Greece or Bust

We arrive at the Norfolk Naval Station, Virginia today. We will try to fly Space Available on a Navy plane today to one of the following posted destinations:

Brazil

Lajes, the Azore Islands, Portugal

Ramstein, Germany


Rota, Spain


Naples, Italy


Crete, Greece


Many of the planes are also going on to the middle east but Space A passengers are not permitted to go to these destinations. Otherwise we would try for one of these more exotic locations.

We will try for Crete, Greece. I will periodically post photos and updates on this blog when I can get to the internet and if I can figure out how to post from my IPAD.


http://travelhullinger.blogspot.com/



Norfolk is a former home of mine. I spent one year here when I was 18 doing a little volunteer social work in the inner city. I was also a Reserve Officer with CincLantFleet in the lat 1980's. Norfolk is an interesting town.


One of my neighbors is convinced that I am CIA because of these trips.

Happy Cities



Interesting to see Cedar Rapids, Iowa, listed as a happy city. Glad they got over their major flood problems from a few years ago. It is a nice city, and residents should be happy.


Click to read the story:


Metro/County Census




 US county map showing positive growth in blue, negative growth in red:








RankMetro20002010Total ChangePct Change
1Las Vegas-Paradise, NV1,375,7651,951,269575,50441.83%
2Raleigh-Cary, NC797,0711,130,490333,41941.83%
3Austin-Round Rock-San Marcos, TX1,249,7631,716,289466,52637.33%
4Riverside-San Bernardino-Ontario, CA3,254,8214,224,851970,03029.80%
5Phoenix-Mesa-Glendale, AZ3,251,8764,192,887941,01128.94%
6Houston-Sugar Land-Baytown, TX4,715,4075,946,8001,231,39326.11%
7San Antonio-New Braunfels, TX1,711,7032,142,508430,80525.17%
8Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, TX5,161,5446,371,7731,210,22923.45%
9Nashville-Davidson–Murfreesboro–Franklin, TN1,311,7891,589,934278,14521.20%
10Sacramento–Arden-Arcade–Roseville, CA1,796,8572,149,127352,27019.60%
11Denver-Aurora-Broomfield, CO2,157,7562,543,482385,72617.88%
12Salt Lake City, UT968,8581,124,197155,33916.03%
13Portland-Vancouver-Hillsboro, OR-WA1,927,8812,226,009298,12815.46%
14Indianapolis-Carmel, IN1,525,1041,756,241231,13715.16%
15Richmond, VA1,096,9571,258,251161,29414.70%
16Oklahoma City, OK1,095,4211,252,987157,56614.38%
17Columbus, OH1,612,6941,836,536223,84213.88%
18Seattle-Tacoma-Bellevue, WA3,043,8783,439,809395,93113.01%
19Kansas City, MO-KS1,836,0382,035,334199,29610.85%
20Minneapolis-St. Paul-Bloomington, MN-WI2,968,8063,279,833311,02710.48%
21San Diego-Carlsbad-San Marcos, CA2,813,8333,095,313281,48010.00%
22Memphis, TN-MS-AR1,205,2041,316,100110,8969.20%
23Birmingham-Hoover, AL1,052,2381,128,04775,8097.20%
24Baltimore-Towson, MD2,552,9942,710,489157,4956.17%
25Virginia Beach-Norfolk-Newport News, VA-NC1,576,3701,671,68395,3136.05%
26San Jose-Sunnyvale-Santa Clara, CA1,735,8191,836,911101,0925.82%
27Hartford-West Hartford-East Hartford, CT1,148,6181,212,38163,7635.55%
28San Francisco-Oakland-Fremont, CA4,123,7404,335,391211,6515.13%
29Philadelphia-Camden-Wilmington, PA-NJ-DE-MD5,687,1475,965,343278,1964.89%
30St. Louis, MO-IL2,698,6872,812,896114,2094.23%
31Chicago-Joliet-Naperville, IL-IN-WI9,098,3169,461,105362,7893.99%
32Los Angeles-Long Beach-Santa Ana, CA12,365,62712,828,837463,2103.75%
33Milwaukee-Waukesha-West Allis, WI1,500,7411,555,90855,1673.68%
34Pittsburgh, PA2,431,0872,356,285-74,802-3.08%
35Cleveland-Elyria-Mentor, OH2,148,1432,077,240-70,903-3.30%
36New Orleans-Metairie-Kenner, LA1,316,5101,167,764-148,746-11.30%




A Little Radiation Never Hurt Anybody

A Little Radiation Never Hurt Anybody


Of course a lot of radiation is not so good.


Who knows how many people will be injured or killed from radiation in Japan? Let us hope and pray for the best.


When I was a young Marine in 1967 we had some very high powered radars. Personnel wore badges that showed how much exposure to radiation they had encountered to protect them. The badges would be periodically checked to see the radiation exposure.


One of our Sergeants hit on the clever idea of throwing his badge up in front of the radar a number of times. The next time his badge was checked the radiation was through the roof.


They evacuated him to the hospital, presuming he would quickly become sick. He spent two weeks in bed, happily eating and chasing the nurses.


They figured out he had pulled a fast one, but could not prove it, so he got away with it.


After I got to Vietnam we were much more cavalier about radiation from high powered radars and radios. I spent a year on Hill 327 in close proximity to a lot of radar and radio transmitter emanations. No badges, no worries.


And now I need to start some more radiation treatments for a little problem I have. But fortunately I know that a little radiation never hurt anyone.


Home Values






Homeowners are more pessimistic about the short-term housing market, but now fewer than half the nation's homeowners expect the value of their homes to go up in the next five years.


Zip Code

Update From Tokyo


Update from my cousin.

Hi all,

We are currently at the gate at Narita waiting for our departure time to come. Still have about 2 hours to go. Airport wasn't too bad. But found out from one of the airport workers that European airlines have pulled out. Seems kind of wimpy to me (he says as he gets ready to leave the country - we are not running away. Just thought it was a nice time to take a trip for our Spring Break). Delta is great.  Delta even said we could change our departure and return dates at no extra charge. All of their flights are flying normally and they even bought in 50 more flight crew members to stand by. KLM crews just pulled out and left (according to the airport employee we talked to). I didn't see any check-in counters open, except for Delta, and they have long lines.

A friend sent me an email saying he saw on the news that some people in the US were buying radiation poisoning prevention pills. That's pretty extreme. Here, it's kind of like orderly panic. People are buying up all staple foods and gasoline, but they do calmly and without cutting in line. I've been telling everybody who asks me (and quite a few have been, because they know that I know everything) that the radiation danger is minimal in Tokyo. For the Fukushima Plant workers, there's a risk, but not us. But what happens is that some people decide they better stock up, other people see people queued on the TV news so they decide they had better stock up and it spirals into a kind of panic.

What we, in Japan,  really should worry about is the ongoing electricity shortage that this is going to cause. I'm sure they're going to have to modify every similar nuclear plant in Japan and that will probably require shutting them down (not to mention the loss of the 6 reactors at Fukushima - 4 that caught fire and 2 more that I'm sure they won't be able to use for quite a while).

Anyway, we're at the airport now. School was closed until the end of the month. Andrew had a plane ticket from his school concert tour that was cancelled. Akane found two other tickets online for a really good price and so we're going to visit our daughter north of San Francisco for a while. We're leaving today. Luckily I filled the gas tank the day after the earthquake, because the next day the lines were half a mile long at gas stations and they started selling out. So we were able to drive to the airport (about 60 miles outside of Tokyo). Now we either see long, long lines at gas stations, or no lines at all because the station has no gas left. 

Doug


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