We
have arrived. Our journey has ended and yet just begun. It began with a night
of frantic packing to get everything together and in 4 checked bags weighing
less than 50 pounds. It ended with a cab ride to our new apartments in north
Jeonju, Korea. The story, however, is more complex than that. I'm still not
sure how i feel about it all....somewhere in between nervous, scared, and
excited. This is a strange new place. The locals don't speak English as well as
we hoped and were led to believe. First plan: learn Korean.
We
didn't finish packing until 2 in the morning. Less than 2 hours later we were
in the car riding to the airport. Thankfully Catherine's parents put together a
nice breakfast to get us on our way. We were late leaving the house (as usual)
but made it with plenty of time to spare. All our hard work the night before
paid off as all our bags came in under weight. One did give me a bit of a scare
as it shifted from 50 to 51 but the guy from US Airways stepped on the scale to
reset it and didn't hesitate to take the bag off the moment it stopped at 50.
We
said our goodbyes to Catherine's family and headed through security. I got my
second exposure to electronic raping.....still not a fan of the invasion of
privacy. Whatever happened to needing a warrant to search someone? I digress,
we boarded our nice 737 for the flight to Charlotte where we sat at the rear of
the plane. Luckily we managed to get both our backpacks and carry-on bags in
the upper storage. I don't think our backpacks could've made it under the
seats. I sat in the middle seat and allowed Catherine the aisle seat to help with her claustrophobia. That
left me between sleeping passengers for the flight as I was timing my sleep to coincide with nighttime in Korea. The
guy in front of me decided he wanted to sleep as well so i got my legs pinched
behind his recline the whole flight :-( That really pissed me off, I never recline on planes because the cramped quarters are bad enough to begin with! I fiddled around for a bit and finally
decided to start reading "The Prince" by Machiavelli. We landed in
short order and disembarked in Charlotte.
There Catherine bought us a couple bottles of water, we found our next gate, and sat down to
wait. Catherine slept, her plan (suggested by her doctor) was to sleep the time difference away, while I got out her computer and read the news. I think she had the right idea! This time our plane was an Airbus 321, the first European jet I've ever flown
on, a decent sized plane. This time we got bulkhead seats. I liked them as I got quite a bit of extra leg room as compared to
the last leg and nobody to squish me. Strangely this flight had no in flight entertainment either....I
thought they were standard on intercontinental flights. This leg I decided to
get some sleep and proceeded to get about 4 hours in several small spurts. Catherine spotted the Golden Gate off in the distance and pointed it out to me! We sat next to a nice gentleman for the flight. Turns out we had the arena
league football team New Orleans Voodoo on board and we were seated next to
their coach. Didn't realize that till the end though, oh well.
San
Francisco has a horrible airport. The design seems new and modern but lacks
some basic amenities such as an easy way to get from one terminal to another.
The lady at US Airways told us that there was a United shuttle a short walk
away so we went there. We asked to be taken to the international terminal and
she needed to know our gate. Unfortunately our tickets didn't have this
information and the television screens only showed the flight for the terminal
we were in....useless! She suggested we ask the nearby United attendants to look
up our gate. They told us no because it was not a United flight and we were mot
allowed to use their shuttle anyway. Assholes. We went back and told the lady
to take us to "international" and she did this time. After getting off
the shuttle we were again confused. No nearby monitor to inform is as to our
gate....stupid airport! We asked the guy manning the shuttle desk and he gave
us two different answers to the same question. Literally said we were in the
wrong place and then told us we were right where we needed to be! We finally
found our gate though.
When
we got there however we were told that the flight was packed and therefore only
one carry-on was allowed on board, the other would have to be checked. The
kicker: the one we could take must weigh less that 7 kilos! Mine weighed nearly
double that! The only way we had gotten the checked bags under weight was thru Catherine's packing skills. We, by that I mean she :), rearranged until all the heavy items were in our backpacks and carry-ons. Thank god we had expanding bags. Side note: thank you Mom for the
awesome Goodwill find, we would've been screwed something fierce with my
original carry-on bag! After shoving all our high weight items in bags we
proceeded to hand them off to be checked. We left out our computers so we could
use the Internet on our 11 hour flight. That turned out to be useless as, unlike
many sources informed me, there was no Internet on our plane.
Singapore
Airlines was in the process of installing it on their aircraft and ours hadn't
received it yet :-( This was heartbreaking for Catherine as she
had promised her mother that they would skype during the flight. Once we
realized this wouldn't be possible we searched for alternatives. It turned out
that the plane did have the ability to make phone calls (at an exorbitant
rate) so we attempted to make a short call to Catherine's parents.
Our
attempts to ease their minds failed at every turn. First we were presented with
a screen requiring a country code. Having never called from outside the US we
had no idea what it was. We asked the gentleman next to us and he suggested 01
or 001 but neither worked. Next we asked a flight attendant who had absolutely
no idea....I guess no one ever tries to use the phones! He did find us a nice
stewardess who did know the code. We plugged it in, dialed the number, and got
nothing. Some statement about 'normal call clearing' and disconnecting. We
tried this several times throughout the flight but were never successful. :-(
Moral of the story? Never try and use an airplane phone, it's just not worth
the effort!
The
777 did have some rather nifty features though. We each had a personal 10 inch
screen with a large selection of movies, TV shows, learning materials, and so
on. The most interesting features, to me at least, was a program called flight
data or something like that. It showed you the speed, altitude, distance
traveled, distance left to travel, estimated time of arrival, and a neat map
showing you where the plane was located. Every time i read my book, went to
sleep, or just didn't use the screen i would put this on. Such a clever little
idea! I spent not a small amount of time on this screen. I watched as our plane
crossed the world via Alaska and Russia, chasing the sun all the while.
Catherine
dove right into the learning programs. She taught herself the Korean numbering
system! I attempted to learn the days of the week and months but soon gave up
because our food arrived. We were both quite hungry as we had been sustained by
snacks up to this point. It was exactly what you would expect, edible but not
great food. Afterwards I took a short nap (not too long because it was nearly
sun up in Korea) to re-energize. When I woke I just tried to keep myself busy. I
read some, tried to watch a few movies (i don't think i finished one....) and
in general stay entertained.
After
a marathon flight we finally got over the Korean peninsula. I watched as a most
unusual sight took over. A very strangely mountainous landmass appeared. Having seen
other mountainous areas from a plane i can definitely say Korea is a whole different
ballgame. I saw cities and towns, plains filled with farms (rice paddies I assume), golf courses dotted everywhere, and rivers galore. I kept a lookout for
Seoul but soon realized we wouldn't see it from the air :-( Our plane was
coming from the east and had to circle south of Seoul to reach the Incheon
airport. Unfortunately that put us on the wrong side of the plane. Guess we'll have
to find another opportunity!
We
were almost the last people to leave the plane. We had been seated in the rear
and waited so as to collect our stuff in peace. We put our coats on (a strange
sight we must have been with heavy winter coats in the middle of summer!) and
walked on to a strange new world. We made it to Korea at last!

Its so neat to read this adventure from two different perspectives! The year will be gone before you know it so make the most of it!
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