| This
one week fling includes London, an English beach town known as Brighton,
Berlin, Frankfurt, Moscow and Helsinki. London has seen several previous
visits and features a special visit to the Millennium Dome; Berlin is a
big small city; Moscow hasn’t changed in 3 years, and Helsinki is a nice
find. Photos will be posted around September 5.
LONDON: Friday morning to Sunday evening
A bit of luck; United has a pilot strike going
on. The connecting flight didn’t make it so my plane was half empty. United
flew a 767 with personal entertainment system. 6 hours to London. At Heathrow’s
terminal 3, long lines at the ATM’s were best avoided by going upstairs
to departure level to use ATM’s there. Many arrivals at 7am but passport
control was about 15 minutes. Long walk from Terminal 3 to the Heathrow
Express; terminal 1 is closer. August is warm and no air conditioning in
public places; airports and metros are hot. Heathrow Express is 15 minutes
to Paddington Station in central London; trains run every 15 minutes. Can
buy tickets over Internet for a few bucks discount; buy at least 10 days
before leaving. Cost is about $18 each way but worth it. My hotel is the
Kingsway (723.5569), just 2 minutes walk from the station in the middle
of Norfolk Square, a square with lots of little hotels all around the square
and a garden in the middle. Rooms are small but a twin room is $85 a night
with tax and breakfast. I understand that Internet searches bring up substantial
discounts at luxury properties in London for about the same price but it
was very convenient being 2 minutes walk away from Paddington if Heathrow
is your airport. You can check in for flights at Paddington for several
airlines and could call the hotel and have someone walk your bags over.
Arrived at hotel by 8 on a flight that touched
down at 7; slept till 1:30 and then lunched with Basil at Galileo, an Italian
bistro on Haymarket Street, a good standby in the heart of the theater
district between Piccadilly Circus and Trafalgar Square. A bit of shopping
on Oxford Street; new fall color is purple ties against dark blue shirts
against navy or charcoal gray jackets. Marks & Spencers now takes credit
cards and I thought they had quite a few nice designs. Internet cafes now
all over the place. Didn’t see this in the other cities I visited on this
trip. Met with Lorenzo to discuss state of technology; Microsoft is in
long term trouble as people resent their strong-arm tactics and design
technology as if they don’t exist.
Get a full day metro pass for $3.50 after 9:30am.
A half hour subway ride to a station created for the Millennium Dome; a
big dome housing a sort of worlds fair for the Year 2000. A bit pricey
at $30 per ticket but go half price after 4pm; requires 4 hours. See the
movie (Badacre – some English comedy ensemble that is popular there; special
film commissioned for the event); floor show with trapeze-flying acrobats
and lots of costumes and technical effects and only music for background.
Sit on floor around the stage for the best view. There are about 15 exhibitions;
“Body” is the most popular and the best thing to do is go straight from
the floor show to that. One stop away on the metro is Canary Wharf
and it is nice to walk around a bit and see all that Reichman built; it
is becoming quite successful and there is a little airport just a few minutes
away that is becoming popular with business people. Fish and chips
for dinner; first of a few such meals. Hard to find Israeli papers here;
much more available in New York than London.
Services Saturday morning at West Marble Arch synagogue,
a 15 minute walk from hotel. Always charming to walk around London. Chief
Rabbi of UK talked about selection of Lieberman to run for VP of the US;
said Jews need to go out and be part of the world and do great things for
the rest of the world to appreciate (as Jews certainly won’t appreciate
each other).
Theater that night to see “A Busy Day” which I
walked out on after Act One; I didn’t understand through all the provincial
British humor and late nineteenth-century dialogue and thought it was just
stupid. Meandered along the Strand to sneak into the second act of Chicago,
which as on Broadway is a concert edition of what used to be a full stage
show with sets and costumes. Now it’s just pretty boys and girls in dark
tights singing and dancing several songs with a really jumpy band leader
on stage. Theater offerings this season are skimpy and rather disappointing.
My theory is that a new generation of people with money that didn’t grow
up on theater are going to see very expensive shows they are told are cool
but that have no substance (sorta like watching Seinfeld episodes live);
anyone who grew up watching good theater would think this stuff is of low
quality and there is a lot of stuff being said and done on stage that is
not suitable for family viewing. Pizza at little cafes along Piccadilly
Circus are ridiculously priced; $10 a slice with some greens and a soda
and not good at all. Better value for the $10 pistachio-chocoholic desert
in the Garden Room at the Waldorf Hotel (now a Meridian Hotel) on Aldwych
post-theater. The London equivalent of the Palm Court at the Plaza Hotel
in New York.
Sunday morning a failed attempt at riding the London
Eye, the new ferris wheel near the Parliament buildings along the river.
Must buy tickets several days in advance if you want this. This attraction
is likely to be around for at least the next 5 years. It’s a 15 minute
walk from Parliament along Victoria Street to Victoria Station. The Gatwick
Express train leaves every 15 minutes or so for the 30 minute ride to Gatwick.
Met Greg there; good thing we were carrying cellphones as we almost missed
each other and then, with the phone, realized we were 20 feet away from
each other. These cellphones sure come in handy. I rented mine from TravelCell.com
and all incoming calls within the UK were free. Check out their website
before leaving the US.; it was much more reasonable to rent a phone and
pay for the calls I made than to try and buy a GSM phone and pay for a
plan which would have cost the same per minute.
Greg and I took a half hour train ride to Brighton
via some very green pretty countryside; nice to see some of England besides
London. Brighton is a seaside town with lots of shopping and faux beaches
(gravel, no sand) that looks like Coney Island. The hotels along the beach
are across the street and not really on the beach; same for the restaurants.
We ate at the Regency, “plaice” fish is a white fish and the local item.
Stumbled onto a coffeehouse in town where you can sit halfway outside but
still inside on a quiet street. I had a minted hot chocolate. Sorry
I didn't take its name or address. I am noticing that these little scooters
that you step onto and ride around on are a fad all over the world catching
on faster than any other fad I’ve seen in a while. England is comparatively
reasonable at $1.50 per British pound; certain items such as paper goods
in a supermarket are still rather comparatively expensive. Returned to
London and to grab my bag from the hotel and check in for my flight and
grab the Express back to Heathrow; I took the 7:10 express to the airport;
arrived at the gate in Terminal 1 at 7:35 for my 7:50 flight to Berlin
on British Airways which flies 1:15 on that route. Previous notes
from London visits are already posted to this site (1998 and1997 visits).
BERLIN: Sunday night to Tuesday morning
Population only increased by 100,000 during past
8 years; tons of construction going on and not enough people to fill the
space. Memorials to the past all over the place. Visited Brandenberg Gate,
drove past tons of museums in East Berlin (could spend a week in them),
visited Hackescher Market (yuppie hangout area inside courtyards between
several buildings joined together), 1936 Olympic stadium (go up elevator
for good city view); government buildings; Checkpoint Charlie; new Jewish
Museum and the Berlin Synagogue. The new museum doesn’t open for a year
but 1,000 people a day are coming just to see the building and walk in
its basement. The architecture is weird and provocative. The US wants a
bunch of prime land next to the Brandenberg gate for its new embassy; it
is pissing off the Germans and the soon to be outgoing ambassador has been
stubborn about it. The Americans are no longer an occupying power and should
stop trying to put an embassy on what will obviously be very public space.
I had hired a car and driver for 2 hours; it took
us close to 5 hours just to drive around and at $75 an hour it was damn
expensive. This I booked via the hotel’s concierge; the direct number is
Prestige Limousine Tours, 49.30.262.82.59 and the guide was Manfred Otto.
You could imagine what the hotel charged me for my laundry especially since
there doesn’t appear to be any same-day laundry service in Berlin outside
the hotel; labor in Germany is high but food is very reasonably priced
(the Deutchmark was 2.1 to the US Dollar which is comparatively good).
East Berlin has a curious mix of decades of architecture; on one street
you can see side by side buildings from the 60’s that have been renovated
next to ones that have not; on the same avenue you can see stuff from several
different decades. There are laws to preserve certain things so that people
will remember the history. It hits you over the head a bit; walk outside
the metro station right near the KDV department store (the city’s biggest)
and there is a sign telling you that people went from that station to 15
different concentration camps (and it lists them). Makes you not want to
go shopping and probably bugs the hell out of many Germans to see all these
reminders (or else they must be immune to them). Metro is confusing at
first glance (no maps that make sense posted in the stations) but they
don’t check for tickets so I just took a free ride or two. The Sony Center
is a new modern building built near Potsdam Platz, a huge construction
zone of planned mixed use development along the East/West border. A 3 story
red building built on stilts called the Information Box is a temporary
exhibit of the development. I took a balloon up 500 feet over the construction
area. The Germans have been planning meticulously 5 years for the redevelopment
of this area and it will take another 5 years to finish. Imagine a whole
city being divided into two with 100 meters on either side becoming a no-man’s
land. Otherwise, Berlin has lots of greenery and a good number of private
houses in the city limits, a very cosmopolitan mix of people (not a bunch
of blond haired blue eyed Germans), lots of undeveloped areas surrounding
the city, and a pretty efficient air about it, although people there don’t
seem to know where things are if they are more than a mile from where they
live. But that’s how Germans are. Same thing in Britain. Amazing either
side ever finished a war. Not as many cafes and cabarets as I expected;
that was a distant time ago.
My hotel is the Kempinski Bristol which is one
of the best in town; I had a travel agent’s rate of $100 a night. Room
had lit up sculptures in glass cases built into the wall and lit up wall
paintings. Electric shutters and all sorts of phone gadgets such as cordless
phone you could carry around the hotel. I couldn’t figure out how to work
all this. Pretty swimming pool and a business center with Internet. Avoid
smoking floors; the place reeked of tobacco in the mornings. It’s a 15-20
minute drive to Tegel Airport; a real pleasure here. Each gate is designed
to handle departure and arrival of a flight and has its own entrance and
exit to the street so you go straight from the taxi to the plane. The airport
is small because few flights go in and out of Berlin; Frankfurt is still
the main airport. Also, from capitals such as London, British Airways has
all the flights due to old aviation agreements that have kept these berries
for the allied powers. It is a capital city but not yet the center of business
or attention. My 10am flight to Frankfurt takes 50 minutes and is half
empty; I have an exit row all to myself.
FRANKFURT AIRPORT and CITY COMMUTE: Tuesday afternoon
Buses to and from planes helps to cut down the
walking; a skytrain runs between concourses A, B and C. Look for
the signs and go up the escalators after passport control. There are places
in the airport terminal to stow bags (ie: $2 for up to 6 hours). One possibility
is at the terminal entrance of concourse B just inside the terminal building
at the departure level or downstairs as well. 20 minute taxi ride to center
city for $25. Lunch visits with Kai and Ilan & Vered. Frankfurt has
a few new buildings since my last visit and continues to have a pleasant
pedestrian center city feel with good number of gardens off the main plazas.
No real rush hour problems getting back to airport or on the runway. 2:40
flying time to Moscow on Lufthansa; pretty busy flight but some empty seats
and a nice dinner. I have learned to switch from windows to aisles for
the leg room and easy access to rest rooms.
MOSCOW: Tuesday night to Wednesday afternoon
Not a dime has been invested in this airport which
is still dark and dreary. Passport control was 20 minutes and I beat everyone
off the plane by having the stewardess seat me at the front for the landing.
There is a new highway to the airport if you go on one route, otherwise
you hit drab roads quickly and you see it is still a third world country.
My cellphone is not working here though it is supposed to. Several pay
phones didn’t work. I was met at airport by a driver from an embassy. Stayed
overnight at the Marriott; there are several in center city. Mine was the
Tverskaya, a few miles from the Kremlin on Tverskaya Street for $140 a
night which is a discounted rate. Quite decent facility. I resent the 24%
VAT and sales tax on top of rooms and meals after paying the $80 for the
visa. They are taxing tourists and businesses to death. Even with new lowered
taxes, it is still confiscatory. I touched down at 10:30 pm and an hour
later arrived at Dan’s apartment. It’s 4 bedrooms with tall ceilings and
a good amount of space; $4,000 a month to rent. New apartments seem to
favor huge jacuzees. Labor is cheap; you can hire a gymnast from a top
academy as a personal gymnastics trainer at about $6 an hour. One friend
works for an embassy, another for a large corporation. Both feel their
employers spend big money for certain items and then chisel with their
employees on nickels and dimes. I guess the grass is greener on the other
side but it ain’t. The attaché is succeeding but bureaucrats and
higherups are jealous and seek to put him in his place; the wife finds
Russian mentalities hard to get used to; my feeling is that both these
guys I will next see in some other country. Alex and I met up in the late
morning and took a walk around Manezh Square, Red Square, GUM and other
central locales. After a big development spurt from1992-97, it looks pretty
much the same over the past 3 years except for a few new cathedrals and
statues. See the statue of Peter the Great on the river near the big cathedral.
Lunched on the patio of the Sheraton near GUM. It’s a half hour drive to
the airport and Alex and I go together because he is flying off to Vienna
to meet up with his wife who now resides permanently outside Russia. Nobody
looks at the customs forms; a zealous bureaucrat wrote these new forms
that ask all sorts of questions and most Russians don’t even bother to
fill them out. That seems to be the idea; the government makes stupid rules
and people ignore them. What the customs people are interested in are large
numbers of dollars going in and out of the country. You can now take rubles
out; nobody cares as you can’t spend them anyway. The ruble at least is
now pretty stable.
Putin is making order at the expense of some freedoms
but there is little opposition since people want order. Taxes are high
but people avoid them. Foreign business is still sidelined, waiting for
more rule of law. Putin appears stagecrafted and a figurehead for people
around him; some of whom expect to benefit while others who benefited under
Yeltsin are sidelined. Putin has a wide-ranging agenda, some of which may
succeed at the expense of other gains over the last decade. Today the big
story is the rescue attempt on the Russian submarine and the likely deaths
of all aboard; there is recognition that Russia should have asked for outside
help faster and not been so proud and secretive; also that Russia simply
can’t afford to pretend to have all these nuclear forces it can’t afford.
Alex keeps one foot outside the country and looks for safe places for assets.
I don’t expect I will visit again for a good long time. My 4:30 flight
to Helsinki on Finnair leaves on time and is 1:30; we pick up an hour going
west. Nice thing about Moscow and Helsinki airports is that they are both
small and it is a small walk to and from planes and on runways. They are
both not busy airports; things run on time and there is no need to spend
lots of time in the airport. By the way, I have been assured that the domestic
airline running flights between Moscow and St. Petersburg is safe to fly.
HELSINKI, FINLAND – Wednesday afternoon to Thursday
noon
Scandinavian feel here; all wooden floors in the
airport. Easy out; a car, driver and guide await me as I exit customs.
25 minute drive to city center to begin a 90 minute tour which is costing
me $100 an hour but because of my 5:30 arrival and 12 noon departure, I
would have no time to take the organized tour (which only goes thru downtown
areas anyway). This I booked via the tourist center (telephone 358.9.22.88.1222
s) First we view the city from the top of the Olympic Stadium; city is
small and, like Berlin, surrounded by trees. Visited Rock Church to see
interesting modern church architecture built into a rock formation. In
center city, the Esplanade is a pleasant shopping street with pedestrian
areas in the center with lots of gardens and ending at the seafront. Various
piazzas around churches and government buildings; drove around embassies;
shipyards to see new cruise ships being built; sculpture of organ pipes
with sounds from speakers in a garden is an unusual item. Took some nice
pictures at a spot it turns out people make their wedding pictures at.
I am at the Strand Intercontinental, a nice hotel about 15 minutes walk
from center city on the sea front. Hotels sport saunas and nice swimming
pools. My room had a TV that had a display welcoming Ivan Ciment on it.
I hadn’t seen that one before. There was supposed to be in-room Internet
access but it didn’t work. My rate is $110 per night, travel agent’s rate,
and I took the seaside-facing room which was an extra $10 included in the
above rate.
As I exit the hotel, I am struck at the freshness
of the air even though I am in a city. The water is also good here.
Good amount of modern architecture amid the historical buildings. Walked
to Stockman’s department store at 8pm for some previewing before it closed
at 9. Then a walk along the Esplanade to Kapelli, a historic tavern housing
a restaurant. Smoked salmon (cooked) and a salad came to under $20.
The 5 star hotel Kampel is also on that street, part of the Sheraton luxury
hotels group. Helsinki is very tourist friendly and lots of English signage;
no one outside Finland speaks Finnish. Swedish is a second official language
and there are close ties; the country was originally part of Sweden; then
became a dutchy of Russia and obtained independence just before the 1917
revolution. Alex noted and others agreed that the people of Finland are
essentially Russians who showed what Russians could achieve given private
property rights and freedom for the past 100 years. Helsinki looks like
what St. Petersburg would look like if it was fixed up although St. Petersburg
has more natural beauty with all its canals and grand buildings than does
Helsinki but still with all the piazzas, gardens it is a very pleasant
place, much more so than St. Petersburg which is not tourist-friendly at
all (you go from hotel to hotel to go to the bathroom or eat). In many
US cities there still are no real public places in center city to sit and
eat or just sit. You can take a 90 minute ferry or 20 minute helicopter
ride to Tallin, Estonia for a day trip but a visa is required. Lots of
cruise ships visit the city and there is quite a bunch of English language
tourist literature. Unemployment and taxes are down but still high. Petrol
is $5 a gallon. After dinner, I am walking around the streets and the metro
stations which are all pretty dead but safe and spotless and it’s about
10:30 pm and just now dusk. Metro here is also on the honor system
and as in London and Berlin the station signs tell you when the next train
is coming; I really wish we could implement this in the US. Desert in the
hotel lobby; my aunt will get a postcard from Finland as she requested.
Finland has an FM radio station, 97.5, which carries
everything from NPR live to the BBC World Service. It is very useful for
tourists. BBC World and of course CNN are on all the TV’s in the hotels
all over the continent. This morning I got up a bit early and taxied to
town to the morning market at the seaside edge of the Esplanade; bought
puppets, dolls and baby shoes for the nieces. Then to Stockmans after it
opened at 9 to buy sweaters and winter accessories. Prices are reasonable
and quality is high. Packaging is also considered important here. Downstairs
features lots of cellular phones; Nokia is the local patriotic favorite
with some 50 funky designs on display and of course people are using the
phone for all sorts of advanced uses which have yet to catch on in the
US (though I did not see the phone-activated Coke machines I had hoped
to view); there is some Ericson from Sweden but Motorola is non-existent
here. Motorola did exist elsewhere in Europe though. People here are winter
people who do not go underground; they like the winter and live in it.
There are stands with bicycles to borrow; deposit a coin and get it back
when you put the bike back, just like an airport cart. The Finns are a
bit liberal; the shopping bag from the duty free magazine shop features
full frontal nudity. Otherwise, Finland is a clean healthy place with healthy
people. This morning it is raining (first time this trip) so I’m really
glad I toured yesterday. Lucky to get a taxi and kept it from the hotel
to the airport; left at 11 for my noontime flight; it only took 20 minutes
and $25 to the airport and the check-in was a total of 3 minutes from the
gate so I had half an hour to kill. Got a lox sandwich; they salt it lightly
here since it is so fresh and therefore one can enjoy lox here more than
in the US where they salt it to preserve it. Everyone was aboard 10 minutes
before the departure time. It is a real pleasure here in Europe; no traffic
to the airport; little walk in the airport; on-time departures and arrivals
with half empty planes, good food with little bottles of numbered-limited
edition wines (which I don’t drink anyway), and you can sit in exit
rows with no one on either side of you. Contrast this with a domestic
flight from Miami to New York and it is glaring. So you can see why this
trip is workable; work a flight into the day (I personally avoid early
morning flights); grab a newspaper and an hour break to eat and think and
you’re in the next city. Pack very light and let the hotel do your laundry.
To my mind, this is better than a cruise since I don’t like being on the
sea. Flying time is 2:50 to Paris.
Helsinki has 500,000 population. About 5 million
populate the whole country. Lots of modern sleek looking furniture and
furnishings. Unusual but interesting designs for household appliances and
electronics; all TV’s being shown in the department stores here and elsewhere
in Europe are the wide-screen digitals but they are expensive (but I suspect
people are buying them); free universities with emphasis on high-tech training
and this is attracting lots of hi-tech companies to locate here. One year
army is mandatory but a joke. Tons of cellphones. I am carrying one and
I can just act on the notion and order a birthday cake for my mom during
my dinner as I will be in Miami for family dinner in 48 hours. In the hotel,
they play Oh My Papa in the middle of my desert. So I guess that home is
where the heart is, as they say. So many time zones so fast, I have not
really had time to get jet-lagged. UK is New York +5, Germany and France
+6, Finland +7, Russia +8. I just varied my daily schedule to stay up and
get up later the further east I traveled. As I leave the country, the passport
control guy is friendly; the Russian lady had a moustache and when I entered
and exited, neither person in Russia acknowledged me as a person even when
I greeted them.
Charles de Gaulle Airport in Paris – Transfer here
is good since the airport is in a big circle with terminals all around
the circle. There is a bus or you can just take your cart downstairs and
cut across the parking lot if you have to get to the other side of the
airport. Beware that customs stamp for VAT refunds is BEFORE passport control.
I expected it to be after passport control; you can solve this problem
in the US but it requires a visit to a consulate. The airport sorta kills
duty free shopping by not allowing carts beyond passport control, so you
sit with your luggage and don’t want to walk around. The good point is
that you walk into the airport, past passport control and right to the
gate. You can arrive 30 minutes before a flight no problem. I checked with
the gate before boarding and they gave me an exit row aisle to Miami which
made a 9 hour flight more tolerable, though 9 hours in the hour is horrible
any way you slice it. It is a rather long day with arrival in Miami at
9pm or 4am in Helsinki.
MIAMI airport – They opened up a second customs
area by Concourse B and it is upstairs, above the terminal. The older area
is by Concourse E and it is below the terminal. So if you are being picked
up, you need to tell your pickup where to go. Also it is a bit of a walk
to the newer customs area so expect to walk a lot.
Summing up, in Berlin and Helsinki where I don’t
know anyone, it was more of an educational trip than anything else since
I tend to favor visiting people rather than places. Berlin is after all
the capital of the new unified Germany and Germany is the leading European
power. Finland is a leading laboratory and roll-out location for new telecom
technologies and its people have placed Technology as Priority One for
the country’s advancement. Both of these locations demanded a visit and
some understanding from one who comments on world affairs. I got a chance
to see where Moscow and Russia is and isn’t going; and London always manages
to have a few new things in store to keep return visits worthwhile but
theater is definitely in a crisis and a cause for concern. World
problems can wait. Bring in more and better musicals that avoid contemporary
issues and simply let theatergoers have a good time.
|