American Phive-Oh #8

It’s hard to look like a local when you’re photographing someone’s front door because it looks cute then staring at a map and pointing in random directions. But if you want to sound like a local you’d better be able to pronounce the name of their city properly. So it’s not Budapest, it’s Budapesht and it’s not New Orleans it’s Nu Orlins (preferably pronounced as one word, so Nuworlins). Then we come to Quebec and learn it’s not pronounced Qwebec but K’bec. Fair enough, I guess. We have Launceston or Lawnceston as blow-ins say whereas to the locals it’s Lon’cstn with a long “c”. Best to ‘fess up to being a tourist, put on your “Bring Back the Biff” rugby league t-shirt as you walk round Kyoto and ignore the stares.

Speaking of uniqueness, is there a city in the world that doesn’t have an Irish pub? Okay, I’m not counting places like Tehran or Riyadh,  but come the revolution it’ll be “whack for the daddy-o there’s whiskey In the jar”. The child bride and I were in K’bec City, having strolled around the old, interesting bit. We had developed our daily dose of tired legs and a bothersome thirst so looked for somewhere to relieve both. Murphy’s beckoned. A bonus was the musician who started playing just after our beers arrived. He was picking his guitar in typical Irish style – all good so far- then he started to sing a clearly identifiable Irish song…in French. Quelle horreur. Imagine if you can, the Clash singing London Calling in Japanese. We were eating pizza so I guess were in no position to complain.

With all of the references to bars and beer on this trip, you’d think the child bride and I are staggering from one hangover to the next. That does happen on our cruises where booze is free and is always only a few steps (if sometimes faltering) away. More on this in the next instalment.

We’ve also noticed that unlike the US, there are comparatively few ATM’S in Canada. As previously reported there are more ATM’S in bars than in banks in the US. In K’bec City, the only one we could find was in a Bureau d’Change hidden away in a nondescript building. Maybe Trudeau had most of them removed out of spite because comedians keep remarking how much like Fidel Castro he looks (his Mum got around – ask the Rolling Stones) or because he wants to bring in credit card expenditure monitoring (by eliminating cash) because governments need to know where you are and when, what you’re buying, who’s up who and how far and whether you need arresting for buying a gas cigarette lighter and destroying the climate. No, no, definitely not that last one. Freedom rules ie we have rules governing your freedom.

American Phive-Oh #7

We have bid farewell to y’all down south and lobbed into New York City. It’s drizzling and we are surrounded by light blocking behemoths down on 35th Street and the contrast with Nashville couldn’t be more striking. Adding a splash of colour, no doubt, will be every pimp for 500km with their flash limos and pink fluffy mirror dice. Why are they here, I hear you ask? It’s because around 140 world leaders with their extensive entourages are in town to condemn Israel at the UN. Isn’t that what they do at the UN? All of that illegal parking and extra traffic has turned the place into a carpark; the sort where parked cars are an active workplace.

Speaking of shit traffic, let’s move to Boston which is acknowledged as having the worst traffic in the USA. It’s as bad as the CB’s reverse parking. This and what I am about to tell you next shouldn’t detract from the fact that it’s a great place. If you like history, it has lots of history. If you like pubs, it has a pub street (and many more of course). They have mildly amusing comedians. The CB and I tittered at 4 of them in one of said pubs in Pub Street. And it has Cheers but we didn’t meet anyone who knew our names.

It also has a Holiday Inn (one of many so i won’t identify which) which is the tittering version of America’s Fawlty Towers. More frustrating than hilarious but here’s what happened. This hotel has a bar. It looks like a real bar with shelves across the back wall packed with various and the usual bottles of spirits and liquores and glasses of various shapes and sizes. There are tables and chairs with high chairs up against the actual bar and carpet on the floor. They have a drinks list that details various beers, 8 different cocktails, five red wine choices by glass or bottle and 5 white wine options although one was rose` which perhaps should have hinted at the confusion to follow. All up, a casual observer would be forgiven for assuming this was a normal functioning bar.

On night 1, after a trip into town, the CB and I decided to have a night-cap on returning to the hotel. It was about 9.30pm. We enter and sit at the bar. There are a couple of patrons present and a bloke slouched against the wall at one end of the bar. A toothpick or piece of grass between his teeth wouldn’t have made him look more casual. I assumed he was a cleaner or hotel worker of some description as he made zero effort to acknowledge us, in fact he didn’t move. Eventually I asked him if anyone was serving. He asked what I wanted. I asked him if he was the barman. He again asked what we wanted. I said we wanted a wine list. He obviously had it memorised because he muttered “chardonnay” and something unintelligible. By this stage I was fantasising about the scene in Ozark where the cartel’s hit man takes out a smart arse, decidedly unhelpful kid in a service station. To short-circuit a process which looked like going down-hill fast I ordered two Chardonnays which prompted him to push himself resignedly off the wall, slope down to the other end of the bar and return with two glasses. We drank them, cut our losses and left.

As we come from the school of thought that says repeating the same behaviour and expecting a different result defines insanity, we went to the bar again on night 2. Our asshole “barman” from the previous night wasn’t there. Maybe the cartels were in town. Another bloke was there with someone who appeared to be his off-sider. He was very polite but as we found, politeness is no substitute for bar-savvy if you are running a bar. So to short circuit the inevitable debate on availability, I pointed at the Chardonnay I think we had the previous night and said we’d have a bottle of that. Then the debate ensued. It eventually transpired that this laughably mis-functioning bar had no bottles of wine. Our man disappeared for a minute or so and returned from the cellar with half a bottle of Chardonnay and half a bottle of Chablis, which wasn’t on the wine list and was probably the unintelligible thing mentioned the previous night. It was in a green bottle and I was reminded of paint thinner so it was two more Chardonnays and an early night.

Now, when I travel, bars have a particular significance. The name of this site may provide a hint. I particularly like the way older hotels, especially those in India do bars with their wood panelling and leather chairs. So, dear reader, you will understand why my expectations are high. And let me remind you- in this case, we’re talking about a Holiday Inn. Elton John wrote a song about them for God’s sake. Love you Boston, but really…

American Phive-Oh #6

You dear reader, have probably worked out by now that this expedition has a music theme. The tour we are on is actually called “Southern Sounds and Elvis”. The third and final stop on this troubador’s traipse across the American South is Nashville and there have been some interesting comparisons not related to the obvious musical evolution, broadly from jazz to blues to country. I’ve already reported on the improved salubriosity (not sure if I just invented that word) of the music districts from New Orleans to Memphis. The same applies when we move to Broadway and the music district of Nashville. At first glance, Broadway looks like a normal city street in any modern city. Then you notice the bars and the noise. It’s only “noise” because of countless competing venues all playing at volume 11. The hotels have improved as well, apart from our anniversary hotel in New Orleans which was as distinct from our tour hotels as the boots they wear in Nashville are from my thongs.

So whilst it seems cleanliness and respectability have improved as we’ve headed north – no “gentlemen’s” clubs on Beale Street or Broadway, unless they’re just not as obvious as “Larry Flynt’s Hustler Club” on Bourbon – that doesn’t mean the good burghers and burghesses of Nashville don’t let their hair down and their skirts up occasionally. I used to believe that if you closed your eyes and stepped into the street in Hong Kong you’d either get hit by a Rolls Royce or a taxi. In the fun district of Nashville it would be a pedal tavern or a booze bus. Actually, you wouldn’t be hit by one of these unless you are deaf. The yelling and yahooing which occasionally sounds like singing plus the music blaring from the vehicle plus the numerous bands all competing for audible band width, makes this square mile just about the noisiest on the planet.

The major industries in Nashville are health care, publishing, tourism and music. There are also 800 churches in the city which probably explains why they print more bibles than Gideon. While on the subject of religion, the child bride and I went to an NFL game yesterday to watch the local Tennessee Titans get boxed by the Green Bay Packers. After running onto the field about half of each team ran to one end and got down on one knee to pray. Most of the Packer fans were at that end but judging by their performance in the hotel bar after the game, I doubt they were the deities, the onfield prayers would indicate.

The Titans are building a new stadium which will have a roof so they can bid for the Superbowl or Superb Owl as vampires call it (look it up if that went over your head like so many bats…or owls). The roof should significantly reduce the prevalence of various sun-related skin problems as at least half the game clientele were sans hats. It was the hottest weather I have ever experienced at a football game and it’s a winter sport. The CB and I had wide-brimmed hats and were lathered in sunscreen and still came away with a decided rosy tinge. There must have been some very sore heads on Monday morning, especially if you add to the sun a dozen sherbets, the first of which is downed at a tail-gate party pre-game. And the game starts at noon so there is plenty of time to kick-on after kick-off.

Nashville is the home of the Country Music Hall of fame, which like the Elvis display at the Graceland  Mall or whatever the visitors centre, with its eight gift shops, is called, has countless gaudy, spangly outfits on display, boots and all. But there are more boots on display away from the actual displays, as worn by most of the young ladies in this town. And very fetching a mid-length boot is on a shapely calf beneath a very short skirt or very short shorts. I couldn’t help but be reminded of a Tom Robbins novel I read decades ago (I think it was “Skinny Legs And All”) in which a foot fetishist called similarly sexy footwear (to him) “follow me home and fuck me” boots. Not sure a comment like that would pass muster (see what I did there) in these more unenlightened or descriptively puritanical times but I’m not offended. I don’t know if you are but I don’t care.

Being a bit of a guitar fan, I couldn’t help but notice another trend, mostly time rather than geographically based. Early players of most genres used Gibson guitars (maybe BB King’s various Lucille’s had something to do with that). Then Martin (the best) acoustic guitars started to creep in followed by Fenders. The closest I have got to a Martin guitar was when my daughter bought her first house and the previous owner left a busted up Martin in one of the rooms after taking out all of the furniture. I had my eye on it but he came back and got it. Damn!

Actually, from a musical perspective, the highlight of this trip was a night at Nashville’s Grand Ole Opry where we were lucky enough to see one of our favourite bands – the rockabilly outfit, Old Crow Medicine Show. And they did one of our (I keep saying “our” but am pretty sure I speak as one with the CB, at least on this topic) favourite songs – “Wagon Wheel” which we lustily sang along to as did the whole audience. I have to say though, their version isn’t as good as the legendary Not Garfunkel’s version. I may have previously mentioned that I am a founder member of that band.

It’s now time to bid goodbye to the South and head to New York City. But first we had to negotiate Nashville airport. At various times during what seemed like an endless trek through the security process, I thought we were waiting for Godot but unlike Beckett’s lost anti-hero, we eventually found our way through the slowest security process I have ever encountered in dozens of airports all over the world.

They (whoever “they”are) say first impressions are everything and when we arrived Nashville did a Joey of Friends fame and asked us “How are YOU doing?” The answer was “pretty good darlin'”. Unfortunately last impressions are lasting. But don’t fret Nashville. If I had to choose a place to live in the US, it would be you. New Orleans – great place to party. Nashville – great place to party. Hang on, that didn’t come out right. Oh well.

Incidentally, speakin’ of darlin’, I have been called “baby” “honey” and “darlin'” more times in the last week than in decades of marriage. It’s something a bloke could get used to. On the other side of the same coin we’ve been wished a “blessed day” by random people a few times also. This is mildly disconcerting if you have watched The Handmaid’s Tale in which that is a standard greeting in the loony dystopian world this country becomes.

American Phive-Oh #5

On Tuesday we travelled out of Louisiana all of the way through Mississippi. We hadn’t seen a hill since Denver by the time we got through the Louisiana swamp and this continued all through Mississippi. Almost as soon as we crossed the border into Tennessee things started to look up, including the front of the bus, as the topography began to change.

While rolling through Mississippi we were driving over some of the best farmland on earth. Of course this part of the world was conducive to sugar cane and cotton plantations with all of the slavery connotations that implies. So what better way to eradicate these memories than by covering this excellent soil with solar panels and wind mills. We might starve to death but all of that renewable energy will ensure we’ll be able to keep warm when the sun’s out and cool when it’s windy. Oh, hang on…. Fortunately my usual disquiet on seeing these monstrosities was becalmed by a visit to the BB King museum and burial place in Indianola. I’m inspired to buy a black Gibson guitar like his and forget every chord I’ve ever learnt so i can learn to play like him.

So we’ve travelled on Highway 61 of Dylan’s Highway 61 Revisited fame and where 61 crosses Highway 49 near Clarksdale Mississippi is the famous Robert Johnson crossroads where he sold his soul to the devil in return for devilishly good guitar talent (apparently) and a location made famous in many other songs. There are many claims on this famous crossroads as there are many claims on Robert’s actual burial site. What we are pretty sure of is that he made it into the 27 Club courtesy of a cuckolded husband who supposedly poisoned him (on my birthday but 17 years before my actual birth). That was in the fine print of his contract with the devil. Always read the fine print. Otis Redding, another member of the Memphis blues and soul royalty was even less lucky than Robert Johnson, only making it to 26 thanks to a plane crash.

So New Orleans is primarily jazz (Louis Armstrong is the Elvis of New Orleans) and blues but Memphis is blues and rock and roll courtesy of one Elvis Presley. There are others who claim to have “invented” the various genres and those like WC Handy who was the first to write down blues music he was listening to over a hundred years ago in the Mississippi delta. But Memphis is blues and Elvis which means visits to Beale Street and Graceland respectively.

Beale Street is to Memphis what Bourbon Street is to New Orleans  but Beale is wider and significantly cleaner. They’re like a teenager’s bedroom, before and after Mum’s been in there to hose it out. But the music’s just as good in both. The CB and I were in Slinky O’Sullivan’s Irish bar and the music was being provided by a pianist who could play and sing anything. Two songs into his set he asked for requests and played them for the rest of the night. These guys and bands play for hours. None of this two hour, 16 song set kindergarten, namby tamby, Rolling Stones stuff for these marathoners. Anyway, our pianist mentioned he was asked to play a Metallica song the previous night. Not one to miss an opportunity, I asked him to play Metallica’s version of Whiskey In the Jar. An Irish drinking song in an Irish pub – what could be more appropriate. He did an admirable job but it was difficult to hear the two guitar parts over his piano and vocals.

The second night in Memphis we attended the Blues City Cafe and saw another excellent blues band fronted by a blind three piece suited black guy. What was additionally unusual about this guy is that he played the harmonica but like the Eagles who switch guitars every song because apparently one song puts them out of tune (they need to talk to Status Quo), he switched harmonicas almost every song. He had what appeared to be a customised bag of them – at least 7. I have never seen that. It could have been different harmonicas in different keys – I don’t know, but there you go.

Then it was on to Graceland. Of course those of you who have been there will know that the Graceland experience doesn’t just involve a house but also a combination mall/theme park/museum (with 8, count them, 8 gift shops) and a huge hotel, cutely called the Graceland Guesthouse. On first encountering this tourist behemoth which straddles Elvis Presley Boulevarde (obviously), the first word that springs to mind is “tacky”. The first complete thought that springs to mind once the full experience has been rationalised is that it’s a holy roller, evangelical, convention shrine, not to God but to Elvis, populated by slavish devotees who still worship him despite his dying 47 years ago on my birthday like Robert Johnson (86 years ago). I don’t know what it is about August 16th but it doesn’t like musicians. It didn’t spoil my birthday party because even though I can’t remember what music we were listening to, it certainly wasn’t Elvis.

The house, sorry, mansion is a bachelor’s paradise. There are man-caves everywhere, both inside and out. It’s a pity he had to share it with his grandmother, parents, wife and daughter. He did have an entourage however so I’m sure the expected shenanigans were got up to periodically.

Onward to Nashville.

American Phive-Oh #4

Move over Budapest. Sorry Pokhara. On your bike Marrakech. New Orleans has stormed into first place on my favourite city list. I have to admit though, I’m a slut for a town with countless bars in which excellent music is being played excellently all day every day and the beers are icy and huge as in Huge Ass Beers. There are other things in life that are more important but I can’t think of any right now.

I thought #3 in this series was going to be the Big Easy wrap-up, but I keep thinking of more Cultural Learnings of America aka Borat. For example, the only place in Australia where you can guarantee the presence of an ATM is in a casino. Here every bar has one. They don’t want you to gamble but they certainly want you to drink. And cash is obviously king. Speaking of gambling, it’s illegal in Louisiana. Which explains the humongous Ceasars casino in the down town area – not. You have to give it to the locals – gambling is banned so they call it “gaming”. And the powers-that-be allowed that rather obvious loophole to ride. You have to ask yourself why. We’re now leaving Louisiana heading for Mississippi then Memphis so no more f…s will be given in this regard.

We’re now looking forward to seeing a hill. We haven’t seen one since Denver a week ago. I used to visit Calcutta regularly and was convinced that one day it would disappear into the swamp on which it appeared to be built. New Orleans is below swamp-level so the odds are that it will achieve oblivion before Calcutta. And as far as the landscape is concerned, “land” is a misnomer. It’s mostly water. Driving north past (through?) Lake Pontchartrain and we appear to have been on a bridge for the last half hour and that’s not the actual bridge over the lake which is apparently the longest continuous bridge over water in the world.

So now we’re heading for a change of scenery as the water seems to be receding and we’re back on dryish land. However there’s a lot to be said for sitting with a cold beer in a hot climate watching the world go by with good music all around. However spare me the appalling short pyjama fashion that some men appear to have adopted and I don’t want to ever see one of Queen’s “Fat Bottomed Girls” violently twerking, again, ever.

American Phive-Oh #3

Where to start. Now I think I know how Borat felt when he had a chance to catch his breath after hitting these shores. The cultural overload down here makes New York seem like The Truman Show. Sorry for the references to two American films. If you’ve seen them, you’ll know what I’m talking about. If not….so be it. Anyway, I’m feeling inspired. I’ve been around this big old world (is that a song lyric?) and seen a thing or two but I ain’t seen nothing like this place with its bars and music and restaurants and it’s human zoo.

Speaking of a human zoo, I’m going to be a bit (factually) nasty here. I’m not referencing anything that isn’t widely known (that’s enough caveats) but if the bald eagle is the national bird of this country then type 2 diabetes is the national disease. We did the hop on hop off bus yesterday and at one stop 10 people got off and the bus’s tyres rose about two inches. And love, you really shouldn’t be wearing those tight short shorts. But feel free to express yourself, both figuratively and literally. Look, i could do with losing a few kilos but in this country i feel positively svelte  and the child bride could be a super model. All of those sweaty, squeaking, shaking thighs and cheeks must result in Curash being sold by the wheelbarrow. When you see the size of the meals they put in front of you, you understand why. I’m reminded of a roast beef sandwich I had in Times Square many years back. There were horns sticking out of one end and a tail from the other. And directly across Bourbon Street from our hotel is Huge Ass Beers. Says it all really.

While on the subject of food (and drink), the child bride and I had a very nice meal in a restaurant called Antoine’s (around since 1840). We were advised they have a dress code – jackets for blokes. It wasn’t policed to the extent that one bloke was wearing shorts and there were a few groups of very casually dressed young men dining and, I might add, behaving impeccably. Contrast that with the female groups (two bridal parties and four birthday groups) we encountered in various bars, both seedy and seedless. They were mostly “fine dining” shots and enjoying themselves at volume 11. Bit of roll reversal going on here.

If you don’t like drinking, there’s weed everywhere – the smell is unavoidable and after a few days, it’s in your clothes. The French Quarter is not the drug induced dystopian zombie world of some cities but I suspect in most places that attract large numbers of tourists, that is only tolerated in the less attractive parts of town. But weed doesn’t turn people into motionless, twisted lamp stands the way fentanyl does. And I suspect all of those competing sounds and masses of people frequenting numerous bars and clubs are incompatible with a slow, quiet crack-induced demise.

So you come to a place expecting to be on alert the whole time, and I guess to some extent you should be, but it’s been pretty cruisy so far. We finished up in Frenchmen Street last night which ironically is outside the French Quarter (hard to believe, I know) and where the locals go to party. It’s quite a walk back to our hotel, the Royal Sonesta in Bourbon Street but we did it and still had enough energy to visit a bar (called the Drinkery – got to love it) where a very loud rock band was playing our 60’s and 70’s music – Cream, Led Zeppelin, Jimi Hendrix – plus a lot of driving blues, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Rory Gallagher style. That was a perfect way to finish stage 1 of this trip. Next comes the first organised tour part of this trip. We’re not quite finished with NOLA but in a couple of days we start our sojourn into the musical heartland as we make our way up through Memphis to Nashville.

American Phive-Oh #2

The first time I flew United was in the early 1990’s, around about the time United planes used to lose parts of their fuselage mid-flight, like luggage hold doors and wing flaps. We used to joke that you could get to Australia from the Us without auto pilot – just follow the debris trail across the Pacific. But now, as then, all went smoothly and acceptably if you count hurricanes as acts of God. So we are here.

I’ve decided after about three hours, that New Orleans is my spiritual home. That three hours comprised 1 hour to get our (unlost, thankfully) luggage at the airport and drive into town to our hotel on Bourbon Street. Then get into the hotel and get out of the clothes we’ve been in for the last couple of days (1 hour) and get into the street and check the place out. So late afternoon/early evening there are numerous bands playing a wide variety of music in numerous bars and clubs they tend to go from mid afternoon to about 6.00pm then someone else takes over. The early shift comprise a lot of children of the sixties and seventies (Iike me) and grey ponytails are ubiquitous. Hence the spiritual home reference. I could retire and do that for the rest of my days no worries. Of course, that’s in another life in a parallel universe because other commitments tend to mitigate against this. But one can dream.

Wandering down Bourbon Street was an experience. We had been told that crime is rife here (we were told the same about Capetown) and there were plenty of layabouts making pretty pathetic attempts to get their scams going but they mostly left us alone. Even I could see that there were eminently more muggable people wandering the streets than us. I had left my glasses in the room as I only had two pockets (wallet and phone) and it was sunny so the sunglasses won. So even staring at a street menu like Mr Magoo trying to distinguish letters from numbers, didn’t attract unsavoury attention.

The souvenir shops here are insane. Our driver, coming in from the airport, told us there are pretty much no rules in this place. If you have to act a certain way elsewhere, reverse it here. So the souvenir shop had plastic models of a girl blowing a crocodile and the crocodile doing unmentionable things to her from behind. Someone I know is getting one of these. And I have only seen similar messages to the ones here on t-shirts in Korea but the artwork here is infinitely more ornate.

This place is a critical cultural observer’s (that’s what I call myself) paradise. So plenty more to come.

American Phive-Oh #1

It’s Wednesday morning and the child bride and I have much to look forward to. Friday, September 13th is the 50th anniversary of our first (blind) date. It was a Friday the 13th back then also. We’ve always considered it our lucky day since, having twice in that 50 year interim, won meat tray raffles in pubs on a Friday the 13th. Put a circle round that date. I can’t remember which pubs or when however. This Friday the 13th has Hurricane Francine blocking our way as we all head towards Louisiana for what I anticipate to be a rather uncomfortable likely flight-cancelling juxtaposition. I suspect we’ll be pretty familiar with San Francisco airport by the time we get our connecting flight to New Orleans.
…..

Got that right. Our San Fran to New Orleans flight has just been cancelled and we haven’t even left Brisbane yet. Looks like a night in San Fran then a flight to Denver and hopefully a connection to New Orleans. We get there on the 12th instead of the 11th so will still make our date on the 13th. It’s times like this you realise the value in booking through an agent (not something I normally do) and lashing out occasionally to sit at the front of the plane. By the time we heard our flight to New Orleans had been cancelled we were minutes away from boarding – just enough time to ring the agent to get our hotel booking changed and our lift from the airport rearranged, not something I could have done myself. I’m assuming United will put us up in a hotel in San Fran although it’s been an hour since I ordered that red wine so the jury’s still out.

This airline also seems to leave the seatbelt sign on for an inordinate amount of time, even when it’s so calm it feels like we’re standing still. There maybe a reason for this – see previous paragraph – regarding giving the flight attendants hours of time for necessary gossip. Or it could be because Boeing planes have been rather inconveniently losing doors and wheels recently. This plane’s a 787 Dreamliner which leads nicely into this. Already the lights are off, the shades are down and people are pretending it’s night time. It’s the middle of the bloody afternoon and I’m going to chase that glass of red, seatbelt sign or no seatbelt sign.
…..

We’re now in a hotel in San Francisco (with flowers in our hair). Haven’t encountered any homeless or drug addicts (or both) or been mugged yet, but we’ve only been here a couple of hours most of which was spent wandering aimlessly round the deserted airport like the Walking Dead trying to find someone to talk to. Here was me thinking someone from United would meet us off the plane with a hotel voucher and new boarding passes. How naive. How old-school. Those passes and vouchers do exist because we eventually located them but not without a bit of Poirot and a very helpful United lady who I’m sure wasn’t expecting to be problem solving for idiot foreign tourists at that hour.

Very early start tomorrow. Our New Orleans flight via Denver is confirmed and will arrive hopefully, after the worst of the hurricane has passed through and hopefully leaving some of the bars intact and unflooded. For now we are in our hotel in south San Fran. Not quite Silicon Valley, which is a bit further down the road, but with pretensions – lots of shiny office buildings and no houses. Maybe that’s why the bar and restaurant in our hotel are permanently closed – the nerd community doesn’t drink.

This was going to be a prologue but we’ve sort of stumbled into the holiday proper, albeit in entirely the wrong location. Hopefully have something more interesting to write about in the coming days.