The Week #138
by
- We flew back to Japan and we're all happy to be home. By day 10 in America, we had spent the entire time going full-throttle meeting people, going places, and doing things and we were all tired and ready to get back into our regular routine again.
- Before the flight I bought the extra Mario Kart levels to give us something new to do on the plane. I really like this "expansion pack" model with Mario Kart. For Β₯2,500 we get new 48 new courses to play and they're delivered over the next year or so. Half the price of a new game and we regularly get new content without needing to buy new games.
- The flight was mostly uneventful. The main mishap was that despite me updating my reservation via the app to include kids meals and Asian Vegetarian meals for the adults, none of them got saved. And as we were coming America, this means there's no rice dishes and nothing that Leo would eat. He survived on half of the bagel he didn't eat for his breakfast and some random bread / butter we could scrounge up.
What was annoying was that the staff didn't apologize for their system messing up and instead told me to check with the ground staff next time. I shouldn't need to do that? And I've asked this before, but why aren't children's reservations set to automatically include a kids meal? - Once we landed in Japan everyone exhausted. But since this is a fully-developed country (and Japan at that) we were able to send our luggage to our house via kuroneko (Japanese fedex), to be delivered the next morning and enjoy a nice rail trip on the Narita Express to Totsuka. Leo ate the food he missed most, a salmon onigiri before falling asleep.
Once in Totsuka, we took a taxi home, brushed our teeth, and collapsed in bed β almost exactly 24 hours after we started the journey from the hotel. - And speaking of Salmon Onigiri, Leo missed them so much he had them the next day (Sunday) for breakfast as well. And some for breakfast, lunch, and dinner on Monday. Onigiri is Leo's life force.
- I subscribed to a new blog brr.fyi. It is chronicling life in Antarctica through the winter. I've only read a few posts so far, but it's well written and is quite thought provoking β seeing what it takes to keep humans alive in such harsh conditions.
Interactions
4
4
-
like
-
Onigiri is life, and salmon onigiri is Monopoly Man owning all the railroads and utilities level of living. Leo knows whatβs up! π π§ (γη²γζ§γ§γγγγεΈ°γγͺγγ)
reply -
Onigiri is life, and salmon onigiri is Monopoly Man owning all the railroads and utilities level of living. Leo knows whatβs up! π π§ (γη²γζ§γ§γγγγεΈ°γγͺγγ)
reply -
@jamesvandyne I need to print this out and stick it to the wall to remind me why I pay ANA's prices. The complete failure to apologise when they mess things up is my number one peeve. Sorry to hear the trip back wasn't so pleasant :(
reply