Friday, August 1, 2014

Turkey Trip - May, 2014



Why Turkey, many people asked?  My reply was “for the antiquities” and “because I have never been there”.  I was expecting Turkey to be a third world country, sort of backwater and laid back.  I had lived in Lebanon in the ‘60’s and made an analogy.  What I found was much more than the antiquities and a third world country.  I found a dynamic, vigorous, proud modern country of nearly 80 million people with a “can do” attitude.  It is reminiscent of Europe and the U.S.  Turkey is living Mustafa Kemal Ataturk’s vision of a secular Turkey, integrated into the modern world.  Turkey is ostensibly 99% Muslim, and is a model of how a Muslim country can exist and grow in the 21st century, (not the 7th century like the Taliban, or the 11th century like Iran).  There are mosques and minarets in nearly every city and town in Turkey, just as there are churches in nearly every city and town in the Western World.  Turkey is not a Muslim theocracy, just as the U.S. is not a Christian theocracy.  What a pleasant surprise Turkey was to visit!  Turkey’s population is about 80 million. Istanbul is 14 million.  Ankara, 4.5 million, Izmir (Smyrna), 3.4 million.  Per capita GDP is $15,300.  Gasoline costs nearly $8/gal.  Low end wage is about $500/month.  Professional salary is about $2000/month.
Istanbul • Canakkale • Izmir • Pamukkale • Antalya • Cappadocia • Ankara.  Total travel in Turkey by bus – about 3000 km or 1800 mi



Day 1 - Thursday, May 15
Departed DFW terminal D at 3:55 PM on an Airbus 320/330, UA8865, LH439.  Arrived in Frankfurt 8:50 AM May 16 after uneventful 10 hour flight.  No internet.  About two hours fitful dozing.
Day 2  - Friday, May 16
Three hour layover and a long walk in Frankfurt.  Air Canada was at gate D48 instead of Turkish Airlines, who came later.  Left Frankfurt at 11:45 AM on UA7773, TK1588.  Arrived in Istanbul 3:45 PM.   It seemed that half of Europe was trying to get through passport control in Istanbul.  After about two hours, where is the checked bag?  Luckily, it was by itself next to a baggage carousel.  Quick debit card to get Turkish Lira for a baggage cart.  Really glad to see the GCT sign, Selcuk, and other GCT people.  Home free after that.  On to Titanic City Hotel (Taksim) and 7:30 PM introductory meeting.
SelchukYigitsoy – our tour director        Merhaba!
  
Sarkis (Steven) Manoukian, one of our tour members from L.A., was a student at the American University in Beirut in 1967, when I was evacuating my family as a result of the Six Day War.  Steven was born in Aleppo, Syria of Armenian background, and speaks Turkish (from his mother).
Another tour member, Gina Jeffries was on the East European tour last year.  We flew out of Budapest on the same plane.
Day 3 - Saturday, May 17
Topkapi Palace
   

First thing this Saturday morning we visited the Topkapi Place.  The Topkapi was a city-palace with a population of approximately 4,000 people.  It housed all the Ottoman sultans from Sultan Mehmet II to Abdulmecit—nearly 600 years and 25 sultans. This palace, where the sultans and their courts lived and governed, is now one of the world's richest museums.  Among multitudinous objets d’arte, it contains the famous  Spoonmaker's Diamond (aka the Kasikci Diamond), the encrusted emerald dagger (of Topkapi movie fame) and the finger bones of John the Baptist.

Blue Mosque
    
The next stop was the grand covered market, followed by the Sultan Ahmet Mosque, with its six minarets. Built between 1609 and 1616 by the architect Mehmet, under the orders of Sultan Ahmet I, the building is more familiarly known as the Blue Mosque, because its interior gleams with a magnificent paneling of blue-and-white Iznik tiles. The mosque is part of a large complex consisting of tombs, medreses (theological schools), fountains, a health center, homes, storehouses, and other buildings.
Hagia Sophia
 
We next visited the Hagia Sophia, a museum that was once an Islamic mosque and the largest church in the world. It is the single most famous example of a Byzantine structure, and contains breathtaking mosaics and frescoes.

Day 4 - Sunday, May 18
Dolmabahce Palace                                                 Jan Sobieski
  

This Sunday, on the full-day optional East Meets West tour, we visited the Dolmabahce Palace, built in the mid-19th century by order of Sultan Abdul Mecit I. The Sultan's architect was given the order that this building should "surpass the palace of any potentate anywhere in the world." The facade of the palace stretches for more than 1,200 feet on the European shores of the Bosporus.  Dolmabahce means “filled”.  It was reminiscent of the Sychrov Palace outside of Prague last year or Versailles in France though not quite as ornate.
The special exhibition in progress was art and artifacts seized by Poland after Jan Sobieski defeated the Ottoman Turks in the battle of Vienna to stop the northern progress of the Ottomans in 1683, and now lent back to Turkey.
The Bosporus
 
Next, we boarded a private boat for a cruise on the Northern Bosporus.  We sailed back to the European side at Tarabya and disembarked for lunch at a seafood restaurant overlooking the Bosporus.  Afterwards, we visited the Sadberk Hanim Museum, a privately funded collection of furniture, art, and antiquities housed in a villa decorated in a traditional Ottoman style.





Taksim Square
  
After dinner, I walked to Taksim Square, of CNN and Fox News fame, which was fairly close to the hotel.  Police were in evidence, but no demonstrations on this Sunday evening.

Day 5 - Monday, May 19
Istanbul • Gallipoli • Ferry to Canakkale           300 km           Kolin Hotel

Spice market – Istanbul                                         Eastern (hole in floor) toilet
 
First thing this Monday morning we visited the spice market.  Similar to the one in Budapest last year.  The Eastern toilet was a first for me.  I had never noticed or remembered these holes in the wall toilets, and the reason the left hand is not used for shaking and eating.
Gallipoli        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PFCekeoSTwg    Liam Clancy
 
Gallipoli was the scene of famous and often tragic World War I battles in 1915 and 1916. Allied troops (mainly "ANZACS," Australia and New Zealand combined forces) landed in April of 1915, and there was fierce fighting across the peninsula through January of 1916. At Gallipoli National Park there are war memorials, along with Turkish and Allied cemeteries. The natural beauty of this area, with its green hills rolling down to sparkling blue waters, is surely a fitting resting place honoring the 500,000 soldiers who were wounded or died here.
The Gallipoli campaign was a decisive victory for the Ottoman Empire, some of the campaign under the leadership of Mustafa Kemal (then Pasha).  Of course the Ottomans backed Germany in the First World War, and ultimately lost the war (and their empire).  Gallipoli is also widely regarded as a major failure for Winston Churchill, who was First Lord of the British Admiralty at the time.  Churchill was sacked and sent into relative obscurity for a good long time.  Another take on Gallipoli and Churchill is offered by the Sydney Morning Herald in the following link:  http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/gallipoli-was-not-churchills-great-folly-20110413-1ddzb.html
In 1934 Mustafa Kemal Atatürk wrote a tribute to the Anzacs killed at Gallipoli:    “Those heroes that shed their blood and lost their lives... You are now lying in the soil of a friendly country. Therefore rest in peace. There is no difference between the Johnnies and the Mehmets to us where they lie side by side now here in this country of ours... you, the mothers, who sent their sons from faraway countries wipe away your tears; your sons are now lying in our bosom and are in peace. After having lost their lives on this land they have become our sons as well.”
Sunset in Europe, seen from Asia                                    Our Coach for about 3000 km
     
We then ferried across the Dardanelles to the Asian side of Turkey, and arrived at the Kolin Hotel in Canakkale.  Tolga is our driver of the above coach after we left Istanbul.

Day 6 - Tuesday, May 20
Canakkale • Izmir • Troy • Home-Hosted Lunch        400 km
Troy
 
This morning we drove on the Asian side of the Dardanelles, the narrow strait between Europe (the Gallipoli Peninsula) and Asia to Troy, a UNESCO World Heritage site. This is the city where, in Homer's monumental Iliad, Helen's face is said to have launched a thousand ships. Until 1870, it was thought that Troy was a fictional place. In this year, the German businessman Heinrich Schliemann began excavations in a location he deduced from his readings of the Iliad. Remarkably, he uncovered the historical city of Troy.

     
  We then continued to a nearby village to enjoy lunch in the home of a local family.

 
We arrived in Izmir in late afternoon and had a brief orientation of the city by bus.

Day 7 - Wednesday, May 21
Izmir • Accommodations: Hilton Hotel
In the first millennium BC, Izmir, then known as Smyrna, ranked as one of the most important cities of the Ionian region. Legend has it that Homer, poet and author of The Iliad and The Odyssey, was born here.
Izmir Market                                                                        Izmir Bay
 
This morning we went to the open air market at Izmir, and then took ferry ride around Izmir bay.
Izmir Center Clock Tower                                     Izmir Center Mosque
 
We then did a bus and walking tour of the city, the third-largest in modern Turkey. The city lies at the head of a long and narrow gulf furrowed by ships and yachts. Behind the palm-lined promenades and avenues that follow the shoreline, the city ascends the slopes of the surrounding mountains in horizontal terraces. The original city of Izmir was established in the third millennium BC, at which time it shared with Troy the most advanced culture in Western Anatolia.
Ataturk Monument with Izmir Hilton in Background            The Aegean Sea
 
Early this evening we attended a Discovery Series slide show with music, Our Land, Our People, presented by the internationally known photographer Yusuf Tuvi, who was born in Izmir in 1938. Later, we had dinner at the hotel.

Day 8 - Thursday, May 22             Izmir • Pergamum tour
Funicular to Pergamum                             
 



Pergamum Acropolis Theater
   

Trajan Temple                                                         Moslem Graves
 
We did a full-day tour to Pergamum, an important cultural center built high on a hilltop. Pergamum became one of the most important cities of the Hellenic era when it was willed to Rome in the second century BC. It was known as a center of medicine, where the famous doctor of antiquity, Galen, worked in the Asklepeion (sanatorium) and wrote several hundred medical books. During the Christian period, its Temple of Serapis was converted to a basilica dedicated to St. John, and the city is featured in the saint's Book of Revelation.
We stopped to view the remarkably well-preserved ancient city and fascinating ruins at Pergamum, which was home to a library of more than 200,000 parchment volumes. We learned about the history and culture during a visit to the Museum of Pergamum, and visited the modern-day city during lunch.

Day 9  - Friday, May 23      Izmir • Ephesus • Pamukkale
Accommodations: Richmond Hotel         Ephesus 84 km,        Pamukkale 193 km
Amphitheater at Ephesus
  

Ephesus State Agora?                                             The Goddess Nike
 



The Library at Ephesus
 

The Tomb of St. John the Evangelist at Ephesus
 
                After breakfast we started toward Pamukkale.  We stopped to explore Ephesus, the best-preserved and most extensive (2,000 acres) classical Roman city in Asia. Located 60 miles from Izmir, Ephesus dates to at least 1300 BC and was once the commercial center and capital city of Roman Asia Minor, with a population that once numbered more than 300,000. One ancient legend attributes the founding of Ephesus to the Amazons of Greek mythology. Another credits the Athenian Androclus, who received advice from an oracle to establish a colony at the "place of the fish and the boar." And so, when he and his crew saw a wild pig charge out of underbrush set ablaze inadvertently by locals grilling fish, he staked his claim on the Anatolian shore.
At Ephesus, we saw the Great Theater, where Paul of Tarsus stood trial for bringing Christianity to the area. This is the largest structure in Ephesus, a huge semi-circular theater that was the central meeting place, and focus of social and cultural life of the city.  The city's fame in antiquity is indisputably due to its great Temple of Artemis (Diana), built in 550 BC, and one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. We saw  other highlights, and walked the Marble Way from the theater to central Ephesus and viewed the two-story facade of the Library of Celsus. We also explored the Tomb of St. John the Apostle.
After lunch we continued on to Pamukkale, and arrived in early afternoon.

White Cliffs of Pamukkale                                   Russian Swimmers
 
Necropolis
 

Day 10 - Saturday, May 24 Pamukkale • Hierapolis & Travertines   3 km
After breakfast this morning we visited Pamukkale, which is famous not only for its unique geological formations, but also for its historical remains. Hot, calcium oxide-rich waters flowing down the slopes that overlook the fertile river valley have, over the millennia, built up deposits of white travertine, or limestone deposits, on the plateau. From a distance, the stalactites—overflowing terraces and unusual shapes—glisten like white ice and dominate the landscape. The Romans established Hierapolis (Holy City) here, primarily as a luxury health resort and thousands made use of health benefits of the calcium-rich thermal spas and pools. Hierapolis itself contains a mix of structures—baths, temples, theaters, and churches—dating from Roman, Hellenistic and Christian times. Both the ancient city's name and its modern Turkish name—Pamukkale (Cotton Castle)—fit the area perfectly.
We also visited Hierapolis' Necropolis (graveyard), which, as one of the largest in Asia Minor, reveals the gravity of the health problems Romans hoped to heal here. We then saw the natural travertine formations—believed to have formed more than 14,000 years ago.
We had lunch in the town of Buldan, where we visited a clothing cooperative, for a look into the town's local textile industry, and also Buldan's marketplace.

Day 11 - Sunday, May 25               Pamukkale • Aphrodisias • Antalya
Pamukkale to Aphrodisias, 78 km;  Aphrodisias to Antalya, 250 km
Accommodations: The Marmara Antalya Hotel






Temple of Aphrodite                                             
 

Sports Stadium at Aphrodisias                            Theater at Aphrodisias
 






Gate                                                                            Theater Masks on Sarcophagus              
 

Aphrodisias Museum
  

We first visited ancient Aphrodisias, named after Aphrodite, the Greek goddess of love. During the guided tour of this city, we saw the Temple of Aphrodite and its tetrapylon, or monumental gate. We toured the adjacent museum and learned more about the history of the Temple, its original construction from marble, and its later conversion into a Christian basilica. We also visited the ancient Council House and the stadium, both of which remain well-preserved today.
We arrived in Antalya in the early evening, and had some time to relax after dinner at the hotel.

Day 12 - Monday, May 26
AntalyaMagic of the Mediterranean tour • Turkey's Lost Antiquities discussion
Accommodations: The Marmara Antalya Hotel

Hadrian’s Gate, Antalya
 

Trash Pickup – Playing Vivaldi                           Ramparts
  


Antalya Harbor                                                        Ataturk Monument, Antalya
 

Antalya Archeological Museum
 
 
After breakfast we did a walking tour through the winding streets of the old harbor quarter of Antalya, the jewel of Turkey's Mediterranean Turquoise Coast. Set on a crescent-shaped bay, it is bounded by citrus groves, valleys, and the Taurus Mountains.
We saw the ramparts, Hadrian's Gate, slender minarets, and the restored harbor area. We then visited the Archaeological Museum of Antalya. The artifacts here trace the path from the Stone and Bronze ages, through the Hellenistic and Roman periods, and up to the Ottoman Empire. The museum is one of Turkey's largest, and has nearly 5,000 works of art on exhibit.

 
After lunch, we attended a Discovery Series cooking lesson and learned how to prepare Turkish specialties with instructions from an Antalyan chef. The chef described the most popular dishes in Turkey, such as eggplant salad and halva (a popular dessert typically made from semolina and honey).
We then returned to the hotel and relaxed by the pool and on the shores of the Mediterranean.
Later, we attended a Discovery Series discussion on Turkey's Lost Antiquities, led by a university professor. Turkey is a land that is steeped in history, abounding with ancient artifacts—unfortunately, much of it has been lost or even stolen over the years. A professor from a local university led the discussion, and described some of the things that have gone missing.



Day 13 - Tuesday, May 27 - Perge and Side
Accommodations: The Marmara Antalya Hotel
Roman Arches
 

Southern Gate                                                          Agora Pillars
  

 

Amphitheater at Side
  
Today we visited Perge, where St. Paul gave some of his first sermons. Originally settled by the Hittites in 1500 BC, Perge thrived during the Roman Empire. The ruins here, which include a theater and stadium, create an excellent impression of how an ancient city looked and felt.
After lunch we toured the ancient Greek city of Side, including its ancient Greco-Roman theater.

Day 14 - Wednesday, May 28
Antalya • Mevlana Museum • Sultan Han caravanserai • Cappadocia                    Antalya to Konya, 364 km      Konya to Cappadocia (Goreme), 238 km
Accommodations: Doubletree Hotel Avanos
Tarsus Mountains
 

Mevlana Museum, Konya (Iconium)
  





Sultan Han caravanserai 
  
This morning, we departed Antalya for Cappadocia over a scenic route through the Taurus Mountains.
At mid-day we stopped at the historic holy city of Konya. Once known as Iconium, Konya is one of Turkey's oldest continually inhabited cities, and was home of the Whirling Dervishes. This Muslim ascetic order performed vigorous chanting and whirling dances as acts of ecstatic devotion.
Here we visited the Mevlana Museum, containing the mausoleum of the founder of the Whirling Dervishes. Each year in December, the Dervishes mark the death of their founder, the great poet Mevlana Celaleddin-i Rumi, selected "Mystic of the [13th] Century" by Time magazine. Though not of the orthodox Muslim faith (a follower of Mohammed), he preached tolerance towards all peoples and religions. Rumi is revered in the world of Islam and studied widely by those of other religions—his beautifully lyrical poems have a wide appeal, and he is one of the best-selling poets in the U.S.
Then we continued along the road to Cappadocia, stopping on the way at Sultan Han, the largest Seljuk caravanserai in Turkey. The caravanserai was established as a way point for camel caravans along the Silk Road by Sultan Keykubat in the 13th century, and has grown to prominence in the years that followed. Over time, a village, then a town sprung up around it, surrounded by immense fortress-like walls served by an intricately-decorated portal.
We arrived in Cappadocia in the early evening.

Day 15 - Thursday, May 29
Cappadocia • Underground city tour • Goreme Open-Air Museum • School visit • Art of Pottery in Asia Minor visit • Whirling Dervishes tour
Accommodations: Doubletree Hotel Avanos or similar

Tufa Formations in Cappadocia
     
 
When you first see the landscape of Cappadocia, it might just take your breath away. Ten million years ago, volcanic eruptions from Mount Erciyes and Mount Hasan blanketed this limestone plateau in central Turkey with ash and lava. When they mixed with water, the result was a mud-like substance that slowly hardened into a soft rock called tufa.
Centuries of erosion from rain, wind, and flooding from the Kizilirmak River shaped this tufa into a striking, surreal moonscape of cone-shaped pinnacles and towers, all in a variety of lovely hues. Some 300 beautifully frescoed churches and dwellings for 30,000 people were carved from the soft volcanic pinnacles between the fourth and 14th centuries. The maze of cones, windows, and chimneys is built directly into the malleable rock. Beneath these fanciful shapes lie even more wonders—underground chambers, even entire villages, some 14 stories deep.
 
This morning we toured the city of Kaymakli, once a refuge from Arab, Roman, and Mongolian aggressors, as well as the Goreme Open-Air Museum, a UNESCO World Heritage Site. There we saw the ancient rock-hewn churches sculpted in the hillsides almost 1,000 years ago. Medieval Christian monks established a community of monasteries by carving their churches out of the soft volcanic stone that is part of this terrain. On the stone walls of the caves, they depicted the New Testament with paintings and vibrant frescoes. Then we continued on to the small town of Urgup, which has many carved dwellings that are still inhabited.

 
After the tour of Cappadocia, we visited a local primary school, supported by Grand Circle Foundation, where, we visited a 4-8 grade English class.  Only a few children were there, since hot weather allowed an early closing of the school.

 
We then had the opportunity to witness a ritual dance performance by the Whirling Dervishes, monks of the Mevlevi sect of Islam founded in the 13th century. During the dance, called a sema, the dervishes believe that their souls are released from their earthly ties and are free to joyfully commune with the divine. The dervishes spin shoulder to shoulder, both around their own axis and around one other, representing the Earth revolving on its own axis while orbiting the sun. The dancers are silent while performing the sema, accompanied by drums and chanting, as the ritual gradually transforms itself into rapid, spinning ecstasy.
Link to YouTube clip taken at this Sema.                  http://youtu.be/eXh74rJlxxg

Day 16 - Friday, May 30
Cappadocia • Ballooning Over Moonscape tour • Turkish Handwoven Carpet discussion • Art of Pottery in Asia Minor -Tufa Formations of Pashabag & Uchisar Fortress
Accommodations: Doubletree Hotel Avanos or similar

 
  
  
YouTube links below to video clips taken early morning May 30, 2014 at Cappadocia:

  
We rose at 4 am this morning and did the balloon tour over Cappadocia.  We got a new perspective on the intriguing tufa landscapes while gliding above them on our hot-air balloon.  We saw the light of dawn spread over Cappadocia, as the balloon flight varied from low contour to get a good look at the sculpted tufa, to a somewhat higher altitude to give a panoramic view of this strangely shaped landscape of eroded pillars and cones.
  
Later this morning we visited the village of Avanos, known for its carpet-making.

  
We then visited the Uchisar Kale (Fortress) that dominates the skyline for miles. You'll then visit the tufa formations of Pashabag, conical formations capped with basalt that are still used as storage units today.  We crawled inside of these holes in the ground like bloody moles!

  
Later we joined a Discovery Series Art of Pottery in Asia Minor event and visited a cave pottery atelier. During a discussion at this workroom, you learned about the artisans' skill and techniques used to produce the traditional pottery of the region.
  
Arab Ray

Day 17 - Saturday, May 31
Cappadocia • Hittite Lands & Hattusas • Yazilikaya • Ankara -  Cappadocia to Yazilikaya  232 KM, Yazilikaya to Ankara 195 km

    
 
 
  
We travelled overland to Ankara today. En route, we stopped to delve into a civilization that rivaled Egypt's during the second millennium BC. We explored ancient Hattusas, a UNESCO World Heritage Site and capital of the great Hittite Kingdom—a powerful empire of the Ancient Near East that ruled from about 1600 to 1200 BC. Located high on a rocky summit, Hattusas offers a wealth of archaeological treasures that have been recovered from this former center of the kingdom, including records offering extensive details on political and religious aspects of the culture.
After lunch, we continued on to Yazilikaya, a sacred Hittite sanctuary of two chambers enclosed by natural rock formations. Hewn out of the rock are depictions of deities and a stone relief of King Tudhaliya IV that stands twelve feet high. Archaeologists estimate that the Hittites used this locale as a revered shrine as early as 1250 BC.
Here, we walked through an open-air cultural center featuring representations of the Hittite pantheon. The Hittite people revered up to 1,000 gods and goddesses—but the major spiritual beings—such as Teshub, the Thunderstorm God, and Hepatu, the Goddess of the Sun—are depicted more frequently in sacred sites throughout the region.
Day 18 - Sunday, June 1
Ankara • City tour
Accommodations: Ankara Hilton SA Hotel or similar


Kocatepe Mosque in central Ankara
     

Ataturk Monument                                                  Changing of the Guard 
                                                                                   
  
 
We did a city tour this morning. The first stop was at the Mausoleum of Ataturk, a tribute to the founder of modern Turkey. Ataturk (originally named Mustafa Kemal) helped lead the nation during the collapse of the Ottoman Empire and transformed it into the secular republic that stands today. He was Turkey's first president and is now considered its most revered historic leader. Local artisans created the statues, adornments, and reliefs you see throughout the complex that combine ancient and modern architectural styles. It is an impressive site, with a large colonnaded courtyard, a Hall of Honor with mosaics of gold leaf on the ceiling, floors of colored marble, and a 40-ton sarcophagus. A group of statues near the towered entrance represent the three strengths of a nation—defense, productivity, and education.
 
Ankara is a very old city, founded in 2000 BC, and there are several Roman ruins scattered throughout the metropolis. Archaeologists have also found artifacts that date back to pre-Roman periods. Much of Ankara's character is sophisticated and modern, from the educational institutions to the art galleries, from the music to the architecture. There are three symphony orchestras and five theaters offering classic performances of ballet, opera, modern dance, and drama. On many levels, Ankara has become the cultural and political center of Turkey.
 
 
 
 Then we visited the Museum of Anatolian Civilizations. It details the many cultures that have inhabited this region, starting as far back as the Paleolithic Age. The museum houses a priceless collection of artifacts from Neolithic, Hatti, Hittite, Phrygian, Persian, Galatian, and Roman times. The two buildings themselves, a caravansary (an overnight site for caravans) and a bedesten (covered bazaar), are Ottoman structures that date to the 15th century. Vendors abound in this area, adding to the local color with their fragrant spices, dried fruits, and traditional Turkish handcrafts for sale.

Day 19 - Sunday, June 2                 Ankara • Return to U.S.      Gule Gule
Lufthansa flight LH1787 6:05 am from Ankara to Munich, 3hrs, 5 min.  4 hr layover in Munich after interminable walk.  UA953 from Munich to Chicago O’Hare, 9 hrs, 45 min.  Passport control, collect checked bag, clear customs, recheck bag.  Catch train from terminal 5 to terminal 1.  2 hr layover at O’Hare.  UA3581 from O’Hare to DFW is late 1 ½ hrs.  Plane is there, crew is not.  This is UA’s hub!  UA 3581 is 1 hr late at DFW.  Maxine was there.  I was in the house at 10 pm.

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