Monday 8 January 2007

The World's Most Expensive Bread

January, 2006

It's strange how sometimes a seemingly mundane incident or casual conversation can dictate the path your life takes.

I was planning on cooking Indian food. It was an overcast January day and I wanted something to spice up the dreariness of the winter in Upstate NY. I stopped by an Indian restaurant in Saratoga Springs to pick up some naan, the wonderfully moist unleavened bread of India.



While waiting for the takeout, I studied a map of India, which hung on the wall.

"You should go to India, it is very beautiful." The restaurant's owner had observed my interest in the map and, like all Indians, was extremely proud of his homeland.

I assured him I had been to India, told him what I had seen and said I wanted to take Max back some day. He encouraged me and suggested we look into the Palace on Wheels, an uber-luxurious train that tours Rajasthan in northwest India.

Within a week, we had decided to go, adding a stop in Morocco on the way back to break up the lengthy flight.

The four pieces of bread cost us several thousand $$ in the end. World Travel as a
naan - sequitur.

October 3rd, 2006 Plans Change (Part 1)

Nine months later, we've added Istanbul to our itinerary, the logic being We can't afford first/business class flights, so we should at least stop somewhere on the way over and back to make the flight in coach shorter and more bearable. Naturally, this would cost us more than the flight upgrade that we couldn't afford. Somehow though, spending slightly more on two new adventures for a few extra days makes more sense than spending the money flying in comfort for a few hours.

Some of our friends and colleagues have been aghast at our choice of destinations. There have recently been car bombs in Turkey and train bombs and an outbreak of dengue in India. Nothing has happened in Morocco, but the fact that it's a Muslim nation, in their minds makes it a dangerous travel choice.

That the Turkish bombs were in seaside resorts quite distant from Istanbul, the train bomb was in Mumbai and the dengue was in the south of India, places we will not even come close to, is not a consideration in the Fear factor of North Americans. More people have died in North America in the last week from 3 school killing sprees and an overpass collapse, than from the total deaths of the foreign situations cited by our acquaintances. But North Americans continue to attend schools and drive on overpasses with no concern for their safety.

October 10th, 2006
It's strange how sometimes a seemingly mundane incident or casual conversation can dictate the path your life takes.
It occurred to me that the complexity of the trip might warrant employing a travel agent. On the way to the agency, I got a call from a business colleague inviting me to a meeting in late January in Hawaii. I bemoaned the fact that I would be starting my trip then and wouldn't be able to attend. Then I remembered that the world was round, like a golf ball, and asked if the dates could be altered. As it turned out, they could, and subsequently they were.
What this meant was that we would fly to San Francisco for a few days, then on to Hawaii for a few more, then just keep heading west to India, knock Turkey off the itinerary, continue on to Morocco and then complete the circle to NY.
I'd call that a change in plans.

We employed the help of Nephew Ryan to see what his travel agency could do for us, and discovered we could save about $3,000 on flights and get better hotel rates and availability by booking online.

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

That is some expensive naan. I can't imagine what would have happened if you went out for chicken vindaloo...
Are you bringing the clubs with you? I hear that Robert Trent Jones course in Bou Craa, Morocco is incredible; lots of bunkers, though.

Anonymous said...

MOre! More! We are reading this aloud and are lovin' it!
Thanks for letting us into your recent adventure!
Lisa-Renee & John