(Very) low non-flying aircraft
Back in the '80s, I used to write a newsletter for an aircraft trade school then called the Academy of Aeronautics (now the Vaughn College of Aeronautics) that trained young men (and they were all men in those days). The school was located across the Grand Central Parkway from LaGuardia Airport. When a small plane (I can't remember what kind) was donated to the school, it was flown into LGA and then was to be airlifted, dangling from a helicopter, across the highway. During those few minutes, the NYPD closed all eight lanes of traffic between the airport and the school. I tried desperately to interest the local television news and the three big New York daily newspapers to send a crew (TV) or photographer (print) to capture this remarkable sight in the middle of the day. No luck. It appeared in the AoA newsletter, and that was just about all.
Fast forward to 2010 and the Internet age. American Airlines donated an MD-80 to the George T. Baker Aviation School, similarly across a highway from Miami International Airport. A Florida construction and engineering company lifted the 39-ton plane across he highway using a 500-ton crane outfitted with a 400-foot telescoping boom. Photographer Joe Pries captured the procedure for airport authorities, and undoubtedly, everyone around with a cell phone got it too. I couldn't get a lone cameraman to LGA back then, and this photo is now all over the Internet.
Monday, March 14, 2011
Sunday, March 13, 2011
Mega-Resorts on Egypt's North Coast. Who Knew?
Mansour Amer's AMER Group properties are huge -- and hugely popular
January and February are way low season on Egypt's North Coast, about a 110-mile-long strip between Alexandria on the east and El-Alamein on the west that is breaking out in resorts the way a kid with chicken pox develops spots. Even though people who live in snow country find days to be mild and sunny, this long resort strip is eerily empty right now. Not so, I am told, between June and August when the area's 100-degree heat and Mediterrranean breezes are a welcome relief for the truly heat-plagued citizens of Cairo (population 18+ million) and Alexandria (7 million in winter) come to cool off.
Of the dozens of resort developments, those in AMER Group's portfolio are the most impressive and aggressive. Mansour Abd El-Meguid Amer is CEO of the AMER Group, and when I look at the ambitious scale of his projects, I am persuaded that he is a direct descendant of Egypt's pyramid builders. AMER Group says that it specializes in "high-speed development." I'll say.
Golf Porto Marina
Under construction now is Golf Porto Marina (below). The first 6,000 of a projected 18,000 units are to be handed over to owners before the summer 2009 peak season kicks in. The 18-hole golf course designed by Raymond Hearn has been sodded and is a green space in the desert. Likewise, the swimming pools, Egypt's first dancing fountain and the gold course's water hazards water are wet spots in the desert. In addition to the condo units, a 300-room hotel should be open by next year, and additionally in the works are a huge aqua park, an "Olympic Sports Village" (does the IOC know about this?) and a California State University campus. What? Our Cal State?!?!?!?!
Porto Marina
In addition to the hotel, the property has hundreds (maybe thousands) of apartments and villas, a bunch of swimming pools (including a kiddie pool with several levels of water slides, middle photo) a 500-slip marina, conference facilities, shopping mall with name-brand retrailers and restaurants, and spa. It also has a Venetian-inspired "Grand Canal" (bottom photo). Because hardly anyone is here right now, the gondolas are beached. I kid you not.
January and February are way low season on Egypt's North Coast, about a 110-mile-long strip between Alexandria on the east and El-Alamein on the west that is breaking out in resorts the way a kid with chicken pox develops spots. Even though people who live in snow country find days to be mild and sunny, this long resort strip is eerily empty right now. Not so, I am told, between June and August when the area's 100-degree heat and Mediterrranean breezes are a welcome relief for the truly heat-plagued citizens of Cairo (population 18+ million) and Alexandria (7 million in winter) come to cool off.
Of the dozens of resort developments, those in AMER Group's portfolio are the most impressive and aggressive. Mansour Abd El-Meguid Amer is CEO of the AMER Group, and when I look at the ambitious scale of his projects, I am persuaded that he is a direct descendant of Egypt's pyramid builders. AMER Group says that it specializes in "high-speed development." I'll say.
Golf Porto Marina
Under construction now is Golf Porto Marina (below). The first 6,000 of a projected 18,000 units are to be handed over to owners before the summer 2009 peak season kicks in. The 18-hole golf course designed by Raymond Hearn has been sodded and is a green space in the desert. Likewise, the swimming pools, Egypt's first dancing fountain and the gold course's water hazards water are wet spots in the desert. In addition to the condo units, a 300-room hotel should be open by next year, and additionally in the works are a huge aqua park, an "Olympic Sports Village" (does the IOC know about this?) and a California State University campus. What? Our Cal State?!?!?!?!
Porto MarinaIf I just read this and weren't experiencing it at Porto Marina (upper photo below), the company's North Coast flagship, I wouldn't believe it. I'm staying in one of the 380 hotel rooms set among buildings with thousands of condo units, I might think this was an impossible Brobdinagian, Las Vegas without gambling, booze or broads fantasy. But it's no fantasy at all. It's a clean-cut, family-oriented resort development where swim-up bars serve nothing stronger than fruit smoothies, and women at "mixed" (i.e., co-ed) beaches and pools must covered in burkinis. There are separate, secluded, guarded ones for women who want to wear revealing swimwear.
In addition to the hotel, the property has hundreds (maybe thousands) of apartments and villas, a bunch of swimming pools (including a kiddie pool with several levels of water slides, middle photo) a 500-slip marina, conference facilities, shopping mall with name-brand retrailers and restaurants, and spa. It also has a Venetian-inspired "Grand Canal" (bottom photo). Because hardly anyone is here right now, the gondolas are beached. I kid you not.

BTW, these are just two of many AMER Group's projects.
Egypt: On the Road
Views along the coastal road linking Cairo and Alexandria
I have no delusions that a tour bus ride on the 130 or so miles between Egypt's two largest city provides great insights, but it does offer snippets of life along Egypt's north coast. Here are some random images:
Just getting out of Cairo (population about 18 million and growing fast) takes some time -- little wonder with crowded roads (below):
In a country fabled for antiquity, the capital is growing, growing and growing, as evidenced by the buildings under construction in the distant outskirts (below), some legally built and others illegally erected on designated agricultural land:
Surprisingly mixed in among the buildings are farm fields (below) that are still being worked by hand:
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As our bus passed a moving open-bed truck, I was able to snap this picture of a barefoot man (below) squatting atop a load of bundled brochures. A guy doesn't need a seatbelt when he's not on a seat:
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Fanciful Euro-Ottoman-inspired wedding cake building (below) on the outskirts of Cairo:
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Large and small mosques dot the route. All are topped with a dome, and some (like the one below) have one minaret, others two, occasionally three:
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Housing construction is making a sprawling city even 'sprawlinger" -- and Western-style real estate sales are taking hold (three images below):
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At the Master rest stop (below)...
I have no delusions that a tour bus ride on the 130 or so miles between Egypt's two largest city provides great insights, but it does offer snippets of life along Egypt's north coast. Here are some random images:
Just getting out of Cairo (population about 18 million and growing fast) takes some time -- little wonder with crowded roads (below):
In a country fabled for antiquity, the capital is growing, growing and growing, as evidenced by the buildings under construction in the distant outskirts (below), some legally built and others illegally erected on designated agricultural land:
Surprisingly mixed in among the buildings are farm fields (below) that are still being worked by hand:.jpg)
As our bus passed a moving open-bed truck, I was able to snap this picture of a barefoot man (below) squatting atop a load of bundled brochures. A guy doesn't need a seatbelt when he's not on a seat:
.jpg)
Fanciful Euro-Ottoman-inspired wedding cake building (below) on the outskirts of Cairo:
.jpg)
Large and small mosques dot the route. All are topped with a dome, and some (like the one below) have one minaret, others two, occasionally three:
.jpg)
Housing construction is making a sprawling city even 'sprawlinger" -- and Western-style real estate sales are taking hold (three images below):
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The farther we rolled on from Cairo, the more pick-up trucks we saw (two images below) -- loaded with cargo, fruit, people, whatever. I saw one with washing machine, one with a cow and a calf, and one with a motorcycle. Chevrolet trucks are surprisingly common, even though Toyotas, Hyundais and Hondas seem to prevail in the car category:
The round-topped towers below are not Angkor Wat wannabes but pigeon houses:
At the Master rest stop (below)...Saturday, March 12, 2011
Images of My Last Trip to California -- but Not the Tour of California Route
For television viewers, long cycling races are a telecast travelogue that happens to follow the route pedaled by some of the best bike racers on the planet. The Tour de France is a favorite, and the Tour of California, which is now referred to as the Amgen Tour of California every single time it is mentioned, is coming in a close second. Today, the penultimate day, was a time trial on the streets of Los Angeles. When I was in California last month, I visited several wonderful places in and around San Francisco that I had intended to post here. I'm finally doing it and posting a few of my favorite scenes from my brief time there. Living in Colorado, I'm not deprived of mountain scenery, so I especially treasure ocean views.
Below is just one of panoramas from the Fairmont San Francisco's tower with 360-degree views .
The fabled Golden Gate Bridge connects San Francisco on the south with Marin County on the north. This is a view from the north.
San Francisco's cable cars remain popular with visitors to the city, both to photograph and to ride.
The Marin Headlands, thankfully government land and therefore protected from California's penchant for development and sprawl, are across from San Francisco and offer beaches, cliffs, hills and valleys where wildlife habitat still exists.
More Marin Headlands views of waves rollling in toward bays notched into rugged coastal cliffs.
Pacifica Pier, south of San Francisco, on a gloriously sunny day -- not a given on this part of the Peninsula.
Pillar Point Harbor, where fishing boats still dock -- but so do pleasure craft.
Cairo: Traffic Impressions
Cairo though the windshield: Seeing the largest city in the Middle East the way most tourist don't

When my friend Katy learned that I was coming to Egypt, she told me that her sister Louise, brother-in-law Brian and two neices are living here and put us in touch. E-mail is a wondrous thing. I wrote to Louise, who replied quickly and invited me over for dinner this evening (Friday) and sent a driver to pick me up at my hotel just six hours after I arrived. What a wonderful chance to meet some worldly expats. Ibrahim, a Filipino and therefore also an expat, picked me up and drove me to the Maadi area. We drove many miles outward from the city center, which took about an hour and gave me a chance to see the non-touristic side of Cairo. En route in whatever direction we were heading (Ibrahim didn't know), I noticed:

When my friend Katy learned that I was coming to Egypt, she told me that her sister Louise, brother-in-law Brian and two neices are living here and put us in touch. E-mail is a wondrous thing. I wrote to Louise, who replied quickly and invited me over for dinner this evening (Friday) and sent a driver to pick me up at my hotel just six hours after I arrived. What a wonderful chance to meet some worldly expats. Ibrahim, a Filipino and therefore also an expat, picked me up and drove me to the Maadi area. We drove many miles outward from the city center, which took about an hour and gave me a chance to see the non-touristic side of Cairo. En route in whatever direction we were heading (Ibrahim didn't know), I noticed:
- Streetlights are yellow-ish rather than glaring white. Advertising signs are affixed partway up the lampposts on arterials in residential areas. Coupled with wicked, visible air pollution, the impression is a gray-yellow gloom. Stores are illuminated with glaring fluorescents that are far brighter than the streetlights.
- Very few traffic lights and even fewer traffic cops -- and then only at a few major intersections. Drivers don't pay strict attention to either.
- Vehicle lights are random. Drivers might use headlights (one sometimes broken), parking lights or no lights at all.
- Replacing some red tail lights and/or white parking lights with blue lights is a favorite example of automotive decoration. Really tricked-out cars have additional trim of alternating red and blue lights on the sides.
- The vast majority of cars have something dangling from the rearview mirror.
- On major arterials, four lanes of traffic where there should be three -- if lines have been painted at all. Also if there are actual lines, straddling one rather than driving between two is common, Motorscooters are a bonus. Helmets? What helmets?
- Broken-down cars are common in the right lane -- and occasionally even the left lane. Some are abadoned where they died; others have their hoods up and the driver and perhaps onlookers staring balefully at the engine.
- The farther from the airport or the city center, the more signs are only in Arabic.
- Instead of traffic circles or left turn lanes on divided roads, drivers make U-turns from the left lane. This creates sudden traffic jams when drivers in the two left lanes wait for the smallest break in oncoming traffic.
- Double and triple parking is the rule. Add cars stacked up for a left turn to the parked cars, and four lanes quickly neck down to two.
- Obeying one-way signs seems to be at the drivers' discretion.
- Whether the traffic is moving or inching along, drivers perform astonishing lane-changing feats.
- Horns are used as alerts ("I'm about to cut you off"), as explanations ("I just cut you off because I could") or automotive conversation ("Same to you, buster!")
- There are no crosswalks (though in fairness, people wouldn't pay attention anyway). Pedestrians cross where ever they wish and pose an extra challenge, especially when said pedestrians are fully veiled women in head-to-toe black who are camouflaged in the dark night.
I saw signs for rental-car agencies. Would I ever? Not on your life.
Friday, March 11, 2011
Everthing's Coming Up Egypt
In Luxor, another tomb revealed. In Denver, city gets ready to welcome King Tut
Last year, when I visited Egypt, archaeologists and their helpers were busy excavating and sifting in dry earth on the west bank of the Nile near Luxor. Some people dig. Some look through what has been dug just in case some artifact is among the sand and stone. And some cart away the archaeological detritus. "Laborious" and "painstaking" are words that came to mind as I watched.
The efforts pay off when a major discovery is made like the one just announced by Minister of Culture, Farouk Hosni. A dig led by Dr. Zahi Hawass, Secretary General of the Supreme Council of Antiquities (SCA), discovered an 18th Dynasty tomb (1570-1315 BC) in the necropolis of Dra Abu el-Naga, on Luxor’s west bank. Memphis Tours, which has nothing to do with Tennessee but which has been organizing trips to Egypt since 1955, posted the news on their blog. According to Dr. Hawass, the tomb belongs to the Supervisor of Hunters, Amun-em-Opet, and dates shortly before the rule of Akhenaten (1372-1355 BC). The image below is from Memphis Tours' blog.
Meanwhile, closer to home, the Denver Art Museum is getting ready for a blockbuster exhibit of treasures from ancient Egypt. Tutankhamun: The Golden King and the Great Pharaohs will be in splendid residence at the DAM from June 29 through January 9, an extension of dates announced earlier. Back in 1978, I was one of the hordes who lined up for King Tut's first visit to the United States at a spectacular exhibit at New York's Metropolitan Museum of Art. Tut's was the only royal tomb found intact, with unsurpassed treasure, both in quality and quantity, because grave robbers had never breached it. Last year, in addition to visiting Luxor, I spent too little time in the Egyptian Museum in Cairo, which whetted my appetite for an encore. I only will have to go to Denver to satisfy that appetite, and the upcoming exhibit is important enough to attract visitors from afar.
The Westin Tabor Center in Denver this evening hosted a media event as a precursor to the exhibit. It is the first time these treasures will have appeared in the Rocky Mountain Region -- and considering how many millions the Government of Egypt requires to lend them out to other museums, the shipping, the insurance and security required, it might be the last time. My husband and I are museum members and have already bought our tickets, but for anyone wishing for a Denver getaway that includes line-beating VIP tickets, six downtown hotels are offering lodging/museum packages:
The Curtis Hotel
A Day In the Museum, A Night at the Curtis. Packages from $159 for one night's accommodations on the King Tut Floor (based on availability); $20 in Mummy Money (food and beverage credit for use in The Corner Office restaurant or Room Service); overnight Self Parking; 2 VIP Passes to King Tut, and a welcome amenity (either two Golden Nile Martinis or one Cairo Kid’s Pack). Book online or by phone, 303-571-0300 or 800-525-6651. Promotion code TUT.
Grand Hyatt Denver
Fit for a King. Packages from $159 for one night's accommodations, complimentary hotel parking, two VIP tickets to the King Tut exhibition at the Denver Art Museum and a welcome amenity. Book online or by phone, 303-295-1234 or 800-233-1234.
Hyatt Regency Denver
King Tut Package. From $159 for one night's accommodation in a Mountain View guest room and two VIP tickets to the King Tut exhibition at the Denver Art Museum. Book by phone, 303-436-1234.
Sheraton Downtown Denver
Pharaohs’ Affair. Starting at $129 per night based on two-night stay; $149 for one night for accommodations and two VIP tickets for the King Tut exhibition at the Denver Art Museum. King Tut’s Treasure package includes accommodations, two VIP tickets for the King Tut exhibition at the Denver Art Museum, breakfast for two and overnight parking, from $159 per night based on two-night stay, $179 for one night. The best prices are on weekends. Hooray! Book online or by phone, 303-893-3333.
Westin Tabor Center
Pharaohs' Affair. Package includes one night and two VIP tickets starting at $179 per night; two nights and two VIP tickets from $159 per night. King Tut’s Treasure. Package includes one night and two VIP Tickets, breakfast for two and Self Parking from $209 per night; same offer for two nights from $189 per night. Also, weekends are the least expensive. Book online or by phone, 303-572-9100.
Brown Palace Hotel
Pharaoh’s Find. From $169, one night in luxury room and two VIP tickets. Booking code TUT. A Night to Treasure. From $199, same as Pharaoh's find plus two VIP tickets and enjoy luxurious accommodations accompanied by truffles dusted in 24-karat gold and valet parking. Booking code TREASURE. Book online or by phone, 303-297-3111 or 800-321-2599.
Cairo: Airport Impressions
You can't tell a book by it's cover, but I'm not sure whether or not there's a corollary about countries and their gateway airports, but here's my first impression of Egypt. Cairo International Airport (CAI) not only serves Egypt's capital and largest city but is also at the crossroads where the influences of the Gulf States, Africa and Europe meet. Terminal 1 has recently been renovated, Terminal 2 redevelopment has "been initiated" and a new Terminal 3 is "under construction and scheduled to open soon."
If you arrive without a visa, as many/most foreign tourists do, don't go straight to passport control. Go to the bank, where $15 will buy you a Monopoly money-size visa that will be pasted into your passport and decorated with an impressive official stamp. Also, don't expect anyone to take the entry or customs declaration forms that you filled out.
My initial impression therefore is of a bureaucratic country with systems that are not necessarily intuitive or logical to the outsider.
If you arrive without a visa, as many/most foreign tourists do, don't go straight to passport control. Go to the bank, where $15 will buy you a Monopoly money-size visa that will be pasted into your passport and decorated with an impressive official stamp. Also, don't expect anyone to take the entry or customs declaration forms that you filled out.
My initial impression therefore is of a bureaucratic country with systems that are not necessarily intuitive or logical to the outsider.
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