Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Finding Joy in a Singapore hallway


Finding Joy in a Singapore Hallway

 

In 1974, war with Vietnam was still winding down. Although I had travelled alone through the Caribbean and parts of Europe, I did not feel experienced enough in my professional skills to handle Asia by myself given the diversity of language and alphabet. So, in September of that year, I began a guided tour where I would celebrate the most joyous birthday of my life.

This tour was no “It’s Tuesday, so it must be Belgium” sort of drill. A small group of 25 upscale people were to stay in four star hotels, and eat gourmet ala carte meals the entire 21 days.  With industry perks of that time, I would be able to fly the entire itinerary first class, which was quite elegant in those days. With the exception of contemporary honeymooning Bostonian couple David and Anne, and her sister Jean, all other fellow travelers were retired couples.

September 29th found me sad  in Singapore at the brand new  Hilton.  Before even the official hotel grand opening, only four floors were open for occupancy.  Every room came with a “tea boy”, who was available to draw a bath, fluff pillows, and, oh yes, make pots of wonderfully fragrant jasmine tea!  This luxury hotel was located right on Orchard Road, the hub of shopping and nightlife in Singapore.

So, In the midst of this luxury adventure in exotic locales, how could I be sad?

The group had just arrived in Singapore two days early because the Khmer Rouge had advanced on Angkor Wat, the beautiful 12th century temple in Cambodia, making it impossible for us to safely tour there.  For me, exploring Angkor Wat was one of the most desired parts of this trip, and now I had to forgo it.

Mostly, though, I was sad because it was my 30th birthday and I wasn’t with old friends to share it.  David, his wife, and her sister were planning to have a small celebratory dinner with me after our sightseeing was over. Nice, but not the same as being with my pals at home. 

 On the bus, we asked Darryl, our guide, for help in where to dine. Some of our other travel fellows overheard.  Significantly among the eavesdroppers were John and his wife Patsy from Skaneateles, New York.  John was a blustery, bigger than life, no nonsense sort that had made his fortune reclaiming chromium from old car bumpers, while Patsy was the reigning doyenne of the Skaneateles Country Club. It was John Wayne and Roz Russell!

John would have none of our modest plan.  He announced that “the kid” was having a birthday and everyone was invited to celebrate.  He and Patsy had suite accommodations, so all in our group were invited to their rooms for a party.

At 6:00 pm guests began to arrive at the suite.  John had ordered room service asking for bar and set ups plus appetizers for our group. An hour later there was a knock on the door.  One waiter in a simple smock and badge had two trays: one held a bottle of Scotch, a Bottle of gin, a bottle of seltzer and one of plain water.  No ice. The other tray:  a plate of crackers and a small bowl of peanuts. Patsy was crestfallen; her Pearl Mesta facade seriously shaken.  John fumed. He called room service. I’m sure they noted his demeanor in no small measure.

That was a polite way of saying he gave ‘em Hell!  But all his invective was to no avail. He was informed that because the hotel was so new kitchen facilities were limited and, already closed, anyway .

John called Darryl.  “This is a God-damned Hilton Hotel, we’re paying guests, the kid is having a birthday, we’re all ready to party, and all they can give us is a bottle of crappy Scotch and a pity plate of parrot crackers.  Now, dammit, just what in hell are you going to do?” John wasn’t a man of political correctness. He was, however, persuasive. Darryl promised to call the hotel manager immediately. 

With our room tea cups and water glasses, we  sipped Scotch and gin like Iowa church ladies with their Sherry tipple.  Other than John, we were in good spirits. I was in a happy mood, amused that such a fuss was being made over my birthday.

A scant 45 minutes someone rapped on our door:  It was Darryl … with the hotel manager, summoned from his home.  One by one, we emerged from the suite, beckoned by Darryl to behold the hallway.

A hallway now filled with easily 20 waiters in full livery attending to 15 or so carts lined up far down the hall. Carts laden with hors d’oeuvres on silver platters, chafing dishes of wonderful Asian delicacies, a carver with a roast of beef, and several bar carts with liquor, ice, and glassware. Plus an ice sculpture- a backlit rising dragon in ice on a rolling cart in a hotel hallway!  And a violinist!  We were amazed. Where had this circus come from so quickly?  Other hotel guests heard the commotion, and in various states of dress and undress, came out. They were welcomed to join in. There was food and drink for 100.  Crab Rangoon, satay, lobster kabobs, steamed dumplings and Indonesian corn fritters were but a few delicacies sampled.  In this crowded hallway we drank, ate, laughed, talked and mingled. For a night strangers became friends. John was positively beaming that this was all brought forth on his impetus. I was regaled.

Having partied late into that night, a tired lot rose at 7am the next day to board the flight to Bangkok, still happy with the experience of something very special happening that night in a hallway at the Singapore Hilton hotel.   For me, the experience defined Joy and sounded a major chord to the quality of life I have been blessed with.
And John never got a bill.                                                                      -Jerry Wendt



Although actually taken at the Imperial Hotel in Tokyo, this was the group that celebrated my memorable birthday. I am center rear with the abstract shirt

Monday, July 29, 2013

Somewhere- just off the pen


 

 

Somewhere


 

"There’s a place for us; Somewhere , a  place for us.
Peace and quiet and open air
wait for us... Somewhere.”

 



I listen to whispering tree canopies responding to gentle breezes
punctuated by fireflies lighting stages for crickets in full symphonic harmonies,
muted to a veil of subdued quiet for my stroll
past picket fences fronting clapboard homes with hollyhocks and hydrangea standing guard.

 
I turn the corner to a buzz of voices from people meandering
this summer seaport hamlet festive under strung lights and the florescent glow
from ice cream emporiums and art galleries radiating enticing caramel smells and bright gold-framed colors of orange and red.
welcoming me to stop and visit awhile.

 
I glean so much pleasure in children with rosy cheeks and awestruck smiles
holding balloons or Raggedy Ann dolls with stitched faces
while parents trade romantic glances or
stop to take the impromptu party  in.

 
I dodge bicycles thumb-clang weaving thru nearby park
where elders on benches listen to wafting jazz beats overlording
raucous toasts and cheers of a generation removed
resonating forth from Bart’s watering hole of what’s happening, baby.
 

A collage locking on time and place, this
bedbound vagabond warehoused in a Newark nursing facility
looks out on a dumpster landscape,
and ,with trembling hands, holds worn and faded travel brochure,

 
still dreaming of ,“Somehow; Someday; Somewhere…”

 
  
I like to read the poem with this audio background.  Pet Shop Boys were the first pop group to stage a London west end theater piece in 1997.  This link is a cinema-verite' version of the inspirational iconic song from that show. I'm SUCH a drama queen !

 

 
-Jerry Wendt 2013
 *- 1st verse © 1956 “Somewhere” from “West Side Story” - Lyrics by Stephen Sondheim, Music by Leonard Bernstein
 

Saturday, July 27, 2013

Micronesia and Nauru- exotic destinations

Micronesia and Nauru



It's so strange; this world.

In ( I think it was ) 1976 Continental Airlines started Air Micronesia and they sparked development of Micronesia as a tourist development. Truk, one of the islands in a far flung grouping, was touted as the place where we got the Japanese "back" for Pearl harbor; bombing their 4th fleet as it anchored in Truk Island lagoon.
http://www.nps.gov/history/history/online_books/npswapa/extContent/wapa/paradise/paradise6c.htm
 It was supposed to be "lush, tropical and unspoiled" What that meant in "brochure speak" was overgrown, hot, and with cranky plumbing . I found that out only after going. I was up for an adventure. The area was unvisited except for some real die-hard scuba divers ( Truk... now called Chuuk.... lagoon is one of the world's best diving sites; but it was just becoming known as such then) so intrepid me scheduled a vacation. Hop one to west coast for connection to Honolulu . Then Air Mic ( Air Micronesia) westward a l-o-n-g way via Kwajelein, Palau, and Yap and then a APU ( auxiliary power unit which is a small jet engine used to start the main engines in areas where there is no ground service) failure delay on a small forgettable atoll (Majuro) where we as passengers had to "bucket-brigade" hydraulic fluid to get the engines started before nightfall as there were no lights to land in Truk at night, being that it was an old Japanese military runway.
Majuro atoll ( in entirety) a four hour delay here

Matter of fact the Japanese made those runways out of coral so the Air Mic plane had a special teflon coated bottom so the fuselage wouldn't tear up from the sharp coral cutting it, and the tires were especially made non-pneumatic. Even the plane was special; a 727 QC called "Ju Ju" by the airline; half passenger seating and half cargo and carrying extra parts and tires and stuff so as not to get stranded. I can remember taking off and at the runways end were underwater remnants of Jap Zero's that hadn't made the lift ! I had flown to Honolulu aboard Continental and sat next to pilot Jerry Journey who was "deadheading" to the Honolulu base to fly the Air Mic leg the next day (with me)


Welcome to Truk


Captain Jerry Journey on "Ju Ju"


No jetways here- enplaining from tailway stairs


The Air Mic schedule on enception


Me with guide on Truk
 
I'll leave the visit story for another time, but one of the subsequent flights was on Air Nauru flying from Guam to Palau and it was there I found out about the Island republic. Nauru was essentially an island formed of centuries of seabird guano (poop) deposits. It was being mined for commercial phosphates and, as result, the inhabitants had the highest per capita income in the world. The airline consisted of a total of 2 737 Boeing two engine jets and it was all one class: First. They served cold lobster and Champagne. I was so impressed, but had no time to visit the island. I had heard stories about people buying American cars and ; having no real place to drive them nor the gas to power them; relegating them to be chicken coops. And of buying kerosene powered appliances that were quirky and quickly discarded to form junk piles of nonworking stoves, fridges, etc. there was problem even back then as the deposits were being mined to depletion and with that, there went the economy.

I got back to the States and went on with life until recently; I was reading "the Sex lives of Cannibals" a recount of life in Tarawa Kiribati, a remote island in the area of Micronesia (and Nauru) When I went online to check and see what was up with Nauru currently: Wow. The phosphate deposits are depleted. The republic in financial straits.

Between 2005-2006, the island all but unreachable because Air Nauru had had its planes reposessed and there was no air service. No funds for any community government and no imports.

Australia paid for a prisoner off shore relocation facility for a few years and Taiwan bought back a jet for them because they recognized Taipei diplomatically over mainland China's objection.

They have only one aging desalination plant providing potable water ( other than rain collection) and have no municipal income. They tried to become a money laundering facility like Grand Cayman, with anyone with $25,000 able to set up a Nauru bank, but that never worked out so now in 2009, they are basically a broke protectorate ward of Australia.

The saga hasn't played out yet and now they do have a subsidized airline under the banner "Our Airline": flying to Brisbane and Guam. A few people make a living working for the republic owned phosphate operation mining what is left ; but little planning for the future and no money for infrastructure or terraforming the blighted landscape the mining has left. They are basically a welfare protectorate of Australia.

A pitiful turn of events for what was once a place in the sun. A part of history I would have been totally unaware of except for that interisland flight many many years ago.

Nauru from air



Map of Micronesia and Nauru
 
 

Populated Nauru
The "Air Nauru" I flew
 
"Our Airline" the Aussie leased service to the island


What the island center looks like now


The decimated center of Nauru now
Update 2013.

The island is now trying to establish a tourist industry. They have a website and a new hotel in addition to a few older family owned properties. The site lists activities with beach-going , scuba diving and water sports as the prime attractions. The "History" section briefly mentions the phosphate operations but goes into no detail or extent. It is a challenging effort. One I fear will not see fruition.
http://www.discovernauru.com/nauru/export/sites/NTO/index.html

Monday, July 22, 2013

Chateau de la Chevre d-Or

My favorite place in the world.
 
Chateau de la Chevre d'Or
( The House of the Golden Goat)

Located in a renovated medieval fortress on a hilltop in the village of EZE
on the French Riviera overlooking Nice and Cap Ferrat. I have had the fortune to have stayed in this Cinderella like setting twice, the last in 1999. It is a 5 star resort that is world renowned for accommodation, ambience, and gastronomy.

The small village of EZE is at the base of the hill.  Car park is in the village and then golf carts whisk you to the Chateau which includes the hotel, restaurants and shops. All were constructed gutting the ancient interiors and bringing refurbishment up by helicopter



The hotel entrance and lobby.  All the walkways within the village are these paved stoneways with surrounding rock walls that wind and open onto small courtyards and lush gardens



The night view overlooking he village and in the background Cap ferrat on the French Riviera



The goat presides over a stunning view
Our Jr Suite living area (and my bedroom)


Our bathroom. Pink marble, pink towels and the view was stunning

The bedroom  with fireplace and hsd snother balcony

Another view of living area and entrance to bedroom


The walkways throughout the village

Some of the many shops

From our balcony

The entrance to our suite


Mike Petra and Me have wine on our balcony- You can see the gourmet restaurant in the building behind and the upper patio the level below


The upper patio

Looking at the Village at sunset with Cap Ferrat behind. It appears near, but it isn't


Overview of Southern hill
Night from the lower patio

The gourmand restaurant

One of many hillside walkway gardens. You meander and as you go around and up and down you continually find new little gardens and viewspots with statuary

The lower pool

Upper patio


The resort and Village as seen from the Corniche by Turbot

From hilltop overlooking the Riviera



The outdoor loweer patio for luncheon and cocktails


A collage of the resort.

An Irish Maelstrom


An Irish Maelstrom

The wind rages, spitting wet snow against the house.  Pelting sleet carrying plumes dance in Arabesque symphony while inside my fire rages and burns, all but distracting me from winters show all around me.  I long for some cooling relief.  My flush face grimaces as sharp pains thrust through my belly. Alarmed, I consider my options.  Here alone in the midst of this frigid maelstrom, I have not the means to seek care.  My whole family has left for a school function in town while I remain as sentry, keeping trustworthy vigil at my post.  Only now, I am in need and there is no one to assist or even comfort me.  I must bear this inflammatory burden, scorching and churning my insides. I try hoping this pain will pass. But it battles on.   I pray that I will find some relief soon.  Still, the fires rage as violently as the storms outside the house. I do understand that it is my station to endure. To “deal.”  For me, there is no respite.  I know if this passes I will be blamed.

 Of course, I could have prevented this whole happenstance not to have shredded all that sofa cushion foam, and then, in a moment of unmitigated frenzied greed, devoured every last morsel . So now I suffer.  “Why did I do such a stupid thing ,” you ask?  Because I’m the dog here and it’s what we do.  You thought the life of an Irish Setter was easy ?  

-Jerry Wendt 250 words

A Wedding Dedication- Sun and Water


Sun and Water: On Life, Love & Laughter

 
 

Be thou with a sun

and be also with the water

 
As the rain permeates staunchest roof and trickles deep into the ground

And the sun reaches into every tiny crack .

And confronts the rain by drying it and drawing it to itself

Only to form clouds that obscure its brightest beams

 

Together they are the fun of a rainbow.

 

Awash in the flow of light and of fluid

Feeling warmth and cold; wet and dry

Knowing the adversity of wet and cold

The comfort of warm and dry.

 

You can be conscious and yet not understanding.

 

For there is beauty in the stars and emotion in an ocean

But there is equal wonder in seeing a glimmer of light

reflected in the drop of water suspended upon a spiders web.

Let your eyes see beyond the pictures at an exhibition.

 

Own your time and each dawn will mount greater meaning

 

Nature will take care of itself to your doing or undoing

Take the sun and water each into yourself to be more with

The flow and the ebb.  The light and the dark.

As encompassing as an ocean.  As dependable as the dawn of the next day.

 

There is more comprehension in a laugh than in a lifetime of study

 

As you accommodate each other as do the sun and the water

Revel in each drop of water for it makes Your ocean

And each glimmer of sunlight is Your hope for the dawn of tomorrow.

Think of life  together not as a journey.

 

Life is the destination

 

Then you shall have Love as much as there are raindrops in ocean or stars in galaxies.

And while you will know the torrent of a storm tossed sea

And the blinding brightness of a midday sun,

It will mean less than the glisten of a single tear from your lovers eye.

 

Be thou with a sun

and be also with the water.

- Jerry Wendt

 
Dedicated to Gianna and Tim Galeba
On occasion of their wedding  St John, V.I April 26, 2005

My Limerick


Fiddle de diddle

I can’t seem to piddle

A problem my shrink would solve soon

Put into a trance, I peed in my pants

And was promptly asked to exit his room
 
-jerry wendt

Uninvited- another look at grief


Uninvited
 
Dark visitor from dankness
 

shielding secrets of the seeded earth,

charred velvets of candle soot

on walls where even shadows no longer fall.

Weeping stone cold tears where

spiders weave in musty vaults

holding discarded memories

and the sacred repository of shame

and sorrow.

 

Loss languishes here, unfettered,

seeping ever again into parlor presence

like a noxious odor

commanding attention

and lingering

with no respite or respect.

 
 
Unwanted creeper:

leave me to my attic of sweetened sorrows,

service to sunsets and warm blankets

and children’s laughter packed lovingly in

trunks full of lavender and handwork,

gilded trinkets, dried flowers, and

sunbeams wrapped in crinkly paper.

Careful treasures stored in

fragrant, ordered spaces.

 

Resented interloper

intruding upon my paid for spaces;

leave and take your jagged messes.

At least knock on the door

when you take your visits

unwanted and requisite.
 

-jerry wendt 2009