wednesday may 6th 2010 (calgary, alberta)
“… New Zealand has been very good to us. We would have a hard time leaving if it wasn’t so bleeding cold!” I wrote that on May 16th 2009. One year ago.
I wonder how often people have muttered, thought, said, screamed;
“How naïve!” after reading a slaplog. I just did.
So a lot has changed
in a year. After a dicey passage on the cusp of a changing season, we escaped Australia and made it to Indonesia. We pulled into Benoa Harbor with full intentions of leaving within just a few
days. We would squeak out a late season passage to Thailand via Singapore and Malaysia. It was our mindset. It was our goal. We’re good that way. It
didn’t happen.
We fell in love with Bali and out of love with our anemic cash reserve. We did what seemed like the sensible thing at the
time and took a pass on the gnarly late season passage to Singapore. It would be 6 months before the next good sailing season settled in so we had some waiting to do. We would use the
opportunity to spend more time in Bali than
we had originally thought possible and even go back to Canada to make some money. Worrying about money is boring right? Maybe even more boring than making money, or so we thought.
How naïve!
If opposites attract then Jaime and I are living
examples. Weirdness may be our common trait, our glue. Other than that we’re pretty much as polarized as it gets, but
we were unified in this; our complete and utter shock at how difficult this reintegration back into the mix actually was.
We joked about it. We laughed over our dollar Bintangs at the Bali yacht club, about how easy it would be to pinch out 6 months. We’ll return as conquering heroes, see our peeps
and shake babies. The hardest part will be figuring out how to get all the cash we would make back to the boat. It’s
settled then. Another round!
Fast forward a month or so and we find ourselves in Calgary working
for the man. [Note to the man: thanks for the jobs, we really appreciate them.]
We dress appropriately. We use an alarm clock. We try to answer questions about a two and a half year trip to
people who are used to 6 second sound bites. We commute. We do what we’re told. We are in bed by 10. We pack a lunch.
We bitch about traffic. We wonder why. We endure uncomfortable silences in elevators. We use the iron. We buy groceries with
little regard for size and weight. We shower every day. We wear shoes. We let the water run when we brush our teeth. We try
our best to be polite, civil, well-mannered. We wonder what happened. Worrying about money is starting to look pretty
good.
There’s
another hand. And on that hand we’ve seen old friends. We’ve hugged family. We’ve laughed hysterically.
We went to the Vancouver Olympics. We’ve met little humans that didn’t exist when we were last here. We found
some new friends. Some new friends found us. We landed in Calgary’s best basement. We’ve needled and annoyed. We’ve
argued, insulted and apologized. We had a brush with the law (the law won). You know, the good shit life has to offer. It’s
here too.
saturday may 22nd 2010 (calgary, alberta)
The wheel fell
off Jaime’s Green Hornet on the way into work. Coincidentally the donor of our free car recently had his truck impounded
in a swat style take-down. There may be a connection here but I’m not going to speculate.
So Jaime and I
split our day between the auto wreckers and the side of the road trying to turn our trike back into a quad while Calgary’s traffic whizzed past a couple feet behind
us. I’ve been working 6 days a week, so it wasn’t the first activity we had picked for our only day off together.
On the other hand office work tends to leave us craving practical matters, and there’s nothing more practical than a
roadside rescue mission.
We consulted the manual. We furrowed our brows, scratched our heads and diagnosed. We sourced parts
and tools previously unknown to us (bubble flare adapter?). By the end of the day I guess we had bled and swore enough because
now there’s a green car with all four wheels on it parked outside the house, and there’s nobody to pay or thank
for it except each other. Total expenditure: 8 bucks. Another DIY job well done and good practice for things to come.
There
are three areas that we’ve been focusing on during our self imposed exile:
1. Trip Money
2. Website Overhaul
3. Event Planning
A little on each…
The first one is obvious. We have a plan, we have a budget, and
we have a timeline. I’m not sure if we will meet our financial target or not, but that doesn’t really matter.
As long as we keep working big and spending little we will return to Bali better off than we were before.
Extreme Makeover: Website Edition. You won’t
notice any changes for a few weeks yet, but there are some major improvements in store for theslapdash.com and a lot of work
happening behind the scenes right now. Slapdash readers will be rewarded with a completely fresh look and feel. New features
will include things like social media integration, real time updates, a slapdash tracker and more. Overall you will have a
far more dynamic and interactive site to enjoy and when the time comes we’ll ask our regulars to help us publicize it.
The folks who have been helping us out with theslapdash.com overhaul also run a gallery here in Calgary called Endeavor Arts. The building has been around for a hundred years,
we fell in love with the place the first time we walked up the stairs. Some locals will remember these stairs from back I
the day when they led to the Night Gallery (or White Elephant before that), a nightclub and live music venue. If you fall
into that category, check out the space. You won’t believe it. Especially the bathrooms! www.endeavorarts.com
On Friday June 25th we will be hosting an event there. Drinks,
music, prizes, silent auction and a presentation from yours truly will be made available. Much like the Green Hornets stub
axle and its brake hub retention nut, this is all new to us. Luckily we have some very good friends helping us out. The basic
premise here is to sell a few tickets, tell our story, and celebrate the website release. We are pretty excited to show off
the trip a little bit and get drunk with a bunch of cool people. We need to sell 150 tickets though so if you know anyone
that would like to attend please pass this along and if you know of any businesses that would donate some merchandise for
door prizes and silent auction items let us know!
Tickets are $20 and available now. You can get them at Endeavor
Arts, from Jaime and I, or here through the website.
wednesday may 26th 2010 (calgary, alberta)
“There's
no reason to become alarmed, and we hope you'll enjoy the rest of your flight. By the way, is there anyone on board who knows
how to fly a plane?”
We’ve all seen some version
of this scenario on TV; the white knuckled nominee sweats profusely and lines up the aircraft for an emergency landing. He’s
unassisted but for a few instructions relayed from the ground through a headset.
Who hasn’t secretly wished
for the chance to do that? I have since I saw it on Airplane for the first time when I was five years old.
The
Boeing 737 is the best selling jet airliner in history and cruises at well over 900 kilometres per hour. Its wingspan could
accommodate our Slapdash and two more lined up end to end with enough room left over for the dinghy. One of these 132 passenger
medium range jets takes off or lands somewhere in the world every five seconds and
on average there are over twelve hundred of
them airborne at any given time.
Taking off was
easy. A slow roll turns into drag strip acceleration and hash marks blur together into a solid line. You pull back on the
yoke and are sucked back into your seat. You see nothing but blue sky through the windscreen as you take her up higher and
higher. Exhilarating. We flew over the city and towards the badlands which gave me a chance to get a feel for the flight controls.
Keeping the aircraft lined up with the little pink lines on the primary flight display during a course change took my full
concentration. We circled back somewhere over Drumheller and before long found ourselves in the final stages of flight.
We
approached from the South and bore down on YYC’s runway 16-34. My equally inexperienced co-pilot Jeff set the course
and lowered the landing gear. He also managed the flaps and airspeed so that my I could stare down those little pink lines.
My palms were sweating as the ground rushed towards us. I had to wait 28 years since I saw that movie, but I was about to
find out of I could land one of these big jets on my own.
This all took place inside of a 16 million dollar
full motion commercial flight simulator. Forty-five minutes earlier we crossed a small bridge which had lowered into place
and allowed access to the big box from a mezzanine. This crazy device is built to duplicate all relevant aspects of the 737 and is
capable of replicating the spectrums of sight, sound, and motion. Just how realistic are these machines? Most commercial pilots
receive their aircraft orientation and recurrent training in them. They are recognized, certified and inspected by the national
aviation authority against regulated criteria. The flight deck was exact, even the flight attendant call button and intercom
worked. The bridge retracted and we were sealed inside. Images project onto mirrors which fill the cockpit windows with a
panorama of runway, airport, weather, and even ground crew. Sitting at the gate you are buffeted by the occasional gust of
wind and feel the cockpit rock gently. When we were taxiing out onto the runway you could hear and feel the ‘thup-thup’
of tires rolling over little bumps in the concrete. Details like this added incredible realism to the experience. The moment
the simulation began you were in full control of the aircraft and instantly forgot that you are actually 20 feet off the ground
in a box the size of a cube van being supported by 5 big hydraulic cylinders. In fact that’s the last thing on your
mind because all of your senses are being willingly tricked as you concentrate on following these little pink lines safely
down to the ground.
The freedom of our flight ends with the realism of landing. Earth greeted
us with a solid ‘thump!’ as our rear landing gear made contact with the runway. I was a little left of center
but still within the acceptable limits. After coasting along for a while with only our back wheels on the ground I was reminded
to lower the nose, which I did. Another jolt. We were now on the ground and barrelling towards the end of the runway. At this
point you no longer use the yoke; on the ground the aircraft is controlled using the pedals at your feet. I ate up about 12,000
of the available 12,675 feet of runway before finally finding the brakes and bringing her to a stop. Not exactly a landing
suited for an aircraft carrier but we were in one piece and safely on the ground.
So, can I fly this plane and land it? Surely you
can’t be serious. I am serious… and don’t call me Shirley.