drainage ditch, there was a dusty dirt pathway along side that led up the mountain side - with an old rickety make shift wood plank bridge. One late afternoon as Elin and I sat on the balcony drinking beer, three sheep came down that dusty pathway from the mountain to graze.
   We rented a scooter for two days - the first day we had the scooter we headed from Benitses to the sand beach of Issos, about a half an hour South and along the other coastline of the island. The beach at Issos was amazing - the better one of the beaches. Issos was a sand beach - the other beaches we went to on Korfu were small stones and rocks. But no matter - the water at all the beaches was perfect, amazingly clear, with crystal green-blue tone. On the way out of Issos we stopped off at a café that looked so perfect, idealic Greek, with an old house, an outside brick oven, a garden shaded with trees, but the food turned out to be real bad. The bread was old - stale and molded, the meat of the soulvaki that Elin ate looked gray and was fatty - even had a bone left in it, I wanted vegetarian moussaka but the old man said they were out of the ingredients to make it. So I ordered a veggie pizza - which turned out to be just a frozen cheese pizza in which they just added oregano, green pepper, onion, and tomato to try and "dress" it up. Some of the pizza was still cold. Along the coast main road riding back to Benitses we noticed areas where the waters were even more clear, with that beautiful Mediterranean green-blue, we found a spot to park the scooter on the side of the road near an almost hidden pathway that Elin spotted. The stone beach area was real small but quite secluded and private - Elin and I had this spot completely to ourselves. It was so refreshing to stop along the way back to Benitses and take a dip to cool off. Later that day, in the early evening we hopped back on the scooter and headed into the main town of Korfu City. We walked the sidewalk by a main avenue along the sea, we took a few photos. The sun was starting to set. On the ride back to Benitses, I missed a left turn I needed to stay on the main coastline road, and we ended up taking a road that led us far up into a mountain, on a very beautiful scenic route - through an old, truly idealic, traditional looking Greek village. We had no idea where we were, or if we were severely lost, until we ended up seeing a few signs for Benitses village, so we figured out we were good. We came down off the mountain just less than one kilometer from Benitses. That night back in Benitses we went to dinner at a restaurant (I think it was called Aquarius) that was about a block away from the Bella Vista. Elin had moussaka - which she said was fantastic, and I had a plate of grilled vegetables - of eggplant, squash, tomatoes, and mushrooms with balsamic vinegar and feta cheese. The veggies were real fresh, organic, so very flavorful - sun drenched. I have never had grilled veggies so good. We also shared a small plate of saganaki - fried cheese. Aquarius became our favorite restaurant in Benitses, we ate there for lunch and dinner our last day on Korfu - ate there a total of three times - always having the fried cheese - (Elin also had soulvaki, we shared a fresh Greek salad, I had grilled mushrooms with garlic, and eggplant with cheeses - which was the cheeses in a tomato sauce - it was amazingly good.) Our last full day on Korfu was a Thursday. We chose to really relax and take it easy for the late morning/early afternoon, there was a swimming pool that Bella Vista shared with another hotel, it cost 2 Euros per person or if you bought something from the bar so we bought a couple of beers. We hung out at the pool for a few hours. For lunch that's when we ate at Aquarius the second time. Later in the afternoon we took the scooter back to that small secluded stone beach we found the day before. We were really looking forward to having that spot to ourselves again, but when we got there we saw a few cars parked along the road and we could hear voices (and kids) down on the beach. We ended up beach hopping along that coast road - hitting a few other small stone beach areas - unfortunately not finding one where we could be alone, but the waters were always amazing. In the evening it was another adventure back off on the scooter. We headed back up that winding scenic mountain road to the small Greek village we found - our second day on Korfu, a Wednesday in July, first day with the scooter, became our day of little Greek discovery. We parked the scooter, walked the narrow mountain village streets, the village was so very quiet, it was beautiful - all the landscape, the old house, old run down abandoned buildings, a couple of old bar/restaurants, the old church with it's bell tower...we took photos. We had planned to eat dinner that - our last night on Korfu in one of the small restaurants there in that mountain village, but it seemed like tourists didn't come up the mountain much to the village, and the places seemed empty of anyone. We thought about that spot in Issos and how the food ended up being terrible, so we went back into Benitses, back to Aquarius for the third time. 
   Friday morning we got up around 7AM, finished up packing our small suitcases, we were checking out of the Bella Vista and leaving the island of Korfu Greece, we ate breakfast, the taxi was to pick us up at 8AM to take us to the port so we could catch the ferry to Albania - to Sarande. We got to the port about twenty minutes after 8AM. We told our taxi driver to take us to a ticket sales agent, we needed to buy the ferry tickets, he ignored us and took us straight to the port building, to the ferry. The passport check-in line was very long and some girl in front of us told us we couldn't buy the tickets there and we needed to have the tickets to get our passports stamped - to get on the ferry. I asked another taxi driver if he could drive me to the ticket agent, he refused, telling me it was too close and that I could walk there. Time was real short. I started to run like hell. I spotted a building with a row of ticket sales offices but they were only doing ticket sales for domestic cruises. It turned out the office I needed was outside of the port gates, across the street and up a block. One of the sales guys grabbed the key to his collegue's scooter, I jumped on the back and he took off fast, taking me to the sales office I needed. Of course there was a bit of a long line at that sales office but I had no choice, I had to wait it out and get our tickets for the ferry. There were only two people working in the office - it seemed like the woman was doing all of the work, and the other guy - who looked like a Greek Hunter Thompson - seemed to be just grumbling and complaining about whatever, he didn't help anyone. Finally I got the ferry tickets and ran out of the sales office, I really did not expect the guy with the scooter to be waiting for me but he was. As I ran up, he started to drive off slowly - and like a scene from a movie, but yes this really happened - I jumped back onto the back of the scooter as he was rolling, and fast as hell off he sped to take me back to the port building to meet back up with Elin. It was ten minutes before 9AM, and the ferry was scheduled to leave at 9, we had made it just in time. The ferry from Korfu to Sarande took about forty minutes. As we waited in the morning Mediterranean heat, in line to get through passport control at the port, there was this pushy - insistent taxi driver standing on the other side of the fence asking if anyone needed a taxi. After we got through passport control we were standing on the sidewalk trying to figure out our next move - we needed a taxi to the Hotel Dea where we tried to book a room online but the payment didn't go through, we weren't even sure if we would be able to get a room there, and we wanted to get to an A.T.M. to take out money in Albanian Lek - we only had Euros on us - (it turned out we could also use the Euros in Albania, though we didn't. We used the Lek.) So as we were standing there on the sidewalk, that same pushy - insistent taxi driver that was at the fence walked up to us. He asked me where I was from - I got a bit sketched out. His name was Maksim - he gave Elin his business card. He got excited when he found out I was American. Apparently - and it did become evident - Albanians do love America. Along the streets, at businesses, hotels, bars and restaurants I saw Albanian, European Union and American flags flying all next to each other in a row. Our taxi driver Maksim even had a small American flag stuck in a holder on his dashboard. His taxi was an old beat up dusty Mercedes and he drove like a complete maniac. We got to the Hotel Dea late morning on a Friday, since we had problems booking the room online they didn't have our reservation or a room ready for us. We set our luggage in the lobby and sat in the patio café poolside drinking iced coffees. The front of the Dea was done up quite beautiful and cozy - with palm trees, the pool was big and it was a salt water pool - they pumped in the fresh sea water straight from the Ionian sea and once a month they drained it and added in fresh new sea water, the patio café was also very cozy. As we waited for a room to be cleaned and ready for us, we met this guy named Erion who looked like he could've been twins with Mickey - my best friend and old room mate back in Florida. Erion was from Albania - from a village not so far from Sarande, but he now lived in England outside of London, his wife Patricia was from Poland. Erion told us that an old friend of his (who now lives in Belgium) owned the Hotel Dea, and he seemed to know the three young guys working at the Dea quite well. They didn't have a room with a double bed available so we got a room with two twin beds - pushed together. At first look, the room seemed very nice but it turned out to not be so good. And where to start with this one...in the bathroom the water pressure and hot water was terrible, the water wouldn't stay hot for too long, the bed sheets had stains and small holes, the pillows stank of old sweat, the air conditioner didn't work, we had no patio furniture on the balcony, most of the light bulbs in the lamps - in the bathroom were burned out, the T.V. didn't work, and the shower was just like how the bathrooms and showers were in Asia - the whole bathroom and shower was one, all open space with a drain in the floor. When we showered the water wouldn't go down the drain properly so the bathroom floor stayed soaking wet and got pretty nasty. We got ourselves situated in the room, changed into our swimsuits, and went down to the patio bar and pool area. We got a couple of beers, took a dip in the pool, and met back up with Erion and Patricia. They told us there was a good beach spot a few blocks up the street - about a ten minute walk, so the four of us went there. This beach spot was called Mango Beach. We only stayed there for about an hour or so. It was a large stone and rock beach - similar to Greece, but the water was amazing, better. We went back to the Dea for lunch. Eating at that cozy patio poolside restaurant at the Dea was good, but it also became quite frustrating because they did not have or offer a menu. They really did make everything fresh and from scratch - (well, most everything), so you could pretty much order anything you wanted - but it also became limited. If they were out of something, they would go to a market to get it right away. Yet, this also meant that a lot of the time we had to wait quite some time for our dinners.
   (In both Korfu, Greece and Sarande, Albania - more so in Albania - the food, especially the vegetables were the most fresh sun ripe flavorful, and fully organic I have ever eaten. All fresh and organic. Greek salads, feta cheese, fried cheese: saganaki, eggplant, sweet onion, tomatoes, green peppers, homemade French fries - and not over fried or too greasy either, grilled corn on the cob, the best olive oil and vinegar for dressing.) So, for lunch and dinner that first day in Sarande I had grilled veggies - squash, eggplant, sweet onion in balsamic vinegar, with a Greek salad. And after eating basically the same for a few days in Korfu, then twice in one day in Sarande - yea, it got tiresome, no matter how fresh. The rest of that Friday we lounged by the pool and drank beer. When the evening came on and the sun started to set and the air cooled down a bit, the breezes started to pick up so we thought we would be OK sleeping that night with no A.C. and just having the window and balcony door open. Unfortunately swarms of very small mosquitos came out and after the sun was completely gone and it was dark, the cooling breezes died out and the night air got still and hot again. Elin and I didn't sleep so good that night. I think it was some time around 9AM when we got up on Saturday morn - first thing we did was take cold showers, breakfast was iced coffees, eggs - omelet, feta cheese, tomato, and toast - which I made a breakfast sandwich. As Elin and I were finishing up our breakfast, Eion and Patricia came down to start theirs. The four of us had planned to go see the ruins of the old historic city of Butrint, then go to the beach at Ksamil. Maksim, the maniac taxi driver from the day before, told us that he would be our driver for the day and pick us up at 10AM. The morning was a bit hectic - (the other) Erion who runs the Dea, switched us to the room directly across from our old room. Our new room was a little smaller, but it had a working air conditioner that actually looked new, a full double bed, chairs on the balcony, yet there were still again blown out light bulbs in the lamps and bathroom, the T.V. didn't work, and the water pressure was even worse - it would just trickle out, and not much for hot water either. It was a few minutes after 10AM, Elin and I were getting ready to leave, Erion from the Dea knocked on our door to let us know that our taxi driver, Maksim was downstairs waiting for us. Elin and I knew it - that he would be dead on time, but we kind of hoped he would've forgotten. When we went downstairs Maksim was already sitting and talking with Erion and Patricia while they finished eating their breakfast. On the ride to Butrint Maksim was of course driving so crazy and bad. We kept telling him to slow down, that we were in no rush, but he just wouldn't listen. He sort of finally got it when Patricia snapped at him, telling him we wanted to get to Butrint safe, not dead. When we did get to Butrint, Erion told him to leave and not wait for us. From Butrint we took a bus to the beach at Ksamil. The four of us spent most of the Saturday afternoon at the beach, drinking beer, we ate lunch at a patio beach side restaurant. We had to take the bus back to Sarande, the buses are suppose to run every hour on the hour and there are no actual bus stops - you just stand on the sidewalk, wait for the bus to come and wave - flagging the bus to stop. By the clock, we had about forty-five minutes to wait till the next bus. We ended up getting lucky, some guy driving a mini-bus - (van) came along, saw us standing on the sidewalk, Erion told him we needed to get back to Sarande. Along the way he picked up two more guys who needed to get back to Sarande as well. The two young guys were cousins from Cosovo, but one of them now lived in Switzerland. Saturday night - Elin and I decided to make the twenty minute walk down into the center town area of Sarande to go out for dinner. Within about a block or so from the hotel, along the main road, a passing taxi slowed down - almost pulling over, the driver tapped the horn a couple of times - it was that maniac Maksim. Elin and I ignored him and kept walking, he finally took the hint and drove off. In the city center of Sarande, we walked the promenade - stone style boardwalk along the sea, there was a man-made beach area along the way - I thought it was cool they made the beach area in the city center, all along the walk there were popcorn vendors, of course lots of bars, not much for restaurants - but quite a few pizza places with old school style brick - wood fire ovens. As we walked through the crowd, a very young Gypsy-type girl stepped right into my path with her hands held out to beg, I told her no and kept walking by - as we walked on, Elin asked me if I had seen the whole scenario - I had not, Elin saw this - just before that girl stepped in front of me to beg, her own father slapped her across the face to make her beg more - to keep her begging. Later on, at dinner at one of the pizza places that same young Gypsy-type girl came up behind me begging for food, again I told her no except when I said no - in some kind of auto-response, I said it in Norsk so what I actually said was nei, and the strange thing that happened - she replied back to me in Norsk saying, jeg trenger a spise. - I need to eat. She had picked up on that I spoke Norsk. Elin didn't catch on to that. After dinner when I told Elin - she was surprised - at what the Gypsy and begger types teach their kids and what they know. When the incident happened at the restaurant, our waiter confronted the girl, telling her to leave, she refused to go, it took the waiter a minute or two to get the girl out of the restaurant - it caused a small scene. On Sunday we didn't have an exact set plan of anything to do, we knew we wanted to go see the place called Blue Eye - it's a natural spring up in the mountains, the water is fresh ten degrees celsius, an amazing pure blue. The spring is more than fifty meters deep but no one actually really knows how deep it truly is, divers have never been able to reach the actual bottom due to the pressure of the spring. Elin and I asked Erion and Patricia if they wanted to share a taxi and go with us but they said no, because they were leaving that afternoon around 5PM - taking a ferry to Italy. They were going to Italy to see some family, then back to England. Elin and I started walking down the main road towards the city center to find a taxi and go to Blue Eye. Right as we hailed a taxi and started to negotiate a price, Erion came walking up - he needed to go into town to get the ferry tickets and other stuff for going to Italy, so he rode with us and got dropped off in town. We paid 4,000 Lek for the taxi - round trip to Blue Eye and back to the Dea, it was 200 Lek to get into the national park where Blue Eye is - the taxi driver offered to pay that. Blue Eye was phenomenal, so beautiful, there were shade trees everywhere, the water of the spring and the river was an amazing shade of blue I had never seen anything like it. There was a short pathway that led up to a viewing platform that was about fifteen feet right above the actual blue eye of the spring. Some kid there was jumping from the platform into the spring, Elin and I did take a dip in the spring - it was the most refreshing fresh water I have ever been in. It was very cold - ten degrees celsius. Our whole bodies - but mostly our legs and feet were quite sore, with that type of pins and needles feeling. Apparently - I learned it's some what of a fountain of youth legend, and you're suppose to drink from it. (For me personally - when I dipped twice in Blue Eye something happened in me. On a spiritual level. I had never felt so refreshed in my life. I only went in those two times, and I kind of wished I would have gone in more even though it was so cold, and I didn't want to leave either.) - I thought about it on the taxi ride back to the Dea, maybe only going in the Blue Eye twice was a good thing, the right amount - not over done, to lose out on that feeling, to spoil a good thing. When we got back to the Dea and I went to get out of the taxi - when I opened the door, it stuck somehow on something and the bottom part of the door panel exploded off, the small round speaker fell out along with some loose wires, an empty wallet, and a bunch of other random debris - I felt real bad about it, the old man taxi driver just shook his head, he got irritated and ticked off, I kept apologizing and he did smile and shake my hand, yet he still shook his head with frustration. He really wasn't happy. We were only suppose to pay him 4,000 Lek for the trip, I handed him a 5,000 Lek bill and he said he didn't have the 1,000 in change, so with feeling bad about the door panel breaking I told him not to worry about the change, to just keep the 5,000 Lek. It turned out - both Erions, two other old Albanians, and a few of the guests at the Dea had seen the whole incident. I had also found out that both Maksim, and the old man taxi driver Elin and I had that Sunday were kind of well known around Sarande as two of the worst taxis to go with - in both aspects of being bad drivers and having (Mercedes) taxis that are basically falling apart, especially for Maksim. I ended up hearing some stories and things about that guy - that he's a little messed up in the head. So after all that, Elin and I decided no more taxis on this trip.
   For Monday Elin and I decided we would really just take it easy and sit by the pool, and hit up the beach. We went down and discovered that Erion was working on the monthly drain and clean of the pool - also getting ready to re-fill with fresh Ionian sea water. So we spent most of the day at Mango Beach where Erion and Patricia took us the first day. While hanging out at Mango Beach we met these five young guys from Greece and other parts of Albania - I never got their names, they invited us to walk out on the breaker rocks with them to smoke a joint of Albanian weed, Elin stayed on the beach tanning, I went with them. Out on the breaker rocks - when the first joint was done they rolled a second, only a couple of them could speak English, they took photos and invited me to be in the shots, they loved basketball and wanted to talk about it, one of them told me he had met a girl from Texas and he said she was so beautiful that he fell in love with her. That night Elin felt a bit sick, she had gotten a bit too much sun exposure, she was burned out. Sun fever. We thought about checking out of the Dea Tuesday morning and finding a bus to go an hour or so up the coast to Dhermi, but she was still feeling pretty sick so we stayed in Sarande at the Dea. The pool was re-filled by late in the afternoon that Tuesday. We sat in the shade by the pool, we met up with these two other couples that we had met earlier in the weekend. Both couples lived in Manchester, England, the two guys were uncle and nephew originally from Cosovo - Valli was the uncle and Bex was the nephew. Valli's wife Abbey was from England, and Bex's girlfriend Raja was from Helsingborg, Sweden. The four of them were leaving Wednesday for Cosovo for a wedding. Valli and Abbey had driven from the U.K. - it took them three days. Bex and Raja did what Elin and I did - flew to Korfu and took the ferry over. They said it was going to take about eight hours to drive to where in Cosovo they were headed. Elin and I decided to check out of the Dea on Wednesday morning. We still stayed in Sarande, just switching hotels moving down the street more closer to the center. This hotel was called the Maestral. It only cost us 10 Euros more per night than at the Dea. The room was bigger and cleaner, the A.C. worked, we didn't have a pool at the Maestral but our balcony had an amazing sea view and there was a private beach area for the hotel, still no proper working T.V., we had a small refrigerator, and the water pressure and the hot water seemed to be a lot better - although I did have a problem that Wednesday morning after we checked in, we had bought laundry soap powder to wash clothes in the bathroom sink, Elin washed a bunch of her stuff, then when I went to brush my teeth there was no water at all - in the sink or the shower. I did get pretty irritated but the water pressure did return, it took some time though. Now that we were closer to the city center - that afternoon we walked around more of Sarande, we found the bus station and made arrangements to take a bus North to Dhermi on Thursday - just for the day. The bus goes at 11:30AM and costs 700 Lek per person and it's suppose to take about an hour or so. Wednesday night we went to dinner at an Italian place called Demi, it was a patio restaurant right on the water and there was this trendy beach bar spot called Orange that was next to Demi that was blasting loud crappy Euro Techno dance shit, now across the waters of the small bay - on the other side of Sarande, in the city was a Mosque and we could just faintly hear the prayer chanting from the Mosque, across the bay, and under the loud music from Orange bar. We woke up late morning on Thursday and decided not to take the bus to Dhermi. We stayed in Sarande hanging out at the beach area at our hotel - Maestral. On Friday, on a spur of the moment - last minute decision we checked out of the Maestral in the afternoon some time between one and two PM, rented a car - a small four door Fiat Punto, and left Sarande heading North with the thought of going the 120 kilometers to Vlora - stopping to stay the night in Dhermi. This was the idea. About ten or fifteen minutes out of Sarande we stopped in some small mountain village to take a break, got some sodas to drink and snapped a few photos. That mountainous winding road North, with steep climbs and descents and hairpin switchback turns had turned out to be more exhausting and scary to drive than we realized. It took longer as well. We didn't make it to Dhermi that Friday evening. We stopped off in a very small beach village called Borsh. There we stayed at a real nice hotel called Blue Days - the owner had an uncle who also lives in the Tampa Bay area - I met him but never got his name. Saturday late morning, after breakfast, we checked out of Blue Days, got back on that winding mountain road North, and some time Saturday afternoon we made it into Dhermi. Elin and I had heard quite a lot of things about Dhermi from various people we talked to in Sarande. Dhermi is some sort of beach hot spot in Albania. We had heard - (and learned when we got there) - that it could be difficult to fins a hotel or room to rent. It was. Every place was booked up. With all the hype on Dhermi, Elin and I also thought it would have been a bigger town. It was quite small. The water was very nice, but we really didn't get so impressed by Dhermi. We just stayed for that afternoon. Hanging out at the beach, swimming, drinking beer, and we ate lunch. Dhermi was also a little bit more expensive than the other places we went to. It was late in the afternoon when we left Dhermi, and we continued to head North. I figured it would possibly take us two or three hours to still go North to Vlora - I really didn't want to go to Vlora but it seemed like Elin wanted to. The road got worse. The climbs got higher and the switchback hairpin turns got tighter, there were long stretches of the road along cliffsides where there were no guard railings - it was just open road to sheer cliff drop offs. I got very nervous driving and Elin was sketched out too. We were only about fifteen or twenty minutes out from Dhermi. We decided to make a U-turn and go back South, but now it was a matter of where to find a place on the narrow climbing mountain road to do so. We were stuck with going on North. We finally had found a place to stop and turn around - right near some old abandoned, graffiti covered, crumbling building - there was an old man with a table set up selling homemade honey, wine and Raki (Albanian style moonshine) - we took a break from the driving, Elin bought a glass jar of the honey, and I shot some photos of the scenery - the views were spectacular, we met a French man and woman who were hiking - doing the Backpacker thing, they had been hiking all the way down through the mountains and were trying to get to this wide open stretch of long beach areas that we could see down to from where we were. The woman looked older than the guy, I took them to be together as a couple and Elin wondered if they were mother and son. We never found out, we didn't even get their names. We offered to give them a ride as far down the mountain and as close to that beach area as we could. From the main mountain road we could see a winding rocky dirt road to the beach. At first Elin and I really figured it could be no problem to drive that rocky dirt road out to the beach - since the beach road in Borsh was also a rocky dirt road (but flat) - we started to head down the rough road, with rocks bouncing and smashing the under side of the rental car, we didn't make it so far, I really thought I blew out a tire - catching a flat. I tried to pull over to the side of the narrow rocky road as far as I could. Elin and I got out to check the car, no flats, the French couple just sat in the backseat, it was obvious we couldn't go on - down that road to the beach, we had to let the French couple off to hike the rest of the way but at first they didn't get the hint - get the idea, the rental car would not have made it. Even when they got out of the car, they just stood around - not wanting to get their packs and gear out of the car, they figured we were OK and the car could make it the rest of the way down. I flat out told them no, that I didn't want to risk wrecking the car or getting stuck. They finally agreed. We unloaded their gear from the car, shook hands, wished each other safe good travels and said our goodbyes. I got the car turned around OK on the narrow rocky road but going back up the hill it got stuck and stalled out. Elin took over. She got the car started again - for a moment - got stuck again and stalled. Some young folks came up the rocky hill in a four wheel drive jeep and just drove around us - it was obvious we were stuck and needed some help. When Elin got the car started again - we noticed some what of a slight burnt smell, we hoped we weren't burning the motor up, the car seemed weak, the French guy ran back to help push the car - helping get us un-stuck. We finally made it back up the rocky hill back to the paved winding mountain road. We ended up just going back into Borsh. We went right back to the Blue Days hotel but since it was a Saturday night it was booked up full. The owner helped us out though - he called over one of his friends - we followed that guy to the other end of the strip down Borsh beach, up to another small hotel that was like a mom and pop type of place - run by a very nice old married couple. The room was like a small studio apartment style, it was only 30 Euros - (4,000 Lek) per night. We stayed there, back in Borsh for two nights.
   Monday we went back to Sarande - back to the Maestral hotel. A bit after 8PM, we went down to the small beach area at the Maestral for an evening swim, the sun was set but it wasn't dark yet - the sky was a deep dark blue, we sat on the beach chairs and just like that previous Wednesday - days before - when we had dinner at Demi, we could hear the faint prayer chanting from the Mosque across the bay. Tuesday was our last full day in Sarande. Late in the morning we went to the port to get the ferry tickets to go back to Korfu the next morning - Wednesday, then we returned our Fiat Punto rental car. The rest of that Tuesday we just relaxed - sat at the small beach area at the Maestral, drinking beer. We woke up Wednesday early morning around ten minutes before 7AM, the ferry was suppose to go at 9AM and we wanted to eat breakfast at the hotel before we left Sarande to go back to Korfu. It was a twenty minute walk from the Maestral hotel to the port. We were suppose to be at the port a half an hour before it was scheduled to leave - getting to the port at 8:30AM for the 9AM ferry, we were real early, getting to the port around 8AM - having almost an extra 30 minutes. We sat across the street from the port office at a small sidewalk café and drank coffee. At about 8:30AM Elin had found out that the ferry was running about an hour to an hour and a half late. At 9AM the ferry came into port, but we still had to wait some time. We waited on the sidewalk outside the port office to get some fresh air. While we waited, we saw Maksim that maniac taxi driver from the first couple of days, and yet another little Gypsy girl begged us for money - she stood next to Elin poking her in the arm, Elin finally walked away and the girl turned to me, I immediately firmly told her no - to go away, the little Gypsy girl finally left, and when she walked back to her mother, she got slapped across the face for not getting any money. We finally got boarded onto the ferry at 9:45AM, but then we sat on the boat at the dock until 10:30AM.
   Back on Korfu island - the hotel I booked for our last night in Greece from hotels.com - it was called the Divani Palace Korfu, and it was labelled as in Korfu City, the photos on the website - it looked quite fancy and baller, and it was a bit pricy - around 750 Kroners, but when I booked it the evening before - I figured we'd go all out in style for our last night. So when we got back onto Korfu island that hot, late Wednesday morning, Elin and I figured we could walk to the hotel since we thought it was suppose to be in Korfu city. We walked a few blocks and I went into another hotel to ask for directions to the Divani - it turned out that the Divani was really about five kilometers out from Korfu city - (but it was close to the airport which was good.) It was too hot and too far to walk, we needed to take a taxi. There was a bus stop right outside of the hotel where I had asked for the directions, and we spotted the bus coming up the street so we hurried to the stop - we did make it to the stop in time but the bus didn't stop - just kept going on by. We walked a few more blocks and found a taxi parked curb side in front of a café but the driver was nowhere in sight. We wanted to wait for the driver, the owner of the café came out and tried to get us to go in his café for lunch - the café was dead empty, no one inside. The taxi driver never showed up, and just as Elin and I were about to start walking some more to find another taxi - another taxi did drive by and I waved him down. It cost 15 Euros to get to the hotel. When the taxi pulled up in front of the Divani we thought it couldn't have been right, even though it was. It looked kind of old and run down. We walked into the lobby and I went to the front desk - they had our reservation so again - we were at the right hotel. The place looked like a rejected throwback from 1978 Las Vegas. Normally this type of seventies-retro décor of a place would be something I would dig on - but this place was just...not so good at all. Our room was a bit depressing, stank of cigarette smoke, and it had two twin beds not the double bed I had booked for. We went back downstairs, to the lobby front desk to complain and tell them we were not at all satisfied. The lady at the front desk was quite rude and bitchy. She told us to just push the beds together, that the hotel was booked up and there were only two rooms left available - basically we were stuck and had to deal with it. It was our last night so we just had to make the best of it. We went back up to the room to get our stuff situated, I opened the balcony door to air our the room, and we changed clothes to go out for lunch. I went back down to the lobby - I had to suck it up, eat my pride, act nice and deal with that rude front desk lady - asking her if there were any cafes, or anything close by in walking distance where Elin and I could eat lunch. She told me there was only one café closest by that was about a ten minute walk, she said the hotel was at the end of everything - out from the city center, she did say we could walk to the center if we did want to, that it was only about three and a half kilometers - (which I thought strange since everyone else had told us the hotel was five or six kilometers out from Korfu city). After all this mess, we found out there is a bus - (the Blue bus as it's called) - that runs every twenty minutes and there was a stop right in front of the hotel. But for lunch we opted for the café that was a ten minute walk away. The café had a cool look to it - I dug on the décor, but the food and service was terrible. After lunch we went back to the hotel and spent most of the afternoon hanging out at the pool. The pool area was the only nice thing about the Divani. In the evening we took the Blue bus into Korfu city. Elin and I walked about the streets of Korfu, snapping some photos, and we ate dinner at a nice, cozy sidewalk café we had found. We ended our night there drinking wine.