
And then I had to spend another 120 minutes administering my winter boots.
When I got to Charlotte-Douglas airport, I found this happening:
Anyway, I felt a little trepidation about flying...this was only my second time since 9/11 flying, so it was reassuring to see that the military might of the United States of America was accompanying me on this flight:
The flight ended up being OK. Here's what I wrote about it afterwards, at 4:40 p.m. CST today:
"I’m sitting in
I found a corner of the terminal waiting-area mostly hidden from the bustle of the main thoroughfare by a column of sheet metal decorated by patterns of tear-drop dents. I lose my balance every time I look at it, because the tear-drops blur together like a Magic Eye puzzle into a perspective-defying optical illusion. I probably shouldn’t be sitting right next to it, but it’s the farthest spot from everyone else and I like it.
I just watched
I have about an hour before my flight is scheduled to depart. My gear is stretched out beside me like a pseudopod, taking up two extra seats. I had to take off my coats (count: three, but two are zipped together into one bulky layer), but I am already starting to get chilly in nothing but the airport air conditioning. I’m about five hours from stepping off the plane in
I largely slept on the flight from
Now it’s raining outside. I want to find things to take pictures of, but I am too afraid to leave my stuff here while being too lazy to pack it up with me. I did jog around the corner briefly to check the flight status just now, and I took a surreptitious picture of a lady wearing what could have been nothing other than a necklace composed of Christmas tree lights of alternating green, red and blue. After I took the picture, I got a suspicious look from a young pasty girl listening to her iPod a few seats down. I don’t know who she thinks she is. I bet she was listening to Nickelback.
My flight is about 40 minutes away, so I am going to pack all my stuff into my backpack and laptop case and re-administer the complicated network of zippers, pull-ties and looped clasps that constitutes my warm weather jacketing. This is because I have to pee. I think the bathroom is underneath a giant gaping swordfish’s head. Time to find out."

Now I'm sitting in a hostel near downtown Anchorage. It's 2:21 a.m. here, and the temperature is -9°F. Weather.com made me laugh just now. You know how forecasts often include the "X degrees, but it FEELS like X minus 10 degrees..."? Well, on the Weather.com page for Anchorage right now, the listing says:
Feels Like
N/A°F
It is always a good sign when the perceptible conditions outside are not describable or comparable to anything within our measurement system.
My flight from Houston to here was uneventful. As we were boarding, the passenger who was to sit in the row behind mine made about twelve jokes about how fat he was. ("Oh no, who's the unlucky one who gets to sit next to the fatty?" "I saw your eyes widen when I walked up -- it's OK! I'm the fat one!" ad infinitum) I slept almost from the moment I sat down until we were an hour or so into the six-hour flight. I read some Moby-Dick, I read some The Name of the Rose, and I watched the last half of Shrek the Third on my adolescent neighbor's portable DVD player. Her mom, Kelley [sic], was a very nice woman who intermediated between my picky diet and the scrolling snack trolly, as well as giving me a few heads up regarding spots of interest around Anchorage (she's from here). To top it off, as I was waiting for my red suitcase to swing around the baggage carousel, she came and found me to give me her phone number in case I needed anything while I was here. Seriously! Now I feel bad about contemplating sticking a piece of paper in her sleeping daughter's mouth just to see if they'd kick me off the plane.


As difficult as it is to find a comfortable position to sleep on an airplane, some have it a lot worse...

As we approached Anchorage by air, the view through the window transformed from sheer blackness punctuated by a single light at the tip of the wing to a dazzling array of color pressing against the night. Anchorage looked like a flat Christmas tree after every box of lights from the attic has been untangled and strewn around it. I know frequent travelers are probably inured to the sight of a metropolis lit up at night, but to me it was stunning. But even though the city at night is a spectacle, but it was only the third coolest thing I saw as we came in to land.

Before you get to Anchorage (Alaska's largest city), you first have to cross the mountains. We flew right over the top, but I can imagine how great a natural barrier they'd be to anyone of more limited earthly conveyance. I had been fiddling with my mp3 player when I looked up and realized that what I had taken to be clouds on my peripheral were really the peaks of endless numbers of white mountain ranges. I was amazed, and still am. I've never really seen mountains before, I guess. I mean, I've seen a mountain, but never mountains. These were enormous and heaped up like frozen whipped cream. I felt disoriented because there was no way for me to tell how big they were, and thus no way to tell how far up from them I was. At first, looking down, it seemed that I could drop a rope of only a hundred feet or so and reach the higher of the peaks below me. Then I realized what the little black dot following underneath us was. The plane's shadow was about the size of a penny, which meant that we were still ridiculously high. I have no pictures of this, because it was too dark out, but if my mouth were a video lens, I'd have an uninterrupted feed of the landscape. The flight over the mountains alone has made this trip worth it. I stared agape until we passed them and came upon the illuminated network of Anchorage.
The other of the three coolest things I've ever seen appeared after our pilot had made his first pass by Anchorage and was looping back around for the landing. Airplanes of this size being hard to turn on a dime, we had to cut a wide circle out over the water, which afforde me as close a view as I'm ever likely to get of multitudes of ice floes in the night. Without much light, they looked like pale patches on a dark background, but when the plane angled sharply for the turn, some lights from the machine's belly fell across the water directly beneath my window, and all of a sudden what had been dull pale irregularities in the blackness lit up like electrified metal shavings. It didn't look real at all, and it was over in only a few minutes, but the shininess of the ice floes under the light of our airplane is not the kind of beauty I could predict. It was amazing to witness, and I couldn't think of anything else for like an hour. Not even the Ted Stevens International Airport Official Welcoming Polar Bear could distract me...


After paying for my first ever taxi ($12.50 for four miles??!) I humped all my gear up the stairs to the lobby of the Qupqugiaq Inn. This is a weird place. It's a lot nicer than the last hostel I stayed in (Chicago's International Hostel, 2005) in that it's more like a hotel than a summer camp, but it's still incredibly laid back (and cheap -- $214 for two weeks!) and they have an ethernet jack right outside my room. I don't really know my roommates at all much beyond their names: Peter (who went to college with a guy from Winston-Salem), Chino (who lives in Alaska working at a Lowe's Home Improvement store after getting married here two years ago) and Jose (who is significantly older than the rest of us). One thing I'll find out soon -- which of them like having their picture taken by a stranger and which don't.
As soon as I took a shower, I threw on as much of my warm weather gear as I could in under 11 minutes and started walking to Wal-Mart, ostensibly to buy an ethernet cable and some food, but mostly because I wanted to see Anchorage and I didn't want to wait until morning.
Anchorage is cold.
And it turns out that when you wrap up such as to fight this coldness, your (my) glasses fog up all the time. After spending half an hour or so in Wal-Mart eating bagels smeared with peanut butter, I started walking home. While walking through the parking lot, a voice came on the booming external speakers to announce, in a peevish tone, "Attention: break is over for all employees. Break is over for all employees, so get back to work." Not much longer after hearing that, I had to take off my glasses and walk home blind because my breathing fogged them over too badly to see anything. But it was worth it to walk around a mostly empty city in the middle of the night in the middle of winter (in the middle of negative nine degrees).

Then I came home and went to sleep goodnight!







8 comments:
This blog will be worth whatever it cost me. The pics are fine the way they are
Dad
deardear alex hendeeeson,
I am so glad I planted the seeds of the sparks of the maybes of the ideas for this trip.
Is it life defining yet?
tell me when you get eaten by a polar bear
Dr. Friedman here -- glad you arrived safely. But what's this -- your first venture into the Alaskan "wilderness" is to Wal-mart? Oy. The pics and comments are great -- the more I think about it, you must write your college application essays from there -- the admissions committees will love it. I think that polar bear is one of the contractors who worked on Ted Stevens' house and then ratted to the grand jury. Watch your back.
This is all so cool.
Check back at AwfulMart for anti-fog spray stuff for glasses. I'm pretty sure you'll be able to find some.
Love love love love love.
Love your blog Alex! Hope you have fun!
A. Jenni
ALEX! I love you and it sounds like you are having an awesome time :) We got presents today from Jennie. i will take the pleasure of opening yours so they dont sit all lonely after christmas. haha jk. Hope tomorrow is as fun as today was!
~Sara~
Alex,
Whats up with knight and "acounting"????
Dad
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