Category Archives: Lifestyle

Public shaming and punctuality

At Schiphol airport in Amsterdam, a woman’s voice booms over the loud speaker, “Ellie Yudna you are delaying the flight. Please board at gate B80 or we will proceed to offload your baggage.”

I look up from my tea and paper expecting to see Ellie running harriedly through the gleaming modern terminal. Instead I see only an elderly couple sipping cappuncinos at a table nearby and a few travelers browsing the newstand, toting small rollerbags. Ellie must have been stuck in traffic, or worse, stricken with a sudden, severe illness. Why else would she caused her fellow passengers to suffer (*gasp*) a flight delay?

The woman on the loudspeaker booms again, “Patrick Gerha you are delaying the flight. Please board at gate H31, or we will proceed to offload your baggage.” Again I look around for the guilty passenger, and see only a young couple making out in the boarding loung and solo travelers tapping away on their computers. No sign of Patrick. I start to wonder. Maybe his business meeting ran over.

She booms again, “James Gibson you are delaying the flight…” I lose sympathy. James must be that guy I passed on the street last night on my way home. After stepping on mu foot, bumping my shoulder and spilling my beer, he ducked out of the bar and across the alley into a sex worker’s room at 2:30 am. No doubt he overslept the alarm and is now making everyone else late. Public shaming serves him right.

The announcements keep coming one after another. So many people are delaying flights. No wonder the Dutch take action with a loudspeaker. How else are wayward travelers going to learn to be punctual? The woman booms, “Genevive Bjorn you are delaying the flight…” Wait, that’s me. I get up and shuffle for the gate, embarrassment flush red on my cheeks.

First of three new attack subs, the USS Hawaii, pulls into Pearl Harbor

The Navy has been busy building the next-generation of attack submarines, called “Virginia class”, and the first of these, the USS Hawaii, built at a cost of $2.5 billion pulled into Pearl Harbor July 23rd at 9:30 am HST. It’s controlled by touch screen and joy stick, not wheel and shaft.

USS Hawaii leaving Connecticut bound for Pearl Harbor

Fanfare

The public was invited to attend the arrival ceremony, which started at 8 am HST, with a Hawaii Air National Guard F-15 jet flyover and the Pacific Fleet Band, the Kamehameha Alumni Glee Club, Halau Hula Olana Ai, Kahuna Pule Ganotise and a haka by Pa Kuci a Lua.

This morning’s arrival ceremony is a warmup for the 50th anniversary events marking Hawaii’s statehood next month. The USS Hawaii is the first commissioned submarine named for the State of Hawai‘i.

USS Hawaii being tugged into Pearl Harbor

If you visit the USS Hawaii, try to spot Governor Linda Lingle’s initials chalked on a plate on the bulkhead wall outside the crew’s mess.  She had a welder inscribe them during a keel-laying ceremony in Rhode Island back in  2004. Continue reading First of three new attack subs, the USS Hawaii, pulls into Pearl Harbor

Tips for moving to Hawaii

Hear Hawaii calling? Holly Ross has. She sent this reply to a recent blog post :

After a week on Oahu and discovering Haleiwa, I am irrevocably changed and having a hard time back in SF. I had never been so relaxed and at peace. Going back in January – already looking at houses and jobs.

Aloha, Hawaii!

Like Holly, I remember when I first fell in love with Hawaii almost 20 years ago. I fell hard, eventually uprooted my life and moved here, shining the Mainland grind forever. Before nearly everything was online, I had to learn about island living the hard way. Now it’s easy to pass along tips to make the transition from the Mainland easier.  Here are a few that I’ve discovered.

Consult this book, So You Want to Live in Hawaii (2nd ed) by Toli Polancy. It’s a great place to start learning about all of Hawaii’s cultural quirks. Just because it’s the 50th state doesn’t mean living here is like the Mainland. Oh yeah, that’s the point.

Also, check out Matson for shipping cars and belongings across the ocean. For moves between islands, you’ll need the help of Young Brothers shipping.