We are in Helsinki, it is 0751 Friday morning. We have already showered, dressed, went looking for AAA batteries for Tricia’s keyboard, and ate breakfast at our hotel. Yes, it is early for all that – the background music artist is singing an appropriate song, “In The Wee Small Hours of the Morning” – jet lag is a funny thing. I just realized that the songwriter of that song is definitely not familiar with UK influenced English since “wee” is a synonym of “small” so it is redundant, but I digress.
It has been quite a week – wonderful fatherly pride, a grueling, retro flight experience, and then of course jet lag to top it off.
Twenty-three years ago my son, Aaron, lamented to me that he was not ready to turn thirty, I remember telling him that I was not sure I was ready to admit that I had a thirty year old child. Well, on Saturday we went to a party to celebrate his retirement from the Molalla, Oregon, Police Force. I am not sure I am ready to admit I have a child old enough to retire, but I am sure a proud papa.
It was a wonderful party, seamlessly orchestrated by Kris, Aaron’s wife. It was held at the Molalla Brewery. There were easily over 100 people who came to wish him well. It made me proud to think that he has influenced so many people.
I am proud of so much that he has done in these 53 years. He has Dolphins from his time in the Navy – Dolphins are the designation of a submariner. Then his long career in law enforcement. He has two great kids, my grand kids, and there are also two great-grand kids. Good job Aaron.
So back to our journey. When we first started planning our trip back to France, with a stop in Montenegro, the best value flight we found was on FinnAir, an airline we have had good experience with in the past. We discovered we had to go through Helsinki, so figured, why not stay a couple days just because we have never been there. Our flight would take us from PDX (Portland) to Seattle on Alaska, then a non-stop flight to Helsinki, perfect.
A couple of months ago we received word that the Seattle to Helsinki flight was canceled, so we were rerouted PDX to Chicago on American, then on to Helsinki. That was the plan until about 0700 Tuesday morning of this week as we were two hours away from heading to the airport. I checked email only to find that due to a mechanical problem, the PDX to Chicago flight would get in too late and we would miss our connection to Helsinki.
Soooo… we had a new routing – Portland, Dallas/Fort Worth, London, Helsinki. Such fun.
We ended up in the back of the plane to Texas, cramped of course, but often my status on Alaska brings some little gifts, the flight attendant brought us wine from first-class.
After a 2 1/2 hour layover in Texas, we boarded our flight to Heathrow. The delightfully helpful agent in Portland did what she could to get us in a row with an empty seat between us, so much for “mice and persons” – there were a lot of standby passengers so I took the middle seat and Tricia had the window.
Aside from the cramped conditions it was a complete throwback to the air travel of at least 15+ years ago. The Airbus plane was so old that the trash bin in the lavatory had instructions that it could be used for cigarettes.
Then it was time for dinner, or whatever you call a meal on a flight that is leaving at 2300. The flight attendant paused long enough to ask, with no wasted pleasantries, “pasta or chicken.” We took the chicken. Oh the memories as she handed me a tray with a paper dish covered in plastic with rice and something that I was hoping was actually chicken. As accompaniments there was a roll, some salad looking stuff, and a wedge of “gourmet” processed cheese, which I am not sure had ever been close to a cow. This is how meals were served oh so many years ago.
We made it to London, waited for our FinnAir flight, then sat on the tarmac for almost an hour, arriving into Helsinki around 2200, ten hours later than we anticipated. We finally made it to the hotel at 2330, So ready for bed.

None of this is in any way is meant to be complaining, simply that sometimes travel can be a challenge, but we take what happens and move on.
Yesterday, Thursday, we didn’t do much, just some timezone adjusting. I did get a sketch in at PDX airport, and yesterday. Hopefully more today. Tricia posted today some photos from our wandering yesterday, check it out.

Today a bit more wandering, then tomorrow off to Prague. Thank you for coming along for the ride. I hope your week has few good adventures and moments to capture with pen, ink, and paint.
To be honest, I never thought you were old enough to have a retired son 😉. The stories of flights on various planes to who knows where, right? Maybe you should make a collection of sketches of all your flights with interesting stories – that could be a winner! Enjoy.
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Thanks, the prob with sketch idea is that when flights are interesting i am usually distracted or tired so don’t sketch. Also in the 25 years i spent traveling I actually have very few stories.
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Nice to hear about your son. I’ll pop over to Tricia’s for the photos. Happy travels! xx
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Thanks so much
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Hope your son enjoys his retirement. And I really hope you get to enjoy Helsinki as it is a great place to visit. Travel can be difficult as we are only too aware over the years. BTW our flight from Auckland to Hong Kong was equally cramped with really awful food.
You are there and that is what counts.
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Yep, for sure.
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We’ve already had our flight home changed 3 times, and it’s not for 2 months. I think it has to do with fuel shortages and having fewer flights. Enjoy your Helsinki. Maggie
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So sorry, pretty sure ours was not the fuel thing, but who knows. Hope yours go smooth in the end.
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We are both still laughing from your descriptions–and commiserating at your flight travel experiences this time around. We’ve all been there…but hoped to never sit in a middle seat or eat faux chicken covered in plastic wrap again. Perhaps this will be the last time you have to deal with flight changes and challenges–but I must say you provided a lot of smiles and entertainment for us reading through your experience getting to Helsinki. I’m sure once you get over your jet lag only wonderful things will happen, but you know–part of the adventure are the stories you can tell about the journey. Thanks for sharing!
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It was memorable, for sure. Tomorrow jut a two hour flight to Prague, or maybe they will divert us through Athens and Rome??
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PS — Your fatherly pride showed through and was well deserved. So cool! Congrats to your son–and many thanks for his service to his country and community!
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Yep, a lot of pride. He has done well.
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What a journey! Flights have been crazy these days, due to increased fuel prices and perhaps related to the bankruptcy/end of Spirit Airlines (even affecting international travel, I’ve heard)! Nonetheless, you made it to Helsinki, and I hope you enjoy your time there, as well as the rest of Europe!
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Like i alluded to in the post none of this was connected to the fuel thing since the changes all happened before the war. In 25 years of life on the road i really don’t have any too bad horror stories. I know some folks are having bad ones now who are quite experienced travelers so things are different in some places, it does seem a lot are in Asia or the mideast.
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I’m not sure what “gourmet processed” cheese is. Ugh. I hope you enjoy Helsinki; it’s a great city. Prague, too.
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Ugh is right! We didn’t give it a try, so we’ll never know. Thanks; we’re loving both cities.
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Thanks for sharing. Travel is usually rife with adventure, as we pass through new places and experiences out of our familiar comfort zones. I enjoyed your pen, notebook and drink sketch.
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And often the surprises are the best parts, thanks so much.
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