Back in the USA

Another day, another 14-hour flight, and another week, another time zone reversal.  I love traveling to Asia; I don’t relish the thought of taking a month to get back on US time.   That’s what happens every time I travel to Asia.  When I visit China, Singapore, Thailand, or any of the places I go to in Asia, I get adjusted to Asia time in one day.  Then it takes a month when I get home to adjust to US time.  It doesn’t matter if I’m in Asia for 2 days, 40 days, or 13 months (I’ve done all three); it always takes forever to get back on our time.   I don’t think it has anything to do with direction; it has everything to do with what’s home.  My Asian friends tell me they experience the same thing…when they come to America, they’re on our time in a day or two, and then it takes them weeks to get back on their home time once they’ve returned.

This adventure was two weeks for Susie and me.  It started with 4 days in Singapore, where I taught a class to folks working in the Singaporean defense industry.  I get invited to Singapore to do that a couple of times a year; the topic this time was Failure Mode and Effects Analysis.

Singapore defense industry engineers in an FMEA course. Good times!

It’s a 17-hour flight from Los Angeles to Singapore.   You’d be surprised; it goes by quickly.  The courses are fun to do, we always do them in 5-star hotels, and Singapore is a good place to have a good time.   I watched Crazy Rich Asians on the way over during that 17-hour flight (it’s the first time I’d ever seen the movie).  I was surprised at how many of the Singapore locations I recognized in the film.  I like Singapore.

Next, it was a 5-hour flight to Perth, Australia.   You’ve read the blogs about it and the reason we went (Susie met her pen pal Adrienne for the first time).  We had a hoot.   Gresh and Baja John both told me Australia was a lot like the US, and they were right.  Still, they do have a few things we don’t…

Freemantle Prison in Western Australia.   It’s a tourist attraction today.  Back in the day, it was where the UK sent its convicts.
Pouring a gold bar in the Perth Mint. The Nikon showing off its low light level abilities here, in this case at ISO 2000.
G’day, Mate…a python in a Western Australia wildlife preserve…more low-light-level Nikon chicanery.
Tie me kangaroo down, Mate. At one of the restaurants in Sydney, I could have ordered a kangaroo burger, but I took a pass.
Kookaburra, sitting in an old gum tree. We finally met. He wasn’t laughing.

The morning we left Perth, there was a big hub-bub going on outside our hotel as we got into our Uber car, and to my astonishment, the fellow getting into the car in front of us was Scott Morrison, Australia’s Prime Minister.  He had been staying in our hotel.  There were a few security folks around him, but nothing like you’d see in the US.  He looked right at Sue and me from just a few feet away as he passed.   Nope, I didn’t get a photo.  Maybe right now he’s telling people he met one of the two guys running the ExNotes blog.  His friends are probably telling him it didn’t happen if he didn’t get a photo.

From there it was on to Sydney (a 4-hour flight), and we had another fabulous visit.  We didn’t know anybody there yet, but we made new friends and we had a great time walking around in one of the world’s great cities.   Sydney is a beautiful city and it should be on your list of places to visit.

An iconic Sydney photo…the Sydney Opera House.
I spotted this scooter, a new Lambretta, in downtown Sydney and I struck up a conversation with Barry, the guy you see here. This modern Lambretta is manufactured in Taiwan. Now I know two guys named Barry who ride Lambrettas.  You see bikes and scooters in Australia at about the same frequency as you do in the US.
Our new friend Colin in Sydney’s Rocks shopping area.

And there you have it.  It was another 14-hour flight to get from Sydney to Los Angeles and we landed at about 6:00 a.m. today.  It’s good to be home again.

11 thoughts on “Back in the USA”

  1. We use a homeopathic thing called No-Jet-Lag that we get at the drugstore here in Canada. Flying to Europe and Australia and back a few times there has been no jet lag at all. It really works.

    1. Thanks, Gord. I’ll probably wake up in the middle of the night tonight. I’ll find a 24-hour drug store and see if they have it.

  2. Welcome home! Sounds like you and the boss had a great trip.

    1. We did, Mike. We covered a lot of ground and saw a lot of things. Good to be back.

  3. Our amphibious squadron was in Sydney in 1980; tied up right around the corner from the Sydney Opera House. Folks were very friendly and helpful, very welcoming to a bunch of American sailors. The countryside around Sydney reminded me of NorCal foothills, except they have gum trees instead of our oaks. After Sydney, we ran down to Hobart, Tasmania…same thing happened there.

    Really enjoyed Australia; glad you did, too.

  4. I love Oz. We will go back some day. You were there at a good time for the $ exchange rate. I believe it’s around .70 cents USD to 1 AUD.

    Last time we went it was 1:1.

  5. Interesting read…..

    I was in Australia last February and it was one of the greatest trips I had ever done. Spent a lot of time in Sydney and enjoyed it a lot. It was Chinese New Years there and they had Circular Quay all decorated out with all the festivities going on. Also a lot of delicious traditional Chinese street food. We celebrate Chinese New Year here in Seattle but its nothing like how Sydney was setup. People were very polite and less stressed out then us Americans.

    If you ever get a chance check out Cairns Australia. Beautiful scenery and beaches and its very laid back and not any sort of tourist trap in comparison to what we have in the states. Riding a motorcycle on the Captain Cook Hwy was an incredible experience and the Daintree rainforest is a unique experience. Amazingly you can do Cairns Australia for cheaper then what a trip to Hawaii would cost.

    We plan to go again in soon and plan to ride a motorcycle on the Great Ocean Road!

    1. Thanks, Chris. I’ll put Cairns and the Captain Cook Highway on the list.

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