Flying from Vancouver to Paris

On my way to Paris for work, I hopped a ride on a Boeing 787 Dreamliner out of Vancouver, BC.  This was the fourth time this year that I have been on a Dreamliner.

Last fall I rode along the road at the edge of the water on my way down to Vancouver from further north in BC on my Honda Pacific Coast motorcycle.

Looking back toward BC.

Beautiful valleys between the mountains in British Columbia.

This is the best view I’ve ever had out of an airplane bathroom.

British Columbia is gorgeous this time of year.

Chris Comes to Visit: France After Dark

Chris had a girlfriend named Tina (and as of winter 2010, he still does). She was studying abroad in Italy for a term. Her flight home was out of one of the airports in Germany. She had planned to take the train to Munich where she would stay a day or two and then proceed onward to see a few other places in Germany before leaving. Chris decided he wanted to surprise her by showing up randomly as she checked into the hostel. Because Chris was active-duty Navy at the time (and still is as of 2010), he got free flights anywhere in the world that the US Military has regularly scheduled flights. Thus one evening at the end of July, Chris showed up at my doorstep in Karlsruhe.

It was late in the afternoon and we were hungry. Not to be one to sit around in town, I suggested to Chris that we take his rented VW Passat Wagon, complete with manual transmission which he had learned to drive on the way down from Frankfurt, to France for dinner. The French border is only a few minutes away from where I was staying. Chris had a road map of Germany that the rental company gave him with the car. It had a little bit of France shown on the side. We used that to navigate our way into the French countryside. More or less… Less than more. The map wasn’t very detailed.

After quite some time and as it was getting dark, we pulled into a small French village of maybe 150 people. In the main square there was a sign for a restaurant and pub. We went inside to find about ten old guys sitting around a table and an older woman serving them some beer. We inquired if there was any food to be had in German. Even though they had been speaking German when we walked in, they looked at us funny and didn’t respond. Trying again in French, they responded and suggested we go back up the road a bit to where there was another restaurant. This particular one either didn’t have any food, was closed, or didn’t like our type.

At the other restaurant we were taken inside and shown to a table in a different room than where the other patrons were eating. Before long we had both ordered filet mignon wrapped in bacon. It was absolutely divine. As we were paying the waitress asked us if we were Polish. We looked at each other and said that we were not. Then she asked where we were from. When we said America she was very surprised. Evidently the last Americans through the town had been during World War II.

After dinner it was quite dark. We had some difficulty finding the way back to Karlsruhe but made it home by about midnight.

The little French village we stopped in to find some food.

Sitting on the border.  Do I look Polish?

Bike Ride to France

One weekend I decided to take an afternoon ride across the Rhein river into France. Equipped with my boss’s mountain bike and my camera I set off without a map or any idea of what lay ahead other than that there was a bridge near my apartment and a ferry further up the river.

Crossing the Rhein.  It was a few more kilometers to the border with France.  Karlsruhe is right in the crux of the piece of France that juts into Germany.  Had the world wars not happened, the whole Rhein river valley would still belong to Germany.

Looking out across the Rhein from the center of the bridge.

At the border crossing between France and Germany.  This is looking back toward the German side.

The sign marking the border.  No border or customs stations exist anywhere near this crossing.  The old German customs house is an American 50s style diner now.  A soccer field even crosses the border.  And the town that is bisected by the border seems to not care a bit that half are French citizens and the other are German.  Everyone spoke a heavy dialect of German.  They also didn’t particularly like to speak to me in German and in fact I had to generally communicate in French or English.  They all could understand me just fine.  They just didn’t want to since I was speaking high German like that taught in the public schools and spoken at home in the northern parts of Germany.

A little concrete marker showing the border.  1991 was when this particular border crossing was opened.  Now the marker serves as a good place to park a bicycle.

This cute little ferry took me back across the Rhein into Germany.  Shortly before the ferry a carload of Germans pulled up alongside me and asked for directions in very bad French.  I answered them in equally poor French that I wasn’t from there and had no idea where the town was that they were looking for.  This ferry was built on top of old pontoon boat things left over from World War II.  In fact the whole contraption appeared to be straight out of the American Army Corps of Engineers playbook.  A few more kilometers of riding after I crossed the ferry and I was back at my apartment, tired but none the worse for wear.