Wednesday, January 1, 2014

Home for the Holidays – 6 Days From Door to Door




Post by Lara

21 December 2013

Fair warning before you read on—this post is long (5 pages long to be precise), and pretty similar to all of our traveling stories (i.e. “we attempted to get from point A to point B in a simple manner, and for numerous silly and occasionally unbelievable reasons, our plans were thwarted. Except in the few cases when they worked out fine”)

16th Dec
We left our house in the morning along with 2 of Lara’s students to attend a conference. Old Meh accompanied us across the river (in a dugout canoe) where we waited over an hour for the driver we hired to meet us. He was delayed due to a flat tire. Then, he nearly ran out of gas (every December there’s a fuel shortage. You’ll find that comes into play a few times in this narrative). He dropped us at our friend’s house 16 miles into the trip to wait while he got more gas, eventually gave up looking, and convinced a friend of his with a diesel SUV to take us the rest of the way [diesel was not in shortage in this part of the country]. We arrived at the conference site in the early afternoon. Kevin slept on various foam mattresses at the PCV’s house for 2 nights. Lara slept on about 2 inches of crumbly foam on top of uneven boards in the dormitory with the students.  Lara’s student “planted” her hair in cornrows with a side ponytail the night before we left.
18th Dec
Left the conference with our fellow PCV Brooke, who had to get to the airport for a 7pm flight. We met the car at 6:30 am, waited until 7 for it to load and drive off, only to have it pick up some cargo and return to the same place to properly fill up with passengers. Then, a fight ensued between our driver and the driver of another car. Finally left at 7:30, reached the outskirts of Freetown by about 12:00, and had to send Brooke in a taxi so she wouldn’t miss the ferry (she didn’t!) and she would make her flight (she did!).  For the whole trip, a loud pregnant lady alternately complained about our slow progress, pushed Kevin and Brooke, implored them not to step on her chicken that was sitting where their feet should be, and generally created a ruckus.  We finally got out of the vehicle at about 2:00pm and promptly attempted to get a car across town to the PC compound. 2 hours and Le 12,000 later (about 4 times the non-fuel-shortage price), we made it to the hostel and promptly collapsed. 
19th Dec
We went Christmas shopping in Freetown followed by spaghetti dinner with fellow PCV Justin.  We walked a lot to avoid paying exorbitant taxi prices, so we were pretty tired by the end of the day.  Harmattan winds (dry, dusty winds from the Sahara) brought clouds of dust to town, and by the end of the day Lara’s throat was totally raw.  This is not a good precursor to 26 hours of plane travel.
20th Dec
We left the hostel around 8:45am with 3 bags (one a big duffel bag to check, and 2 carry-ons). Through a series of transfers, we finally made it to the ferry in time for the 11am crossing. We met our friend Sahid the taxi driver at the other side of the water, and set off for the airport.  Arriving at the airport by about 1:00pm, we had no trouble whatsoever with employees (it was odd—last time, no less than 5 employees attempted to solicit bribes or undeserved “tips” from us—this time it was zero).  We then had fish ‘n’ chips in the restaurant, chatted with some Wisconsinites, and watched a plane land and subsequently take off again without ever boarding the 2 American passengers waiting in the terminal.  The passengers left behind were understandably peeved. I hope they made it home ok.
When we finally boarded the plane, a really old Boeing 767, we got to sit on the runway for about 30 minutes (long enough for the pilot to announce that he was going to go ahead and turn off the engine…when it was 90 degrees outside). Why the wait? Well, 4 planes were queued up to land at an airport that has exactly one runway.  Yep—one.  When all 4 planes were safely out of the sky, we finally got clearance to take off.
During the 2 hour flight, we were in the front row of the coach section. Kevin’s seat cushion (the one that’s supposed to keep you alive in the ocean) kept slipping out from under him, and at one point, his headrest came off.  Also, the flight attendant who served us, an incredibly friendly man that we guessed was from Kenya, encouraged us to get something other than water to drink because, “It’s free!”, which we thought was pretty endearing, so we got orange juice too. 
When we landed in Accra (the capital of Ghana), we followed a line of transferring passengers, most of whom appeared to be miners and one of whom was a woman traveling by herself to Hanover, Germany.  The miners all got shuffled through a door under a sign marked “transit,” while the three of us remained, confused, as the airport employee pointed us on toward what appeared to be the customs line to enter Ghana.
Our experience in the Accra airport was a glorious pile-up of frustrating, confusing, panic-inducing, and rushed. Over the course of the hour or so that we were simply trying to move from one plane to another, we had to follow a series of airport and Delta employees who all conveyed to us a certain lack of knowledge of what on earth to do with us.  To make matters worse, we did not have boarding passes, because the Freetown airport worker told us we would have to print new ones off in Ghana anyway once we arrived.  We went to a counter in the customs area and were immediately asked what our flight was.  We rattled off the flight number for the flight we needed to get on toward JFK, and the woman looked very confused before saying, “no—the flight you arrived on”. We told her.  Another employee came up, needed to see our passports, and also asked about the flight number. We went ahead and handed her our printed flight itinerary. She stared. “What flight were you on?”  We told her, the flight from Freetown, and pointed to the spot on the itinerary where Kevin had drawn a big asterisk. She stared again. “What was the flight number?” We read the flight number to her. I was not excited about the prospects we were facing when the first employee wee interacted with couldn’t read a printed airline itinerary.  After hand-writing our information in a giant book, she pointed us toward the airport exit, which we stared at long enough that the workers around us realized we were going to need some help.
First, we had to go to the baggage claim, escorted by an airport employee who dealt with us for the first half of our Accra experience.  She will be heretofore referred to as Trudy, because we decided this story is better if she has a name.  Trudy first asked us if we knew the way by ourselves, and then when we said “no,” led us through the “Diplomats” customs line, cutting past who knows how many important people, to get out and over to the carousel that of course did not have our bag on it yet.  Trudy then got impatient with us for not standing 1 foot from the carousel, until we pointed out to her that our bag was not on it yet, and by the time it appeared we would still be in position to get it before it sprouted legs and ran off on its own.  When we finally got our bag, Trudy then looked at us and said, “Ok, so you can go out now. You know where to go, right?” None of the many signs in the airport said anything resembling “transfer passengers this way,” and this being our first time in Ghana, we looked back at Trudy and said, “Um, no. We don’t know where to go.” Trudy looked for a second like she was going to try and describe the route to us, then sighed and said, “I’ll show you.”  We followed Trudy out toward the Arrivals door, weaving through throngs of people (Trudy weaving a bit faster, and frequently turning around to tell us to hurry up).  The 50-lb wheeled duffel bag that Lara was dragging made weaving a bit more of a chore, and she fell behind, at which point Trudy scolded her again for not being able to move faster, and told her she should have put the suitcase on a trolley (which would have made it twice as wide—the better for bumping into every Ghanaian between the baggage claim and the exit, I’m sure).  Following Trudy, we walked down two flights of stairs, passed by literally hundreds of people waiting for arriving passengers, and took a sharp right turn into the crowd at one point, walking through an alley and up a ramp, before turning to the right and revealing…the front door of the airport.  Trudy walked us inside, all the while reminding us that we were about to miss our flight, and pointed us toward the Delta desk before turning around and going back down to the arrival gates.
The Delta desk was manned by exactly no employees behind the counter, and exactly 3 baggage movers in orange vests standing in front of the desk and shooting the breeze.  We walked up to them and said that we were passengers to JFK and we needed boarding passes and to check our bag. They stared a few seconds, then one employee, whom we will affectionately call Amos, got on his walkie-talkie and paged himself.  Someone on the other line pointed out that he was paging himself, and he made a facial expression that said, “that’s the umpteenth time I’ve done that today” before then radio-ing that he had 2 passengers with a checked bag at the entrance.  Over the radio, we heard an announcement that 2 passengers were missing from the flight.  “That’s us!” we said.  Amos continued to stand there.  He asked what to do with our bag, and though we didn’t understand the reply, we guessed they told him to check it there. He took us down to the conveyor-belt and had us put it on. The bag was quickly carried away.  Amos then told us to “go ahead,” which we responded to by saying, “Where?”  He made the same anguished face that Trudy had made and then begrudgingly said, “Follow me.”  We got fast-tracked through security (though still had to take the electronics out and remove our shoes), then told to go to the gate.  What about our boarding passes? They will be printed, we were assured. We didn’t feel so sure.
To get to the gate we had to walk through the world’s longest duty-free shop, turn a corner, and walk nearly all the way back to where we came from, handing our printed itinerary and passports to the employee at the gate and explaining that we did not have boarding passes.  The employee told us to sit and wait, holding on to the passports and printed itinerary.  Nervously watching him hold our passports, we sat down in the closest two seats and prayed that the plane wouldn’t take off now, when we were so close to being on it.  About 5 minutes after we sat down, a female Delta employee who had been sitting there at a desk when we arrived looked at me and said, “Are you on the JFK flight?”  When we told her we were, she quickly snapped, “You need to go. That plane is about to leave.” Lara glared at her and informed her that the man from the gate had our passports and itinerary and told us to sit while he printed our boarding passes.  A few minutes later he showed up with passes, handed us the passes and passports, and let us through.
About 2 steps beyond the doorway, 2 Delta employees materialized, snapped on rubber gloves, and subjected us to a more thorough search than the one we had just gone through in the official airport security line.  The woman assigned to Lara actually folded her sneakers in half during the check, which made us incredibly nervous because we had just super-glued the soles back on the day before. Luckily, she didn’t break them, and we were shuffled on toward the shuttle bus.  At the shuttle bus door, 4 or 5 late passengers were standing in line, which we took for a good sign.  The bus pulled up, the door opened, and the passengers in front of us walked out calmly and took their places on the bus. As we were following, an employee stopped us, turned to another employee, and asked who we were.  “These are the last 2 passengers” she said.  “Don’t they have a checked bag?” was the response.  Then one of them turned to me and said, “Please. Wait here.”  Literally 20 feet from the shuttle bus and we still couldn’t catch a break!  The two employees argued for a while over the fact that we were apparently supposed to plane-side check our bag. I’m not sure how that would have worked, having to go through security with x-ray scanners that definitely wouldn’t have fit our giant duffle, but very little up to this point had made sense, so we let it slide.  After a few minutes of standing in the doorway and being asked repeatedly to “Please Wait,” one of them finally turned to us and told us to get on the bus. As far as I know nothing had changed, except that we were now closer to take-off time and that made protocol much less important.  As we rolled toward the plane and boarded, a shipment of checked bags pulled up, with curtains along all the sides so we couldn’t see if our bag was included.  Within 5 minutes we were taxiing, and before we knew it we were in the air for our second leg, a 10-hour flight.
The flight to JFK was actually quite pleasant. We enjoyed the food (a side effect of living on rice and plassas for the better part of a year and a half).  On-demand videos were great, and we watched some fun action flicks (Lara: Die Hard With a Vengeance; Kevin: Fast & Furious 6), slept a bit, and felt pretty sure that whatever lie ahead of us couldn’t be worse than what we were leaving behind.  Lara’s sore throat developed into a full-on head cold, which was about as expected.  We landed about 4:30 am local time.
In JFK, we went through customs in record time, made it into the main airport, printed our last 2 boarding passes, bought Day-Quil, Raisinettes, and Wint-O-Green Lifesavers, and arrived at our gate to find a room full of iPads with a sign inviting us to use the iPads and the wifi for free!  This felt a bit like heaven.  We updated our Facebook statuses to let our families know we were on our way, then putzed around online as long as we could (which is not that long, FYI), before deciding to take a walk.  We weren’t really sure when our flight was supposed to take off—the original printed itinerary said 8:10am. The newly-printed boarding passes said 7:35am, and the plasma screen at the gate said 7:40am.  It was only about 6 by this point, so we figured no matter what we probably wouldn’t miss the flight.  When 7:10 rolled around, we headed over to board and learned that Delta was offering a deal to passengers who were willing to take a later flight. We decided that was definitely not us.  The plane ended up getting delayed every ten minutes for the next 2 hours or so.  We left around 9am after buying breakfast at Wendy’s for $14 and running out of things to do online.  Our plane was pretty tiny, but the headrest stayed on and we arrived in Detroit with plenty of time to spare for our next flight.
The Detroit airport has free wifi now as well, so we were able to keep family and friends abreast of our status—even our good friend Angie, who was stuck in rural Alaska watching our story unfold, and remarking that it was rather silly that we were able to make it home from West Africa more quickly than she could get out of her state.  We had hot dogs, chips, and beer in Detroit. We ran out of things to do quickly, but sitting at the gate and waiting to take off was not an option, as our flight was delayed by about 2 hours and the gate was reverberating with the voice of one incredibly talkative passenger whose life story we could recount after sitting across from him for about 20 minutes. Lara actually can still remember his full name, where he came from that day, what he is studying in grad school, and that he used to work in a lighting store and therefore knows all there is to know about lighting.  We walked the length of the terminal twice before finally settling down at the gate, commiserating with another couple who also got some fresh air after learning everything (and more!) they cared to know about our chatty fellow passenger.  The plane took off a few hours late, and we made it into Dayton with about 3 hours to spare before Lara’s parents’ Christmas party.
Arriving in Dayton, we practically ran to the baggage claim and into the loving arms of our dear Pattycakes, who had come to pick us up while Kevin’s mom, Jane, waited in the cell phone lot.  After a bit of catching up, we called Jane on the phone and she told us she would come right away.  A few minutes passed while we complimented Pat’s beard and gave him half of his Christmas present, a Mende Bible and a Krio New Testament that we had bought almost a year prior.  Then the phone rang, and Jane told Pat that her car wouldn’t start.  Jane doesn’t have AAA, but Pat does, so he offered to call them, at which point Jane let us know that Lara’s dad was in fact on his way to come jump the car.  About an hour later we were back in business, speeding toward Kevin’s parents’ house only to turn around and drive back to Lara’s parents’ house with about an hour to spare before the party. 

And that’s how we made it home for Christmas 2013!  We will post some photos of our exploits in the next post.  Merry Christmas and Happy New Year!

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