Tuesday, July 6, 2010

Las Vegas to London

Now, here's the dilemma: Ontario International Airport lies a mere 50 miles from my house. It's easy to find, just off Interstate 10, about an hour and a half to the southwest. Barring morning or afternoon traffic, the airport is within easy reach.
It is also more expensive to fly out of. A simple connecting flight to Houston costs over one hundred dollars. McCarran International Airport is 200 miles away from me, a stone's throw from the Strip in Las Vegas, Nevada. It takes about three and a half hours just to get there, and that's if there's no traffic. However (neglecting the price of the gas you need to reach it), McCarran is cheap. A flight from Vegas to Minneapolis costs just eighty-five bucks.

I can go with expensive accessibility (Ontario) or remote thriftiness (McCarran). In deciding how I was going to get to England, I was confronted with the same choice. To fly from Ontario would be several hundred dollars more than to fly from Vegas. Being dangerously close to broke already, even before striking out on this trip, and always being one to err on the side of cheapness, I erred on the side of cheapness. I bought a ticket from Las Vegas, Nevada, to London (Heathrow), England, by way of George Bush International in Houston, Texas.

Now I just had to get to Vegas. Parents? Nah, it didn't have to be like that. They had enough stuff to worry about without me sucking up one of their weekdays with my own selfish plans. Bus? Ha-ha, yeah, right. All sorts of variables came into view there. Would my luggage survive? Where were the starting and ending bus terminals? How much would a ticket cost? Would I actually survive a long-distance bus trip without melting, or having my pocket picked, or contracting some disgusting skin infection? Airplane? And I thought you were trying to save money, Postman. Train? The train between Victorville and Las Vegas isn't due to arrive—or even exist—for another five years at least.

Well, that left me with one option, an option I'd been taking advantage of since my college days: bum a ride off a friend. Proving that Facebook is actually good for something, I set up a group. I called it Help Postman get to England (and back). Then I invited all my friends who'd be in a position to, well, help. And lo and behold, I roped in a pigeon found a volunteer. Alice, an old school chum, currently living and working in Diamond Bar, said she'd be happy to give me a lift. Then I had an even brighter idea. I said, "Hey, Alice, instead of getting up ridiculously early on Friday morning [my flight left at 11:14, and we'd probably have to be at the airport around 8:30 or so, which meant that we'd have to leave Apple Valley no later than 5:00, so who knew how early we'd have to get up], why don't we road trip up to Vegas on Thursday evening and stay up all night? Rock the town? Party hearty?"

Alice endorsed the idea, so she made arrangements to leave work, drive to the desert, pick me up, and continue on to Sin City. There remained only to see whether I could stay up all night in Vegas and somehow manage to navigate my way through four airports the next day to reach England. If I hadn't managed to catch some sleep on the plane, I would've been awake for 48 hours straight. Even for a nocturnal pizza-eating die-hard midnight Halo tournament champion like me, that would be a considerable challenge.

The day arrived. I was all packed. Mom and Dad drove me down to the parking lot of Barnes & Noble (the designated rendezvous point). We waited. Alice arrived, only a bit late (she'd had trouble getting away from work). I introduced her to the folks, hugged my mother, shook hands with my father, threw all my junk into the backseat of Alice's plush black sedan, and away we went.

The black night hours between Victorville and Las Vegas flew by. Good conversation sure does wonders for relativity. We found a spot on the third level of a parking garage midway down the Strip. The heat was nothing short of demoniac. Though the sun had been down for hours, a hellish warmth still clung to the stucco and concrete. It was far worse inside the parking garage than out—having so many flat surfaces in close proximity turned it into a titanic oven. It was easily in the mid-90s at 10:30 p.m.

Matters improved once we'd taken the elevator down and emerged into the (air-conditioned) gambling floor of Harrah's (or was it Bally's?). We got some tall drinks and took to wandering around. That is what we did most of the rest of the night, in fact: drank and wandered, drank and wandered. We hit every major casino during the eight hours of darkness we spent in Vegas. We window-shopped in Caesar's Palace; took in Treasure Island's pirate ship, still and quiet in the breezy night; giggled at the inane karaoke we heard drifting along the strip (seriously, who sings along to Rammstein?!). I have Alice to thank for the $90 I won that night; it was she who suggested, while we were in the Bellagio, that we play casino war. Fifty-fifty odds are the best in Vegas. We each walked away from the table a sight richer. My net gains that night were about $50, minus the twenty it had cost me to get in on the war game, and another twenty lost at blackjack in Whiskey Pete's.

Dawn came quickly. The first we knew of it was when we stepped out of Harrah's (or Bally's) and the eastern sky had gone purple. We were pretty well exhausted by now, but not quite done yet. It was time for a leisurely breakfast at Denny's, and then the airport. We revived slightly over some cold orange juice and warm buttery pancakes. We said cordial goodbyes at the Continental Terminal at McCarran, and then I was on my own again.

(Thanks, Alice. You're a lifesaver. And mighty good company on an all-nighter.)

My ingenious plan was to get all checked in, stop at the Wells Fargo on Level Two, and then go through security with a few hundred British pounds. No dice! The bank didn't open until 10:00, barely an hour before my flight. It was 8:30 when I walked through the airport doors. But I stuck to my guns. I sat outside the damn glass doors, pulled my hat over my eyes, and dozed until they opened up. And when they finally did open, I ducked inside, was second in line at the counter, and... ...discovered they didn't have any British pounds on-site.

Peachy.

They told me I had to go to the foreign-exchange stall on Level One. It was little more than a cart set up by the baggage claim. But at least the elderly Asian woman inside it had some poundage. I made a hasty purchase and dashed back upstairs and through security. I made it to my gate in good time, and before I knew it, I was bound for Houston.

So far, so good. International customs in Houston wasn't as bad as I'd feared. A few passport checks and the usual scan and I was on my way. They didn't even pull my bag apart as the smiling, well-dressed Japanese girls at Narita had done. It was a breeze. Even the eight-hour flight to England was bearable. Continental has risen a few notches in my estimation. The meals are actually meal-sized (and not desiccated, or at least not having the appearance of desiccation). Entertainment is top-flight: I had nearly 150 movies to choose from, and even video games and TV shows. I occupied myself with Starfighter and watching the bits of various movies I hadn't seen. I actually managed some restful sleep on the flight, too, for the few hours it got dark.

The only problem was that, for some reason, somebody in the control tower decided that our cargo configuration wasn't right, and that our plane had to return to the terminal and be checked. There was an hour's delay as we sat on the tarmac, taxied slowly back to the gate, and had the attendants crack open the hatches and have a look inside the belly of the plane. Everything turned out to be shipshape after all, and the Airbus thundered into the sky soon thereafter. On the ground in London (now June 11), I passed through British customs, again with no trouble. Due to the delay, however, I would have to skip most everything I wanted to see in London before heading to Newcastle that evening. It was already 11:00 by the time I stepped off the Tube at the Embankment, near Charing Cross Station.


I had no time for the Eye, the Tower of London, Kensington Palace, anything. I pretty much got a glimpse of Trafalgar Square and that was it.


So I figured I'd head for the British Museum. I had a few hours, and it wasn't a great distance away. It was what I wanted to see most in London, the British Museum. My boss, Spud, had told me such effervescent tales of the interior. Jewels and skeletons and taxidermied animals and stone tools and sarcophagi and who knew what-all else...everything that would make a self-respecting eight-year-old boy go bananas.

But no such luck. I couldn't get into the British Museum. They don't let you in if you have big bags. I had big bags. They had a cloakroom where you could check stuff in, but bags over a certain size...well, they just wouldn't fit.

Bummer, dude. There I stood, in the vast courtyard of the British Museum, having traveled 3,000 miles to get there, the glowing reports still running through my head, the palatial entrance still seeming to gleam under the sullen sky, crowds of happy foreigners chattering all around me, playing hacky-sack on the lawn or flopping casually wherever there was an empty bit of concrete. And I stood there, backpack slung over my shoulder, laptop case in my hand, barred from entry.

Massive suckage.
Oh well. I probably didn't have time to do the place justice. As it was, I just barely surmounted the 15-minute walk from the museum to the Underground station to get a ride to Gloucester Place. 'Twas there that my Londoner friend Andrea and I would catch the shuttle to Stansted Airport outside of town. We met without any trouble and had a relaxing pint at the Allsop Arms (a pub by the bus stop) before climbing aboard the jaunty orange-and-white EasyBus and departing for a singular rarity in England: a domestic flight. To Newcastle-upon-Tyne, Northumbria, Northeast England. Geordie-land. Home of Brian Johnson (AC/DC's lead singer), a thriving manufacturing industry, Georgian architecture, fast-food meat pies, beaches, England's coolest accent, and more pretty girls in short skirts than you could shake a stick at.

But that's another story.

9 comments:

Claire Dawn said...

Airlines tend to suck less on the long flights. AA to Japan is fab. AA locals- not so much.

I'm envious though. Never been to England!

Anonymous said...

Oh goodie, an adventure! I'm sorry it took so long to make it over here, but I love being along for your journey. Looking forward to the next installment and I'm wondering...did you get to see the museum on your return?

~Olivia

Olivia said...

that's weird, I showed up as anonymous. :(

Jerry said...

The adventure has begun and I'm eating it up.

dolorah said...

Very exciting. I love the way you write out your adventures - I read your six day weekend too.

I'm pretty sure we went to the British Museum while were were there. I know we spent some time in Madam - what's her name's - wax museum. And the Tower of course. We were lucky that day, the Crown was there. A gaudy ugly thing, and dang heavy to boot. Way cool though.

Its been about 25 years since my trip to London - the details have faded mostly. But I do remember the experience, and reading your current adventure reminds me how much fun we had.

BTW: AIRPLANES!!! Airplanes are back on your blog! Woohoo, yay!

........dhole

Murr Brewster said...

Did you shake your stick at them?

Jane Jones said...

haha, your trip sounds crazy. its sure as annoying as hell when things go wrong, but it makes for better stories. its boring when everything is perfect and peachy.

i cant wait to hear more stories.

also, great idea about the help postman fb group... did you ever think about hitchhiking the way? it might have been fun :)

A.T. Post said...

Claire: I hear ya. I've no faith in American air carriers anymore. Not after riding JAL...

Anonymous/Olivia: No worries! Glad you're along for the ride, no matter when you join up. Nah, I still didn't get to see the museum on my return. As you'll see, I wound up going to Heathrow, bending myself around the armrests of a bench, and trying to sleep for a few hours before my flight left in the early morning.

Jerry: Glad to have you, sir, glad to have you. Cheers.

DH: Madame Tussaud's? Yeah, that was right by Baker Street Station, where I met Andrea and close by the bus stop where I departed for Stansted. Adam told me it was a complete rip-off...

I got to see the Scottish crown jewels, the Honours of the Kingdom...probably not as grand as the English crown, but still, I know what you mean about gaudy and heavy and somehow quite amazing regardless.

Glad you stopped by! And that you like the airplanes...that shot's a year old, it's from the airshow.

Murr: I should've.

Jane: It was! And I love crazy trips! It's like you said in your last post: "I love love love life on the move." It's exhausting as hell and one is never clean or tidy or neatly-pressed when doing it (James Bond notwithstanding) but it truly feels like you're actually ALIVE.

I would've hitchhiked if I had a bigger time frame. But I had a strict timetable to keep to, and a fortnight to keep it in, no more and no less. When I go to Australia I just might hop a ride on a cargo ship or something, I hear that's cheap, and you get to learn a lot.

Mia Hayson said...

Dude, you didn't get to go in the British Museum? Awww :( That place is one of my favourite places to be. Seriously, I COULD LIVE in that building.

I love that online social networking got you to Vegas.

:D