India is remarkable, has lived up to expectations, and is a place I would like to explore more, although Delhi is now done, and I’d hope other parts might be less pushy. You can’t just walk anywhere without someone offering you advice or urging you to use their taxi/Tuk Tuk. Hotels were very good and oasis of calm with tremendous service from hordes of staff.
Despite gripe above travel was easy – from the efficient joys of the Delhi Metro to the mania of travelling by Tuk Tuk. The driving generally is insane with horns blaring and near misses galore. That said, we only saw one accident (Tuk Tuks crumple horribly) and I was terribly impressed by the responses of drivers to finding a calf walking down the fast lane of the three lane road between Agra and Delhi. It was alive when we swerved past.
Our regular driver – a man of insight. He said to Alison on our first drive, “You are very lucky to be married to a man who smiles so much”. Who knew?
We were unfortunate in that the air quality in Delhi was dreadful because of the unhelpful combination of farmers burning crops and Diwali – government efforts to ban firecrackers went only so far. However, it did not spoil the holiday save blue skies stopped after day two and you could feel it in your throat.
India Gate – on a cloudless day according to BBC weather
Rather than ramble about what we did, here is a selection of photos which hopefully give a sense of the fun we had. Suffice to say the tensions between what we enjoyed and some of the things we saw, made us think. We have far too much, and take it for granted. India’s history makes you think of where we all are currently, and I don’t just mean the Raj.
The Imperial – built in the 30s for Brits inevitablyAnd still very comfortableAnd peacefulNew Delhi: Lutyen’s epic scale on Kingsway, now Raj PathNow Indian government buildingsSt. James’s Church near Kashmere Gate north of Old Delhi. This was the area where the British first governed from and where, in Delhi terms, the mutiny occurred in 1857. Beautiful church built twenty years before by Colonel Skinner, half Scot, half Indian, and therefore rejected by British Army. His solution was to found his own regiment, Skinner’s Horse, which still exists in the Indian Army.Happily the newspapers reveal that funding is being made available to restore it as a national monumentThe Skinner graves. The red stone by the fence is for a lady born in Edinburgh in 1902 and whose ashes were interred in 1998.The headquarters of the North Indian Railway Board. It was the original governor’s residence.The road outside the Church is aptly named and was once very grand. Like many Indian streets its shops reflect a particular interest, in this case cars.It is less fine nowNearby is the cemetery started at the time and still being used for Christian burials. Empires come and goTragedy and stoicismCelebrations at Connaught Place included a laser show and heavy metal!Taj Mahal was simply wonderful. Our guide instead on many staged photos which won’t be shared. Much surpassed laughter. Her – so what are you going to build me? Him – Remember, it was for his third wifeAgra FortOld DelhiThe smells were varied Again, faded grandeur, but this time from Mughal era.Gandhi Smriti, New Delhi – built by an Indian, not a Brit, in the 30sGandhi’s roomThe final walkIndian National MuseumHarappan Clay animals from 2700 – 2000 BCHmmm.
Now those of you with limited horizons might miss this on flying into Delhi. Try not to, as it’s only a ten minute taxi ride to the other side of the runway from the Terminal and it is sensational. Cost to enter was 30p and it contains some remarkable aircraft, some of which can only be seen there. There were also two charming men who positively engaged me in conversation and were both obviously IAF officers, one a former Mig and Mirage pilot.
Fascinating chat about their aircraft, Indo/Pakistan politics – in the 60s there was mutual understanding about POW conditions since both Air Force heads knew and had served with each other pre-partition, but that was now long gone – and future developments of the museum. That led to the invitation to sit in the Spitfire XVIII which I accepted with gusto.
A very good start to the holiday! Non anoraks may now skim through a small selection of pictures if they must …
Westland Wapiti – the last on the planet. Once flew over Glasgow and Edinburgh with 602 and 603, and something similar was the first to fly over EverestA real FoxbatLysanderTempest War bootyB24 LiberatorCanberra – ECM pod, not a gunpack underneathSmall boy in SpitfireAnd the charming man who made it possible Fairchild Packet with jet for mountain ops, with Mig 21 behind nosePano of the hangar. Hurricane far corner left plus second Spit XVIII in bits
The FC Terminal is as good as I hoped it would be. Never entirely full or ever feeling over busy, and therefore very different from Concorde Lounge. Alison slept in one of the nap rooms while I showered, collected more ducks, and had a tiny breakfast number three, for comparison purposes only you understand. Like Munich, staff were enthusiastic and helpful.
Security so different from EdinburghAnd think of the grim BA showersAnd you can even bring your own cigars and endure the rest of the world thinking pariah!130 whiskies apparentlyDining
The food and drink offer is remarkably broad, and we later enjoyed a pre-boarding lunch of Wiener Schnitzel which was excellent!
So much so that Alison was restrained!
There’s even a Duty Free Shop just for the FC Terminal itself, though we resisted the offering below which I’d have preferred to see on its side!
And did I mention ducks?
The highest spot however is the getting to the plane part. Walking for ages? Certainly not. A staff members finds you, announces your flight is ready to board, and then escorts you down a level to the parking lounge, where your passport is returned by immigration, and you stroll out to an electric Porsche! Sadly, our journey only took 75 seconds from start to finish, then a further minute up in a lift to the air bridge before being welcomed onto the aircraft.
For the first time in my puff I’d got 1A, so the front three windows were mine and the next three were Alison’s in 2A. Again, its an unfair comparison, but LH’s A380 put the BA experience to shame yet again. There are only eight seats on turning left with no overhead bins meaning the space is light and airy.
The seat felt bigger with a moveable ottoman, and there was masses of space, along with your own personal locker to put items in. Mine was in the front of the cabin, while Alison’s was at the back. It was all very satisfactory.
Good selection of films and really enjoyed being able to watch take off live using the A380’s tail camera.
The crew were tremendous, witty and willing, and the Captain even came round before take off to say hello! Food and wines were excellent.
Caviar and …Curry. An obvious combination!
While the wash bag, slippers, and pyjamas were high quality, brown wouldn’t have been my first choice as head of marketing design.
Though they did come with a dashing scarf for some reason!Look, behind the curved door – a urinal!
In a daft way, a delightful part of the experience was the washroom. Unlike BA First toilets, which being on the lower level are standard fare, the LH versions being at the front upstairs are vast. No shower, as on some of the middle eastern airlines, but room to swing a cat and admire the Brown look fully!
A bench to lie down if it all gets too much
Flight was smooth and the main eating and film watching was in the first half. The second, everyone slept, save for the last hour when trying the light meal options while sweeping past the lights of Kabul, and the amazing sight of the Pakistan/India border which is a bright line of light running for miles and miles in the otherwise dark world below.
Landing Delhi
All too soon, and five minutes early, we were there. And within an hour in the airport hotel drinking the Duty Free whisky. If only travel was always like this.
Alison has always wanted to go to India. I have always wanted to go to the Lufthansa First Class terminal in Frankfurt. Simples. Wait til a magnificent sale (2 for 1 offer and way cheaper than BA business let alone First) comes along and then don’t quite reveal that the trip means overnighting in Munich first, a breakfast flight to Frankfurt, and then a happy half day of indulgence in the FC Terminal before finally getting on the A380. I do actually want to go to India too, it should be understood!
Shiny but elderlyGenius – a holder for all your boarding passes with a window so you can scan them
The LH experience has been leagues better than BA. Check in at Edinburgh was swift with staff who were responsive and friendly. They volunteered boarding passes! Aspire Lounge is fine with a reasonable selection of hot and cold food, though disappointingly full of men whose only active adjective is f***ing. Welcome to Scotland or the UK.
Flight was efficient in a 30 year old A320 with speedy boarding (BA take note) if perplexing service thereafter in two halves. First one: serve the passengers their dinner and booze. Second: hide behind the curtain and pretend you can’t see them, but give them more if they open the curtain for themselves.
Easy overnight in Hilton in the Airport before a nine minute walk from room to through security! And then the added bonus of breakfast number one in the First Class lounge at Munich. It was sublime – calm and elegant with the best Eggs Benedict I’ve ever had! Proactive and welcoming staff (BA take note), and of course a display cabinet full of LH ducks.
Hurrah! But no time to shower as off for breakfast number 2 on the 35 minute flight to Frankfurt. I am astonished to report that muesli with a little bottle of fresh milk works well with watching the sun rise over the German plains.
Munich LoungeYum!Arriving FrankfurtOne of these may be ours later..
And then the joy of a short walk to the FC Terminal. Just stunning and I think all the talk of it being the best in the business is correct from first impressions. Welcomed in by Nadine, who escorted us through a mini security with polite staff, took our boarding cards and passports (latter to be returned on boarding) , and then showed us round the lounge to explain the options, and then brought our boarding cards back, along with our own LH ducks. Night and day in comparison with Concorde Lounge. Alex Cruz should come here for a day and learn how to provide proper customer service.
The no entry sign mercifully didn’t applyA healthy approach to life
What to say? A whirlwind of seemingly constant activity and much shopping. Rosie’s first experience of NYC in a taxi from Penn Street station to the Intercontinental appeared to be overwhelming. She had never seen such a hectic and loud place. However, over the the next two days she became very fond of it.
As well as the tourism, I enjoyed the CNN nightly gutting of Trump which reflected his appalling ABC interview, but also a real transformation in approach since I was last here in February 2017, just after the inauguration. Back then CNN were polite and clearly hoping he’d behave in office. No more. Much like Eddie Mair and Boris….
Rather than boring you further, I”ll simply add photos to reflect where we went, but understand that I enjoyed seven shops, particularly the one where Rosie ended up with a little blue bag, I had a very expensive cup of coffee, and a ride in a lift with the most charming attendant who I take it has worked there for decades. He was almost as mellifluous as Alistair Cooke. For the gentleman it was Tiffany’s, and my optimism/worries about being refused entry in shorts and a t-shirt were misplaced.
How brave was I going up the Rockefeller Centre – to the very top!See, it’s huge!I didn’t have the inclination or the funds, no matter how tempting!Ellis Island. Definitely worth a visit, including the Hard Hat Tour which gets you into the unrestored hospital side – with the artwork of a Frenchman who used images of those who came through the site.Immigration – how little has changedThe view from one of the isolation wardsSouth TowerThe 9/11 museum. Go, but it is harrowing.Central Park entranceTiffany’s, 5th AveA satisfied customerMOMA: Munch – screaming during “The Storm”Grand Central Station – grand in every sense
Now sitting at JFK. Positively excited as trip back on the top deck of a 747 – a first for me. And better still I think it’s the retro one in BOAC colours!
It was, and the experience was good. The cabin is light and roomy and quite different from downstairs. That said, and to to my surprise, I found the steep take off into turbulence sitting backwards disconcerting.
The Independence Sea Port Museum is worth the visit. For a start it’ll make you go down to the Delaware River which is huge and filled with history. Most exciting of all you have the simply epic USS New Jersey across on the other side, while to the left is a combined rail and vehicle bridge which reminded Rosie of Golden Gate, and to the right the twin funnels of SS United States taking you back to the golden age of travel.
The museum itself is well thought out with a variety of naval, ship construction, and social history displays related to Philly’s maritime connections. As an aside, if travelling by car from the airport look out for the Philadelphia Naval Yard about half way to town. It used to contain multiple retired carriers from the Cold War but still has rows of smaller ships – destroyers/frigates – in numbers that would shame the RN.
One particular exhibit caught our attention. It was a box representing one in which a black runaway slave spent 18 hours to be carried to Pennsylvania and freedom in the C19th, again making the point that all men being created equal a century earlier was guff. Rosie just fitted.
However, the high spot is the two vessels you can visit, the cruiser USS Olympia from the C19th and the USS Becuna, a submarine which did five war patrols in the Pacific before moving onto listening to Russians until the 1960s. The common theme of both was work hard at school and become an officer. In the Becuna that apparently meant on patrol, unlike the enlisted men, you could enjoy a shower for one minute a week, whilst on the Olympia it meant you lived in the most civilised space I’ve seen on a warship.
Officers cabins facing forwards to the 5″ shell hoist …which provides a gentleman a seat to contemplate on.
The Becuna was not quite up to the same standard however better than hot bunking…
WardroomA perfect fit
And here are some more shots to sate you. Rest assured Rosie enjoyed it – particularly the ice cream and lemonade in the sun.
Forward turret on which the American unknown soldier of World War I was transported from Le Havre to be buried in Arlington. The final act prior to leaving Europe was to allow French school children to cover the turret and coffin in flowers. They, and almost the coffin, were washed overboard on the journey, according to an account I read online. More prosaically …
We both throughly enjoyed ourselves, indulging in history for the most part – where else in the States would you start? As the impressive guide in Independence Hall said, speaking mostly to a class of 8th graders, this is the first dot in the ongoing join the dots that is America. He made a valiant attempt to encourage them to engage in the gun debate, making the point that amendments remain live and each generation must express its view. Some kids, and hopefully the teachers, got the point. The pupils who will no doubt carry guns may not have.
Where the declaration was signedIndependence HallThe Liberty bell which was made in Whitechapel, didn’t actually ring to trigger 1776, , and was thereafter used as a symbol to press for an end to segregation and allow women the vote.Carpenter’s Hall, where discussions were held in secret pre independence The Bank
The guides we encountered were universally impressive – both National Park Service and independent – enthusiastic and knowledgeable, wanting to share the excitement of the late 1700s. The most impressive was perhaps in the Second National Bank of America – now an Art Gallery of portraits of the main players from the colonial/revolutionary period – who discoursed for 45 minutes, keeping us both interested. What was striking was the influence of the Enlightenment, and how British the colonials remained even ’til as late as 1775 when it began to tip. And all because of the idiocy of the British Government. How things change … oh no wait.
We loved Christ Church which is an elegant and light filled building with a history that goes back perhaps twelve generations! We were shown round by a lovely lady who knew Perth, having worked there when Scottish Amicable was taken over, and was clearly a Democrat. She was worried about their candidate in 2020. Biden was too old, and there were simply too many other candidates. People now seemed to be accepting Trump and she thought Pelosi had to seek impeachment, if only to prevent his behaviour becoming the new norm.
Interestingly, this theme was repeated at wine o’clock at the Monaco where we spoke with two scientists, one Swiss, the other German, over for a meeting with their American Board. The Swiss lady, who had lived in the States, was horrified how her boss, an intelligent and not illiberal man, positively supported Trump. He told her he liked the way he upset the norms, but chillingly had added that since Trump wasn’t after him, he accepted his offensive behaviour. The German colleague laughed, and observed that much the same had happened in his country once. I cheerfully observed that at least HMQ had toned him down and reminded him of the benefit of global order as opposed to isolationism, They were pleased that I kept referring to myself as a European, as distinct from the piggy eyed blond lady beside us who became increasingly red faced as we chatted happily. Obviously a Trumpette but not prepared to engage.
That is not to say for a moment that we had anything other than positive experiences. It is a matter of joy at how polite the Americans were. They can still queue, and the sheer industry they display shames me. Useful doing the sites.
We also visited the Reading Terminal Market and Rosie shopped in Macy’s lest you think I was cruel. It was a magnificent C19th shop in a building akin to Frasers in Glasgow. Better still it has the world’s largest working organ – the pipes in the photo are fake and the vents above open and shut as the range is played! But the music was sublime and made my day more than tolerable as Rosie indulged.
Rather more choice than Matheson’sShopping in scale!
Finally, good news for those who were beginning to worry, there will be a brief and separate special interest post to follow for those who like ships!
The journey started well. Torrential rain at Heathrow but the plane was apparently on time. Except it wasn’t, and was on a stand requiring a bus. Wet passengers although absolute credit to the BA employee who stood with an umbrella between the bus and the covered stairs while the deluge continued.
On board matters became much more calm. Pyjamas issued, champagne provided, followed by more and more as the delay increased. Would have been rude not to. And then off for a somewhat bumpy ride to high altitude where it never quite smoothed out but who was caring?
Joined Rosie for dinner which was good though again the BA poached egg was still solid if not quite as rubbery. Menus below for those who are interested – Rosie had salmon followed by halibut while I had asparagus and beef. Then chocolate ice cream for Rosie and cheese for me. Wines were good though was being semi abstemious by this point.
Films and a brief snooze followed, with the joy of high tea at half past midnight UK time. Somewhat different yet admirable, albeit the stewardess perplexed me by clearing it all away save a small pot of jam, which she then asked me, ten minutes later, if I wanted to keep! Eh no! One particular cinematic joy was a BOAC short film “George and the Flying Boats”. It is simply magnificent, involving a boy getting a flight in a Sandringham, and grown men wandering about on wings and near moving propellers. In short, a reminder why H&S is so overblown. If ever flying BA long haul watch it. It will delight you.
Only fifteen minutes late in Philly, where it was also very windy and wet and horrifyingly humid, and to be absolutely fair we were in the hotel seventy minutes after leaving the aircraft – first off which was most satisfying in a shameful way.
All that smugness evaporated, however, once we hit the immigration queues, where a new circle of hell had been added, just for fun or so it seemed to me. We duly saw a human being who asked aggressively why we were there, as well as scanning all fingers and thumbs and photographing us, but prior to that we had to go through an automated procedure which did much the same – though right hands only – before issuing us with a most unflattering, in my case at least, photo.
This of course sorted the wheat from the chaff and the real test I suppose was to see who was stupid enough to stand in line behind the large family from a southern state who whooped and hollered as they failed to make it work for the fifth time. With Rosie’s help we avoided that and passed through uneventfully. In due course our print outs were looked at dismissively by the officer, marked with a large cross and then taken off us as we left the area. Most odd.
It was therefore a relief to be back in the Monaco Hotel which as a Kimpton has whacky if impressive decor. Not necessarily the best thing after eighteen hours of travel but strangely reassuring and remarkably sleep inducing.
Great news! Rosie professes herself satisfied with lounges.
An easy day of travel so far as everything has run ahead of schedule. A seven month old A321 Neo – no table in the spare seat – but otherwise much the same.
What has changed since 2017 is the way my body has obviously become a temple. For with two lounges and one flight down all I have eaten is fish or fruit and veg. Not a single sausage.
BA’s flight option from Edinburgh was a mushroom tarte which was very tasty. However don’t be fooled by the “poached” egg. It had the look and feel of a squash ball and didn’t so much explode gooey goodness as crumble.
Boing!
The Concorde Lounge has been much better, although the Concorde seats have gone! Lunch was very good – soup/gravadlax and then we both had the crab tortellini. Yum.
The general ambience is if anything better than last time, as is the service, largely because there are more people who actually want to take an order. Furniture is improved too, in particular groovy day beds which we are currently taking full advantage of looking at a very damp Heathrow!
View from one’s day bed, and yes, there is fizz off camera.
Not delusional royalty on my part, but simply indicative that the ramblings will continue reflecting the travels of two generations of Broon. On this occasion Rosie is coming along to experience the joys of low cost air mile travel and IHG Spire Ambassador excess. In short, points mean prizes!
Seemed only fair as (a) she has not (yet) inherited her mother’s humorous disdain for airport lounges and (b) she was due a treat given her success at school and impending departure to Dundee University to start law of all things.
We always travel like this, obviously.
So join us on a brief trip to Philadelphia and then New York, BA permitting. Rosie tells me we have a list of seven shops to visit in the latter but seems content to do some Constitutional history in the former. And my chances of visiting the battleship, the aircraft carrier, the cruiser, and the two submarines we’ll pass?
Enjoy the New Jersey. This is as much as you’re going to get I suspect!