Splette's Travel Blog
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  • January4th

    I hope I won't miss this flight (wouldn't be the first....)

    Countdown to Take Off

    Here’s a condensed update on what’s been happening:
    I’ve defended my PhD thesis in mid December, had a farewell party a few days later, moved out of my flat and left Heidelberg for good, brought my stuff to my parents’ place and celebrated Christmas there and then went to Berlin for New Years.
    At last, I will start my trip Jan 5 – tomorrow morning. Take-off is 11:50 at Tegel Airport, Berlin.

  • September26th

    Last night I got my wallet stolen in a club in Barcelona. Snatched it right out of my front pocket of my pants in a moment of distraction (Thankfully that guy ignored the other pocket with my expensive mobile phone). That’s a new experience. I have lost my wallet quite a few times and it always came back to me with nothing missing. But I never got it stolen in my 12+ years of traveling. Then again I was warned. A friend lost his iPhone 4 in another club here just a few days ago and I heard stories of that kind from others, too.

    The incident made me think about how different cultures are. What does the fact that people steal from each other tell about the culture here? I had to think of Japan where people in a bar sometimes leave their wallet or mobile phone on the table when they go to the bathroom.  I got the impression the only thing you easily lose in Japan are umbrellas. But I guess they are considered common property. You lose one, you take another one…

    Well, I learned a lesson. I may have been  over-confident given the fact that I virtually never got anything stolen during a trip. One of the many voices in my head said: Me, getting anything stolen? Never! That only happens to clueless tourists, not me. I am a super experienced traveler who knows all the tricks… etc. I guess I am not. And isn’t that what I once thought about getting ripped off until I got, well, ripped off again… ?

    In the end it wasn’t a big deal: Lost 40 Euros in cash, my driving license, health insurance card and bus tickets. I canceled my credit card immediately. The biggest lost may be the bonus card of my favourite Café. Just three more stamps and I had gotten that free drink…

  • August2nd

    Bad news for me concerning my schedule. All did not go well and I will not be able to start my trip in October as I hoped. My publication is still with the reviewers and has not been accepted, yet. Therefore the date of my PhD defense will shift to late November / early December. I will probably spend Christmas in Germany and start my trip in January. First stop: Montreal. Need to buy a warmer jacket…

  • June8th

    As the end of my seemingly neverending PhD study draws nearer my travel plans become more refined. If all goes well I will defend my thesis in September or early October and then leave for Canada in mid October. Wish me luck.

  • March17th

    Back in 2007, when I first visited the US (for a study visit at the Oak Ridge National Lab near Knoxville, Tennessee), my colleague and I spend our very first night at a Super 8 Motel. As it turns out this very Super 8 Motel at Papermill Rd. became the scene of a shooting last month. If my mother gets to know about this….

  • January13th

    Today I ordered the first batch of Lonely Planet guidebooks for my trip: Alaska, California & Colombia. There is a 30% discount at the moment, so the timing is good. I also realized that no new edition of the Central America guide will be released until end of this year, so I’ll use the one I got. However, there is a brand new edition of South America on a Shoestring coming out in two months.

  • September20th

    I live a diversified life but if there is one constant in it, it’s the little disasters that happen with an astonishing frequency. They are a integral part of my life and ensure that it is never getting too boring. Just a few months ago I got into trouble with the police when shooting some test footage for one of my small film projects on campus. For some reason, I still don’t quite comprehend, some person who witnessed our activities thought that the very authentic-appearing (but harmless) BB gun, we were messing around with, was … well … REAL! So he called the cops. For the rest of the story, check out my video on Vimeo.
    No, today’s little disaster wasn’t related to guns but a seemingly harmless USB-stick, I got from the cool GridIron people at the IBC in Amsterdam last weekend. Ha! Don’t be fooled by its small size and unobtrusive appearance. If it has a bail to attach it to your chain of keys, it is a potentially dangerous device! Why? I was planning to go to my cousin’s wedding. It is a 9 hour train ride from Heidelberg and because I am not the most organized person, I intended to take the last possible train connection to make it to the wedding ceremony. As usual, I started packing my things no more than 1 hour before the train would leave at 4:30 am. Because there is no public transport at this early hour, I called a cab (not cop) to drive me to the station. When I heard the cab arrive at 4:05, naturally, I was still very busy with packing. No time to iron the shirt I will wear at the wedding; no time to print out a map of the location of the church; no time to dry my fav t-shirt which just came out of the laundry (I put it on instead. 36° body temperature do the job.) I was afraid, the cab might be leaving if I take much longer. So I ran outside to ask the driver to wait a few more minutes until I am done. On my way back in, I realized which stupid mistake I did this time: my keys were gone and I was locked out. 25 minutes before the last train leaves, to still make it to the wedding of my cousin. My keys weren’t in my pocket because earlier today I attached them to my fancy new GridIron USB-stick, I am proud to possess. And that USB-stick was plugged in to my computer because I wanted to do some last minute file transfer. And there it was again, the feeling of being a complete idiot. (I usually always check if I have the keys on me. The only times I don’t are when it’s actually important…) I had no choice but the ring the bell of my neighbor. What are the chances that they bother to get up and check who is disturbing their sleep at 4 am in the morning? Neighbor #1 did not react within 30 seconds, so I rang neighbor #2 and then #3, #4, #5 … all of them.  Time was a limiting factor for me. They’ll probably hate me now. But I will be forever grateful to the shirtless student from the top floor who bothered to get up and look out of the window to check who’s waking him at this hour. I explained to him and he opened the front door. I was lucky enough to have left the door to my apartment wide open when I rushed outside. This time I was saved. But I haven’t always been that lucky. So far I have missed four flights in my life (and counting…) Each of them for another uniquely stupid reason, I was fully responsable for. Thus, this was only my first small disaster to report here. Rest assured, it won’t be the last…
    Meanwhile, you may want to consider detaching your USB-stick from your keychain if you are equally absent minded and chaotic like me.

  • September2nd

    Hey there…

    I have just finished building this website. Still needs extension and a few fixes here and there. Let me know if something doesn’t work the way it should. Although my pan-america trip is still a few months away, putting this website together got me all excited about it. Why build an extra website for just one trip when I already got my personal website at www.splette.com? Since this is one of my longer travels and and hopefully the most exciting one, I decided that I’d like to do more than just upload a few photos afterwards. I want to share this experience with you guys.