Friday, January 08, 2016

Saipan Part 1


After 7 days straight of long work days I can finally post more of the excursion.  Wifi here is sketchy sometimes.  The work site is usually good but this morning wifi was not working at my favorite hipster coffee shop.  So I'm back in the hotel room where the wifi seems good enough this morning to upload lots of fun.

JFK airport is a parade of international airlines from everywhere.




First class menu!




When the hostess handed me a hot cloth before the meal, it sank in that yes this whole excursion is going to be different in unexpected ways.

Here is what I learned soon afterward was the first of two appetizer courses...



Because after second course was cleared (how about the fine linen?)  the hostess came by "we'll be bringing the main meal to you soon" .  

Grilled trout. Could be the best fish meal I ever had.  How about that porcelain china?


Custard



Crossing the Bering Strait between Alaska and Russia



Focaccia


Approaching Tokyo


Tokyo, another parade of int'l airlines.  Thai Airlines looking majestic.


The airline seats are in booths that are kind of like cubicles.  You get a side table and your feet can stretch out underneath the next person's table.  So you have both a side table and a rectractable front table, plus electricity and USB so you can play with all your devices.  Your seat then fully retracts flat to a bed.  At one point the hostess came by "would you like a cardigan" another instance of this new situation to which I need to adjust.


After a four hour flight from Tokyo to Guam.  The "cultural center" isn't much more than a nice gift shop.   A variety of macadamia nut products.



Turbo prop from Guam to Saipan (ready to board in Guam at like 3AM local time), a 50 minute flight.

Saipan... my hotel is a short walk from this



 Stood here and just lost myself


 The construction site I am working at is adjacent to these resorts


Seriously




I'm staying on the main drag.  One of many gift/beach supply stores



Rented a Toyota CJ Cruiser for half a day.  Battle memorials many places on the island.





Many Japanese jumped to their deaths in fear of not so friendly treatment if captured.

Japanese memorials at what is known as "Suicide Cliff":

The eastern side of the island has rougher seas. Trade winds always from the east.

Construction site

A crew of four drill the soil probes. My task is to make detailed measurements of the recovered soil, and collect specimens for laboratory analysis.


One of a few Chinese meals with the management team, whom are Chinese from Hong Kong, Singapore, and Macau.  This spread below is Southern Chinese.  We went for Northern for New Years Eve with a big crowd. Neither was anything like in the US!  I much prefered the Northern because Southern uses more exotic seafood and animal parts that were not easy for me to be accustomed to.  The Chinese have been very hospitable, so the best way to be diplomatic was to accept their hospitality and try most of what was offered to me.  There was often a language barrier, but a good time could be had because for me the saying held true that ninety percent of communication is nonverbal.  Nods, smiles, and raising your glasses in good cheer.


just doing my job

Myself with John, the project archaeologist.  He is in charge of collecting artifacts found during excavation for the hotel foundation.  He is Chamorru which is a local Pacific Islander. There are Micronesians, Melonesians, and Polynesians.


Flashy cars are rented by many places here

A shell once used as a carving blade that John found in the excavation.

The orange jeep-looking car is my rented Toyota.


Pieces of coral that we found in the soil probe about 30 feet below ground.  The islands here are on coral just as we are on clay and glacial sand and boulders back home:

 UXO, unexploded ordnance from WWII are common here. this is a Japanese beach mine ("baby mine") because it's relatively small. They are old and harmless due to decades of rain and decomposition.  Care is still taken before hauling them offsite.

John opening a coconut, islander style. The juice is a natural source for electrolytes.

Lizard on construction equipment


Another view of my seat on the Tokyo flight

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Third try with comments.

For some reason,y comments not being transmitted.

Look forward to more pics.

Enjoy Japan!

Anonymous said...

Got your revised itinerary.
Loved your blog about goings on in Saipan. You worked hard! Beaches look great!

Look forward to more pics and hearing from you when you get back.

I'm sure you're looking forward to Tokyo.
Mom

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