Diario - 11 July |
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Feeling deceleration: 20 minutes to landing. All passengers seated, cabin crew prepare yourself, you know the drill. Dubai by night from on high is a sight: orthogonal streets outlined by yellow lightglobes, white lights marking houses or plants (not sure which). Front camera shows the approaching lane, rear wheels touchdown, front touchdown, brakes brakes brakes, down we are, get out of the way, do a nice parking, it's been a pleasure to fly you, now get out of my plane! and take every thing yours out with you! So out we go, to the warm welcoming of Dubai International Airport: 0200 local time, 37°C outside temperature, and rising. Warm indeed. Transit passengers this way (how do some people accomplish to get
confused by ONE, SIMPLE, LARGE sign? how do they expect to survive in a
foreign country without knowing this much of either English or the local
tongue?), transit desk gives me (as an Emirates transit traveller with
more than 4 hours wait in front of me) a ticket for They said Dubai Duty Free is impressive. That's an understatement. 40
meters wide, about 150 long, it comprises so many shops: you can buy
anything you'll ever need while traveling, and most of what you'll need
not. My Newton, after deceiving me with the local time (which is one
hour ahead of what Mr.N thinks) tells me he never knew the exchange rate
for the Dirham (UAE currency). A cashieress (is there such a word?)
tells me 1 USD = 3.6 Dh; couple of mults give me 1 Dh ∼ 500 ITL. I need
some batteries for my CD player, so I go exchanging some liras. Walk
many a hundred meters to find someone willing to buy liras, discover 1
Dh = 588 ITL. Not bad for a quick estimate. Buy batteries, buy Go find where to reclaim I'm boarding at gate 7, take off about 0730. I'll listen to some music now. It's another two hours before gate opens. Fog! And I was thinking about asking 'which way is north?' to see the sunrise on the (quasi) desert! No chance: sun is probably rose by now, but I'll not see it till I am well above fog and clouds. Oh hell. Countermand: Ek 463 to Johannesburg is late, so I board at gate 18. Thanks me I asked. Regular boarding, no problem till taxing. I'm 25G, that is, right-hand
side aisle is on my right. Emergency exit is right beside me. R3 (flight
assistant Iutoi) is uncomfortable: he notices a clunking sound coming
from below. Captain is notified, crew members come and go. Captain
drives the plane back to dock, for examination. In the following hour
and a half we get to know that: no problems exist with the hull, none
with the cargo, but: one of the cargo shells is broken. Cargo gets down
the plane, changes shell, gets on again. OK, taxing to the lane. Uh oh,
same sound. Captain says We're nearing Singapore, where a one-hour stop was programmed. Don't know how they'll manage it, since we should have been here two hours ago! And probably we'll not arrive to Sydney before 0800 local time (due 0605). Will the guy (gal?) from Wollongong wait for me? After all, they have my flight number, they can check. Even thought about faxing them (this plane has a satellite phone system), but is full night there, and they'll leave to get me before even noticing the fax. We'll just have to wait and see. And hope my baggage is here, in the cargo area... I've slept most of the flight, and my bio-rhythms are quite screwed up. If they expect me to start working the same day I arrive, I'll ask Markus how he felt after making the opposite trip. What I want when I get there is a shower, know my hosting family, then I'll go and look around the campus. Not the other way round. They sound like sensible people, after all. Oh, I finally made sense of a picture in the Landing: I'll pack the Newton. Changi airport (i.e. Singapore)... not much time to visit it: just got
off, and that lady tells me to be back in half an hour. No problem: I'll
just go look around. On the plane again. Getting tired of this; luckily it's the last take
off. This time I get to watch some movies. The screen is still not working
properly, but I'll make do. So I select channel 1 and watch Dinner. Sleep. Not so well, actually. Succeed in a two-hour near-sleep.
We're over Australia mainland, but still two hours and a half ahead
prior to landing (yes, 7 hours between takeoff and landing): another
movie. |