Day 17: Weather craze

And from 35°C, the temperature violently dropped when the whole sky fell down on New York City. Little did we know that the hailstorm looked like this from above (shot by Dahni Jones), and little did we know that this wet and kind of romantic “NYC feeling” would cause fires, power outages and destruction in and around Newark Airport, which again would create great delays and even airplane cancellations from the entire world. Butterfly effect? Oh yes!

Quote from the local news media:
Jersey Central Power & Light reported roughly 10,500 customers had no power Wednesday night, while about 9,600 PSE&G customers were without service. However, roughly half of PSE&G’s outages were caused by a traffic accident.

19058770 BG1

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DelayedLittle did we know that we’d be directly inflicted by this storm – not only by getting wet downtown and buying another umbrella, but by delaying our flight with 5 hours, 56 minutes and ticking.

Too late for coffeeIt’s soon 02:08 in the night, and our plane is supposed to take off, 6 hours and 8 minutes after schedule. Kari has run out of juice and I am closing in as well. Too bad. Our flight was finely tuned for 20 o’ clock, giving us the Best Possible sleep/wake Cyclus™ with a short, yet pretty natural night and a very early, yet pretty realistic morning. Now it is totally fucked; we’ll be departing late in the night, and arriving in the end of the day.

Oh well. Here comes jet lag.

America – it has been an interesting experience. See you soon!

Day 15: Hello, New York!

We’re here!

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Day 14: Goodbye Salut to San Francisco

Dawson crying So this years trip is coming to an end. Bawhawhaw! According to the program – I guess it is time to sum up everything in decorative, seemingly interesting, thought jamming sentences with post-ironic meaningless-to-answer-headlines.

Did we learn anything?

Well… Yes. America is great. In so many different ways.

  1. It is – as always as always – difficult to get a decent cup of coffee (too bad we didn’t make it to the R&R Diner this time, I hear they have some brew).

What we didn’t do that we should have done

While we think the well researched ad-hoc way of traveling is great and provides us with many great opportunities, there is one part we se needs some work: Staying.

We are so occupied with traveling and moving that we forget about staying.

  1. Problem: We always arrive late.

    Even by Japanese speed-tourist standards, our two weeks on the road was a stretch when taking the length in comparison. Going North from Salt lake City when the destination is to the south-wes even had the tourist information puzzled for a while, and the distance increased as we wanted to see more of the country. Google has estimated our final road-toll to be AAAA miles, equivalent to BB hours on the road.

    Is that much? We wouldn’t know!
    Thus we invented the Stay/Go ratio, S/G

    Kari og Knut Goes USA
    S/G ratio: CC,C

    While most of our sleepovers were in the low/medium range, we sometimes got tempted to going higher end. Arriving late means we get little out of the lodging. And that it wasn’t worth it, as we saw little or nothing of it.

    Where should we stay and where should we go?
    Decide what are the go-miles and where are the stay-places.

    Solution: Decicivness

    Stay
    • Arrive as early as possible
    • If not applicable, spend +1 day and leave early the second morning
    • Use high end lodging
    Travel
    • Travel as fast and long as possible
    • Stay as cheap and short as possible
  2. Problem: When we get to a great location, we don’t really know what to do with it.

    Here I’ll give my ups to the charter planners. When we arrived in San Francisco, we used a lot of time on Yelp, finding where the restaurants and bars were in our neighborhood.

Solution:
1. Kickback

  1. Day -1, Day 0, Day 1

    Å ha en bil eller andre typer tidslås/rom. Planlegg -1 dag til å undersøke

    1. Tourist information
  2. Kickback

Working with it!


Cliff House15Dramatic story of the cliff house09I’ll try to update this thread as we go. In the meantime, here is the final salute to San Francisco, recorded in the once lavishly extraordinary Cliff House on the east coast of SF (now a little less lavish, but still in a great spot!)

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Day 14: Last day in San Francisco :'(

So this is it. Again the end of our trip is approaching. Yesterday we went to Castro Theatre for a live musical performance of a russian silent film from named “The Overcoat” from 1926. Pretty dramatic / brilliant stuff!

We also met a group of San Franciscans about our own age that insisted San Francisco is the place to go. And perhaps we will? Oh well this was blogged at a speed so here are this mornings last two video updates from San Fran:

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Day 12: Craigslist

This is the ultimate list we lost. We are now trying to decipher and do the things the list once said. :)

Digitally Enhanced Version

Craigslist

Original Version

ClouDrop 12 17 07 14 juli 2012 png

Day 11: Height / Ashbury

It’s day 11 and we’re somehow settling into the neighborhood. Height was apparently the place where the hippie movement started and doesn’t really seem like it has ended yet.

But now – breakfast!

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Day 10: Cold Francisco

It sure is cold. 13°Centigrade! San Francisco seems like the Bergen of California.

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Day 7: Bubbles

From the Cold Coast of Oregon, Kari found a nice accommodation in the little town of Brookings through AirBnB, just on the south border of costal Oregon. And there was bubbles!

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Day 6: And then – the Coast

From we set off from Salt Lake City, we had the immense flatlands of Utah, the national parks of Great Teton and Yellowstone in Wyoming, the beautiful Sawtooth mountains of Idaho and the badlands of east Oregon.

And then – after hour after hour traveling through the landscape of nothingness – there it was; the west coast. The end of the great US.

Cold coast

And then came the coast, and with it – the wind and the cold!? Not that we hadn’t done our temperature research; (we even had 1st hand information that people were wearing ‘winter jackets’ in San Francisco in the mid of July?!), but to be honest, we had difficulties understanding it. California is supposed to be the Sunshine State, right?

From the intense 35°C (95°F) heat of Salt Lake City, the temperature was now 15°C (59°F). Yikes!

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Day 4: Lakeview Lodge

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First bath this trip coming up. Very posh / executive place. High power boats for rent with water skis etc. With a great view!