Friday, August 5, 2011

One week check-in

** This was written on the June 30th but just now getting around to posting it**

Well after one week I am happy to announce that this place is a blast. Everywhere I go I meet new people and make new friends. For example, I walked into Jamaican restaurant for a jerk chicken sandwich and noticed a group of people wearing badges and asked them what event they were attending. It turned out they were actors in a play that was going on later that afternoon. They told me that the play started at 5 and if you were late that we would not be allowed to enter. We showed up 30 minutes early and saw a bunch of young Japanese Okinawan (some of them don't like being called Japanese)  workers at the entrance. We told them we were there for the play and they asked for a ticket. We said we didn't have any and asked how much they were. They said 1800 yen (about 24 dollars). I said that we were invited to the play by one of the two actors. When I said this they signaled for us to wait at the entrance and one of them ran upstairs. He came back and said he was sorry but we would need to buy tickets. We said ok, and started taking out money to buy a ticket and he then explained to us that we couldn't buy tickets till 15 minutes before the show. We were getting a little frustrated but walked down the sidewalk out of the way to hang out till we could purchase the tickets. My buddy and I finally decided to not go when and as we started walking down the road, the ticket master came running down the stairs and motioned for us to wait. He approached us and said the actress we had met had given a couple of her personal tickets to us. So after all that we ended up going to the play which was pretty interesting, very contemporary, Katherine (Dede) would have liked it. It was in Japanese, but some parts were in German, and French as well, so they had subtitles, which was a very big help obviously.

I've fallen in love with the neighborhood of Chatan-cho. Specifically the neighborhood of Sunabe. It's less than a mile from the main gate of base, it's very close to the East China Sea. Sunabe, has great restaurants, good night life, and lots of scuba and surf shops. Almost every place you go you end up meeting the owner and eventually get to know them. So my house hunting has been concentrated on that area. That's all for now, I'm going to drive up North in my new (well, new to me) Toyota Surf (basically a 4Runner in the states). Pictures will come soon.

Thursday, August 4, 2011

Ranting on the Plane

**Written on the plane back on July 20th but posted now** 

So after a great trip back home, I'm finally off to Japan. I was trying to use my miles to upgrade to business class but I was able to get economy plus in the exit row seat and I have so much room in front of me I have actually done a few sets of push ups in-between watching movies, and eating, of course. The 777 I'm in is 9 seats across in economy and so far is making good time cruising along at 38,000 feet. On my last flight, the pilot came on the speaker and told us the altitude we were flying at. The guy I was sitting next to asked me, "why do we fly so high?" The airlines have been pioneering fuel conservation and have found a few cool ways to do so. When you are flying, there are many speeds that can be used for various reasons, it's not like being in a car where you just look at the speedometer and instantly know the speed you are traveling along the ground. Due to winds, instrument limitations, temperature, barometric pressure and other factors, the speed on your airspeed gauge only shows the speed of the air entering a little tube facing the front of the airplane, called the pitot tube(pronounced pee-toe). Yea, I know what your thinking, the French don't know how to pronounce their own words whatsoever. Give it to the French to take something made up in the good Ol' US of A and have the audacity to slap their names on it. Fuselage, empennage, and pitot tube are just a few of the ones that come to mind right now. I better caveat this with the fact that they do sound a little more majestic then what we probably would have come up with but it's just food for thought. No hard feelings for my millions of French readers, right?

Alas, I digress... Back to fuel, without getting into to much physics, the higher you fly, the better "mileage" you get. In addition to the possibility of using jet streams, one of the other speeds flyers use, true airspeed (versus indicated airspeed shown on the gauge), increases with altitude. So say for example you compute that due to your aircraft and engines, you want to fly at 250 knots/hr "indicated" airspeed. Well if you had absolutely no winds, in a perfect world, your "groundspeed" would equal "indicated" airspeed on the gauge at sea level. However, for every 1,000 feet you climb, you gain another 3knots in true airspeed, which for sake of discussion well say is the same as "ground" speed;) did I confuse you yet??? So say you were flying 250kts/hr at sea level, when you climb up to 25,000 ft (25 X 3 kts/1,000 ft= 75 kts. So that's an additional 75 knots of "free speed" you get after you take out the additional fuel it takes to make the climb. I imagine the cost to climb is offset by the fact that you get to descend at nearly idle for the last 50-100 miles depending on your altitude and if you do it right. In addition to saving gas, at higher altitudes you also smash less bugs, not just the insects but also those little ity slow bugs called Cessnas, Pipers, and others that will not fly at higher altitudes due to lack of engine capability and supplemental oxygen, pressurization, ect.

Well I have another 1 hour 47 minutes till we arrive in Tokyo, should be interesting for sure. I'll write more on the flight to Okinawa and I explore the airport.