Time to Go Home…

Time to go home…

After a week and a half and literally circling the world it’s time to get home and back to Jodi and Kenzie.

I checked out of my Airbnb and took the train to the airport. After checking in I enjoyed some lunch at the Swiss business class lounge and then boarded for my flight back to San Francisco.

Swiss business class was outstanding! Lay flat seats (basically converts to a bed), great food, and even an ice cream cart rolled down the aisle for desert after dinner.

After I landed in San Francisco I had a couple of hours between connections so I headed to the American Express Centurion lounge for a shower and some dinner. During dinner I met Lily who was sitting right next to me. She had just flown from Switzerland on my flight and in talking to her owners I realized she travels more than most people I know. She even has her own passport which her owner was happy to show me and let me take pictures of. So this is Lily, word traveler dog.

I was definitely ready to be home but this last week and a half has been an amazing trip. I’m very fortunate to be able to travel affordably using points and see so much of the world. On this trip I visited 4 countries (5 if you count the 2 minutes I was inside of North Korea), experienced several very different cultures, had great conversations with people who’s background as well as day to day life is completely different than mine, and checked quite a few items off of my bucket list. Overall a great success and a wonderful experience!

Now it’s time to start planning the next trip…

 

Mt. Rigi and Lucerne, Switzerland – Day 3

Day 3 was my last full day in Switzerland and I decided to head out for another day trip south.

I started by taking the train to Mt Rigi which is a mountain high up in the Swiss Alps and well above the snowline. I took a conventional train most of the way, but then transferred to a small cog style rail car for the steep ascent up the mountain. The grade is so steep that in addition to the 2 normal rails the train rides on, there is a “cog” or gear which meshes with a 3rd rail to keep the train from slipping as it climbs (there is a picture that shows how the cog system works).

After Mt. Rigi I took another train to Lucerne. Lucerne was a classic European old town with lots of winding streets and little shops to check out. I found the Victorinox outlet store here (they make the classic “Swiss Army” knife) and picked up a couple of souvenirs here. I bought Kenzie her first knife and had it engraved with her name, as well as a couple of other neat finds.

On the train back I ended up in what was apparently the “kids car” on the train. It was a double decker rail car, and the whole top level was seating for families and a kids play area. I only got 1 picture of a small part of it (didn’t want to be that weird guy taking pictures of other peoples kids) but there were a bunch of different play structures. How cool to play on the slide while watching the Swiss Alps go by!

Switzerland and Vaduz, Liechtenstein – Day 2

Day 2 I decided to venture out and see some other parts of Switzerland. The tiny country of Leichtenstein is only about an hour and a half away on the train and the ride there through the Swiss Alps was beautiful. There was something about the Swiss Alps that are very different than any other mountain range I’ve ever seen. They are extremely steep and really pretty at this time of the year with some snow on them.

Leichtenstein was very cute and well worth the trip if only to get another stamp in the passport book. The king of Leichtenstein lives up on a hill overlooking Vaduz. People here were incredibly friendly and chatty and seemed genuinely happy to have a tourist visit their little country.

Zurich, Switzerland – Day 1

The flight to Switzerland on Swiss air was an overnight flight but I managed to get a pretty good nights sleep so when I arrived in Zurich I was ready to go out and see some sights.

I rented an Airbnb for this leg of the journey and it was teriffic. Right on the river in Old Town Zurich and a tram stop out front that went direct to the train station to make day trips around the country easier.

My first day in Switzerland I spent just getting the lay of the land and checking out Old Town Zurich. Being in Switzerland I had to try out the local cheese fondue…it was AMAZING!

Beijing China – Day 3, Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City

Day 3 was a lot of walking (more than 14 miles) while visiting Tiananmen Square and the Forbidden City. It was interesting to see how citizens we’re regularly required to present their government issued ID to police and have it scanned so they could be tracked as they walked around different parts of the city. Every few blocks people would just line up and walk through a checkpoint as police scanned a little portable credit card reader looking thing. Since I was obviously not a local (I stuck out like a sore thumb walking around Beijing) they just waived me through without any checks. On the first day while driving to the Great Wall I also noticed what looked like red light cameras flashing at us along all of the roads. I asked the guide about this and he said it was not red light or speed cameras, but rather just a system that tracked all vehicles as they travel around the city. He commented very sincerely that it was a good thing and that it was for the safety of everyone. A very different perspective on privacy than we would have in the United States.

It was a great day of sightseeing, followed by a very early morning wake up to head to the airport and board my plane for Switzerland.

Beijing China – Day 2

Day 2 was a lot of walking around and included the Temple of Heaven, lots of little side streets and markets, and finding interesting food.

 

Many of the restaurants had these TV screens so that you could watch the activity in the kitchen, I assume so you can be sure things are being prepared in a clean environment? 

The Temple of Heavan

While in Beijing I had to try Peking duck.  After asking for a suggestions from a few people this was consistently said to be the best choice.

After dinner I took a walk through the open air food market.  It was amazing to see what people eat!  You can’t see it from the photo obviously, but the little scorpions were still alive and squirming.

Beijing China – Day 1, The Great Wall

Through some reviews on the Internet I found a guide named Simon Xiao and arranged to have him pick me up from the airport and go directly to the Great Wall so that I’d be able to get some sightseeing in on the first day.  Simon was fantastic and was a great guide.  Not only with information about the Great Wall, but general China how to information to make the trip a bit easier.  Thanks Simon!

This was definitely one of those things that you just have to see with your own eyes to appreciate the magnitude of it. Seeing the size of this wall, and knowing how far it extends was just incredible. Thinking about the manpower required to build this, and all by hand without modern equipment, just boggles the mind. As I walked around it and looked down at my feet, I was thinking that every single foot of it probably amounted to several peoples entire lifetimes worth of work.

Simon told me that the lettering on the side of the hill say “Loyalty to Chairman Mao”

 

South Korea to Beijing

Seoul to Beijing was an early morning short 2 hour flight.

Just after takeoff there was a great view of North and South Korea.  North and South are divided by the river that crosses left to right in middle of the picture.  You can see the contrast between how developed the south is and how there is virtually no sign of infrastructure or other modernization to the north just across the river.

South Korea – Day 2 in Seoul, the DMZ

Day two in Seoul was an all day tour of the DMZ. It started with a pick up at the hotel followed by an hour-long long drive north to the boarder. As we got close, there were several security checkpoints where everyone on the bus had to present their passports and have their identity verified. We were told that photos would be limited from here on. At the final checkpoint armed military personnel boarded the bus and escorted us to a building in the Joint Security Area where we went into an auditorium and were given a briefing.  During the briefing we were given a short history of the area, as well as told what to do should any sort of hostile incident take place (just about 2 months ago a North Korean soldier was shot several times here while trying to defect, that was at the building to the far left in the panoramic photo). Then we were asked by the military guide if we had any intention of defecting to North Korea today during our visit (it was no joke, he was quite serious). The briefing wrapped up with the signing of a release that basically said if we were killed during an incident at the border today the military was not responsible.

From there it was back on the bus and through a final checkpoint which led into the actual four kilometer wide demilitarized zone. The entire area is heavily mined and it’s obvious that nobody is ever in the area except for on the road. When we arrived we we’re escorted off of the bus and into the building that straddles North and South Korea (the sound of North Korean propaganda playing on loud speakers in the background). On one side of the room you are in the South, and on the other you are in the North. By walking to the far side of the room you are actually in North Korea so now technically I can say I’ve been there. :).

After the tour to the Joint Security Area we visited several other sites. This included the “Third Tunnel” (a tunnel dug by North Korea to invade the South), an observation post, and a train station to nowhere that is ready to be put to use should the two Korea every unify again. Pictures were allowed in some places, but not in others. From here you can see North Korea to the left, including what we were told is a completely fake village (windows on buildings are just painted on) built by the North to create the perception of prosperity). After a day of this you started to wonder what was real and what was not because of all the propaganda coming from both sides.

During the drive home I noticed that along the river for probably 20 miles south (very far from the border) there were security fences and manned guard stations every thousand or so feet. I asked the guide why this was the case so far into South Korea and he said they are there to protect against North Korean spies who might use the river as a way to travel south and sneak in.   

Overall this tour was amazing. Not something I could have ever appreciated just by reading about it. On the one hand it’s a deadly serious place with defectors being shot right there if they attempt to leave the North, but on the other hand there are constant reminders of how comically ridiculous both sides are in their showmanship and trying to one up each other (for example South Korea built a beautiful and lavish building at the border to be used for family reunifications, though it is never used.  And as soon as they did, North Korea realized this new building was slightly taller than their building and threw a third story so it would not be bested).

After the tour ended I had the evening to explore the local neighborhood.  I had some Korean BBQ and then headed back for an early night and a 5:00am departure to the airport to head out for China!

South Korea – Day 1 in Seoul

South Korea is a quick stop with just one day to visit Seoul and a second day doing an all day tour into the DMZ that separates North and South Korea.

I arrived in Seoul about 6:00am and fortunately I was able to check into my hotel early, get a shower, drop my luggage, and then head out for the day in the city.  On my first day I hit up the main tourist sights including the Gyeongbokgung Palace (built in 1395) and saw the changing of the guard.  I also saw the old town area, wandered through some street markets, and checked out some of the other popular areas of the city.

Thanks to Amy and Alex who recommended I check out Vatos tacos and the raccoon cafe.  Unfortunately Vatos was so busy I couldn’t get in, but I got into the raccoon cafe.  Not only were there raccoons to play with, but there was this really cute little teacup pig who wandered by and hung out with me while I had a drink.