United States
Dallas

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    • Day 9

      Dallas

      October 31, 2019 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 2 °C

      Heute Vormittag sind wir kurz in die Innenstadt von Dallas gefahren und haben das JFK-Memorial besucht. Es ist furchtbar kalt hier und wir haben fast nur Florida-taugliche Klamotten dabei...

      Heute Abend sind wir dann bei der Probe (Rehearsal) für die Hochzeit und anschließend beim Rehearsal Dinner. In Halloween-Kostüm. Wir sind gespannt...Read more

    • Day 8

      Der Reunion Tower

      March 26, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 25 °C

      Nach dem Brunch wollten wir noch etwas von Dallas sehen.
      Auf der Straße, wo Kennedy erschossen wurde sind die beiden Plätze mit einem „X“ auf der Straße markiert.
      Dann sind wir auf den Reunion-Tower, um die Aussicht zu genießen. Und die war gut!

      „Der Reunion Tower ist ein 171 Meter hoher Aussichts- und Restaurantturm. Der in der Downtown von Dallas gelegene Turm im Reunion District gehört zu den bekanntesten Wahrzeichen der Stadt. Das Bauwerk ist Teil des Hyatt Regency Hotelkomplexes und zählt zu den höchsten Gebäuden in Texas.“
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    • Day 8

      Der Brunch

      March 26, 2023 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 21 °C

      Gleich nach der Ankunft in Dallas wurden wir schon zum Brunch abgeholt.
      Wir hatten einen wunderbaren Vormittag bei leckerem Essen im „Fearing‘s“.

      Die angesagte Kleiderordnung von „upscaled Business casual“ war wohl etwas übertrieben.

      Essen war wunderbar!

      „“The father of Southwestern cuisine,” chef Dean Fearing has a reputation that reaches beyond Dallas. At his namesake restaurant, he creates elevated American cuisine with a distinctly southwestern touch. The experience goes beyond the main dining room with several spaces including a wine cellar and the Rattlesnake Bar. The latter hosts a weekday happy hour with Fearing’s signature margaritas. Sundays offer an indulge-worthy, Dallas-style brunch.“
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    • Day 1

      Opening

      March 20, 2018 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 12 °C

      It’s starting 😃
      As one of the speakers in the opening keynote Jacob Morgan presented ‘The Experiential Organization’, very inspiring! His views on employee experience give a lot food for thought.
      Jacob claims that looking at employee engagement for improvement potential doesn’t do the trick as we are providing ‘adrenalin shots’ to improve engagement rather than working on the cause. Where engagement is the result, experience is the cause and sustainable, long lasting improvement of employee engagement can only be achieved by focusing on great employee experience. The experience is built out of three blocks which are interlinked and influence each other: physical space (office, working environment), technology (tools, enablers), and culture (values, way of cooperation) - sorry for the blurry picture, or do I need better glasses, again???
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    • Day 6

      Wyoming, but not as i knew it!

      August 7, 2017 in the United States ⋅ 🌧 26 °C

      I grew up in Wyoming. Seriously, I did. However, arriving in Jackson Hole, Wyoming I was not prepared for what I was to see... The drive from the airport was across plains, and then we hit it...the township is amazing, and what one would expect from a 'Merrican western township...my pics did it no justice...Read more

    • Day 21

      Travel Day to Dallas

      September 21, 2018 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 23 °C

      Vegas is great. Vegas is big. Vegas is OTT. Vegas is full-on. Vegas is not my cup of tea at all. Frankly, I doubt you could get a cup of tea in Vegas. If you could, they'd want to serve it with Margarita and a slot machine.

      Up early, Ubered out to the airport for a 9am flight to Dallas. We lost a couple of hours in time zones but the flight was also delayed some 30 minutes from landing due to storms. Dallas is muggy. Dallas is frowzy. Dallas is close. As Chris said, it's like a Newcastle or Sydney summer at the height. Hot, incredibly humid, it's no wonder it rains. TG for air conditioning.

      Very disappointed with American Airlines (I hope you're reading this AA). First, they separated us, after having purchased the tickets ages ago. Second, the flight was full and by the time we boarded, the overhead lockers were crammed full. This meant that we both had to carry our overhead bags as well as our personal bags into middle seats. One half of one bag stuffed under the seat, the personal bag stuck under the seat in front, where your feet are supposed to go. For three and a half hours. Boo hiss boo!

      I did watch a movie and listened to a bit of music on the flight to help pass the time. 'A Quiet Place' starring John Krasinski and Emily Blunt masterfully protect their family from alien creatures that are blind but attack anything they hear in a killing frenzy. You see them, but you hear them more. Very clever. The family communicates by sign. It is very compelling and I got a few jump frights on the way, as did, I presume, the two gentlemen either side of me. Politically, this movie is about having your voice silenced. Hollywood makes no bid for morality here as it plays it straight down the middle. Both Right and Left could claim this movie as their own. Boo hiss boo! Take a stand! Four stars. It goes to places, even in the opening sequence you don't expect. It's more of a thriller than horror, but there are some horror elements present. Very enjoyable and very well done.

      The sound track to my boxed in twisted uncomfortable flight was Joan Baez The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down, some Handel, Mozart and Verdi soprano arias performed by Sutherland, and the Haydn Piano Concerto in D Major, a sweet little thing.

      We're staying an an older hotel in Dallas, the Sheraton, that they are renovating. We have a comfortable although not huge, room on the 31st floor and have a fine view over the city. We've been out for a bite and it really is a city of glass. I grew up on the tv show Dallas, but none of that sensibility is present anymore. I doubt we'll be doing a Southfork tour even if there is one. Bathed, beered, eaten, we feel refreshed and ready to discover this balmy city. I mean that in the nicest possible way. Till next.
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    • Day 22

      Towering Inferno, Waterworld, West Wing

      September 22, 2018 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 24 °C

      It's nice to stay somewhere air-conditioned when you're in Dallas at this time of year. It's hot and steamy and there are storms always threatening, some of which appear, some of which don't. And so it was that Chris and I settled into the Sheraton, an older, but gloriously older, hotel in the downtown. They gave us a room on the 31st floor, second from the top, from which we had sweeping views of this part of the city. Come midnight, we were still up, talking, responding to socials, I was tweeting correctives to Lyle Shelton (what can I say), both awaiting the long day's travel to finally hit us and the sleep train arrive. It did, just after 12 of the clock.

      At 2.15, we were suddenly awoken by an alarm in our room, a god-awful low sounding howl, punctuated by a human voice that said calmly but incessantly, "Please leave your room. Go to the lobby. Do not use the elevators. Leave immediately. This is an emergency". We both jumped out of our skin at the first sound of the alarm. Chris screamed. I think I did too. We jumped out of bed, processed the message, realised we were in an evacuation and started to pull some clothes on and shoes. We grabbed our personal bags, I grabbed my watch and wedding ring too and headed for the door. I had not had time to put socks on, so I was shod in my shoes only, with no orthotics that I usually wear. Our revestment went all the while to the frightening strains of this man telling us to get out. Trying to tie the laces on my second shoe, my hands started to shake and I was fumblling badly.

      Outside in the hallway, we heard others on our floor, but saw no-one at first. We headed down the hallway, trying to find the stairwell. Around a corner or two, we finally came across it. The whole time we were searching for it, we could hear the siren and the message. It was absolutely terrifying. We were both scared half out of our wits. I am old enough to have watched and been terrified at the 1974 movie The Towering Inferno, where a high-rise in San Francisco goes up in flames and residents are trapped on the upper floors to burn to death. But at the Sheraton, there was no Paul Newman or Steve McQueen to save us. We were on our own.

      We headed into the stairwell and started what can only be described as the most surreal experience of my life. We were both shaking but descending the steps. There were 62 flights to get down. Gripping the railings as we went to steady ourselves from falling. Some older dude either on our floor or Floor 32 came hurtling past us. We were in his way, but he was determined to get down out of this building, so "excuse me" and we let him pass. "Hmm," I thought, "save yourself buddy". We just kept on going and going, flight after flight after flight. By about ten flights down, I realised that my two big toes were being pressed into the side of their respective shoes in such a way as to abraid them. "O God," I thought, "I'm getting blisters". But it was blisters or possible death, so I pressed on, my feet absolutely killing me. We both stayed relatively calm. We could hear fire engines outside the building speeding toward us and parking. But we managed to just concentrate on the task at hand. Flight 15, flight 16, flight 17 and on wards, down and down and down. VERY scary!

      Two people joined us somewhere on the journey down, so for the last third, there were four of us. A man and a young woman, who were not together. They had both come from 32. Eventually, we got to the bottom and opened a barred door and we found ourselves out on the street in the bucketing down rain. Confused as to where we were in relation to the building entrance, for the Sheraton Dallas has three towers, we ended up following the fellow who got it right and got us around to the entrance and lobby. As we entered, the fire engines were driving away and a young girl from the hotel said in THE most cavalier fashion you could possibly muster, "Don't worry, false alarm, just a leak set it off". The four of us just looked at her, hearts racing, panting from hurtling down a skyscraper, adrenalin pumping, calf muscles already painful, wet and dripping somewhat, as if she had murdered our grandmothers and cut them up with an axe. A leak? That was it?

      We got ourselves up to the lobby, on the second floor, to be greeted by Robin, who was very kind, thoughtful, offered us water and a sit down, and some reassurance, but the rest of the hotel staff, clearly not in charge, were just lolling about laughing among themselves. Another man and his wife came in just after us and we found out they were also on the 31st floor, in fact two doors from us, and they had just done the same thing. They were older than us, the wife, not the fittest and rather a big woman. If we struggled, they struggled even more.

      After some solidarity of our shared experience, we went back up in the lift to the 31st floor and had to process what had happened. It was 3am. We were wide awake and drowning in incredulity. I said to Chris that tomorrow morning, we would ask for another room, something lower down, and perhaps something a smidge bigger as there was only one chair.

      We did fall asleep eventually and woke this morning full of promise, joking that we had both had this really bad scary dream last night. Readying ourselves for the day, we headed back down to the lobby to talk to the Manager. I wanted to give feedback. In fact, I wanted to give three pages of feedback, as I had sat down and put a few thoughts on the page so I would not forget anything. It was all helpful feedback, no blowhard anger or anything like that. Accidents happen. They could have handled this better, and I suggested where they might, including looking after the mental health of patrons in a situation like that. The feedback was gratefully accepted by one of the managers, Angela, who also said she would upgrade our room for us to something bigger and lower.

      We were being met this morning by my friend Ben Strube and his partner Tino. Ben read my book years ago and we became good friends online. We've skyped a few times, but this was the first time we have met face to face. It was such a lovely morning, a real balm after such a distressing night. Ben and Tino took us first for coffee where we chatted and got to know each other better. We were able to give Ben an original art work that I had asked Chris to do for him. Another beautiful piece. He's so clever.

      After coffee, we headed into Tino's workplace which is a gallery where we got to see some amazing Latino art; sculpture, drawings, etchings, pottery, paintings, metalwork, all sorts of media. As we once might have said in Australia in a bygone era - fan bloody tastic. We so enjoyed Tino's gallery and felt we had seen something really special.

      Brekky after that at authentic Mexican, which we both enjoyed enormously. The boys looked after us so well and we all connected wonderfully. We'll be seeing them again over the next few days.

      This afternoon, we took in the delights of the Dallas Aquarium, which hosts some amazing exhibits, birds as well as fish and reptiles. I loved the owls, as always. They were just huge. The aquarium is kind of in two halves. The first half has you snaking aroung a single track looking at the exhibits as you go. Great idea for maybe thrity people at a time. But when they let in hundreds, it bottlenecks up and gets quite close and you can't see much. They need to allow only fifty through at a time, with a five to ten minute break between groups to allow things to proceed. The second half is more traditional, tanks and pools, and people start to thin out a bit more here. The Dallas Aquarium is rightly known as one of the world's great aquariums. We got some amazing pics.

      Home and to our new room. We sidled up to Check-in and the girl said, "I think you'll be pleased with your up-grade.". I joked and said, "it's not the Presidential Suite is it, ha ha?" To which she replied, "I don't make these decisions, I just do the keys, at which point, she handed over two freshly minted hotel room keys and told us our new floor, the ninth. "Much better" I thought.

      Arriving at Room 955, we were greeted with a sign on the door that said, PRESIDENTIAL SUITE. "You have got to be joking" we both intoned. We slowly opened the door, and walked into a giant beautiful room lit with charming lamps, with lounge suites, dinner table, coffee table, opening out again into a long lounge room, with bar, then an office with escritoire, at which I am writing this footprint right now, then a bedroom and two bathrooms. This thing is enormous. It is bigger than our living area at home. Not long after, Angela from Managment rang and asked if we had settled in. She was very thankful for our courteous attitude that morning and for the written feedback which she said she would take to the various meetings. How lovely! And what a way to finish off this extraordinary 24 hours.

      I have just listened to one Handel Organ Concerto and two Haydn Cello Concertos as I wrote this. Chris is doodling some new art work, a bird I think. We are happy and content in our Presidential Suite and ready to take on Dallas again tomorrow. Till Next.
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    • Day 84

      Dallas, Dealey Plaza, 22.11.1963, 12.30

      April 25, 2018 in the United States ⋅ ⛅ 11 °C

      Was an diesem Ort, an diesem Tag, um diese Zeit passierte, liess die Welt so etwas wie stillstehen. Lee Harvey Oswald hatte aus dem 6. Stock des Texas School Book Depository an der Elm Street 411 mit zwei Schüssen aus einem Zielfernrohr-Karabiner den 35. Präsidenten der USA, John Fitzgerald Kennedy, auf seiner Fahrt im offenen Lincoln Continental durch Dallas erschossen. Oswald wurde zwei Tage später vom Nachtclub-Besitzer Jack Ruby im Hauptquartier der Polizei von Dallas erschossen, und so bleibt der tatsächliche Tathergang bis heute etwas im Dunkeln, und viele Verschwörungstheorien kamen auf. Aber die ofizielle Untersuchungskommission und auch spätere Untersuchungen gehen davon aus, dass Oswald der Schütze war und als alleiniger Täter handelte.
      Heute ist der 6. Stock des ehemaligen Schulbuchlagers von Texas ein Museum und heisst einfach Sixth Floor Museum. Dort wird die ganze Vorgeschichte, der Tathergang und die Nachbereitung des Attentats eindrücklich und ausführlich mit Dokumenten, Fotos und Filmen erklärt. Und natürlich kann man den Ort, wo Oswald aus dem Gebäude geschossen hat, ebenfalls besichtigen.
      Ich wollte schon immer einmal nach Dallas, dieses Attentats wegen. Warum?
      Die Ermordung Kennedys ist der erste poltische oder historische Vorgang, den ich wissentlich mitbekommen habe, und zwar so:
      Als ich am Samstag, den 24. November 1963 aufwachte, sassen meine Mutter und mein Vater sehr betreten in der Küche und sagten mir, dass Kennedy erschossen wurde. Meine Eltern waren eher apolitische Menschen, umso erstaunlicher war diese Mitteilung. Meine Mutter sollte mir Jahre später die Ausgabe der National Zeitung vom 24. November 1963 geben, die sie extra wegen dieses Ereignisses aufbewahrt hatte.
      Ich ging danach in die Schule (damals war samstags noch Schule!), und all die zehnjährigen Mitglieder meiner Klasse diskutierten angeregt das Ereignis. Unser Primarlehrer kam herein, und auch er ging auf das Attentat ein und erklärte uns, was passiert war.
      Und: Ab diesem Tag musste ich mir, meines Vornamens wegen, für geraume Zeit das Attribut „Kennedy-Mörder“ gefallen lassen.
      Nun war ich also mehr als fünfzig Jahre später hier, und das war etwas ganz Besonderes für mich.
      Zu den Bildern: Das Texas School Book Depository, von wo aus Oswald aus dem äussersten Fenster rechts im zweitobersten Stock auf Kennedy schoss; dann der Ort des Schützen im Gebäude; der Blick des Schützen aus dem Gebäude auf die Elm Street bei der Dealey Plaza, wo heute zwei Kreuze auf der Strasse die Standorte des Wagens von Kennedy markieren, wo die Schüsse gefallen sind (der erste Schuss beim vorderen Kreuz ging daneben; die tödlichen Schüsse 2 und 3 erfolgten bei der zweiten Markierung; siehe auch erstes Bild); die zweite Markierung auf der Strassen aus der Nähe.
      Und dann noch etwas Positives aus Dallas: die Pioneer Plaza mit der eindrücklichen Dallas Cattle Drive Sculpture von Robert Summers aus dem Jahre 1994, die 49 Rinder darstellt, die von drei Cowboys durch einen Fluss getrieben werden und an das Viehtreiben entlang des Shawnee Rivers im 19. Jahrhundert erinnern soll; schliesslich mein Lieblingsbild aus dem Dallas Art Museum (Lighthouse Hill von Edward Hopper aus dem Jahre 1927).
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    • Day 24

      day 21/22: dallas

      December 20, 2015 in the United States ⋅ ☁️ 11 °C

      we left at 8am and arrived in dallas at about 5 so was a loong day of traveling. plenty of snapchats around the bus to keep us entertained. was a quiet first night in Dallas we went for tea, tried a deep fried chicken steak wasnt a big fan really. then about 12 of us went and watched the latest star wars, was an allright film i guess. the next morning we went to the JFK museum we went up to the floor where the sniper was sitting when he shot JFK you got to the window where he sat. was a lot of interesting reads and such there. we walked down on the grassy knoll and seen the X marks on the road where JFK was when he was shot all 3 times. after that we went to the AT&T stadium home of the texas cowboys. one of the biggest stadiums in the world. home of the biggest tv in the world! well at least in the northern hemisphere it was. was cool we got to go into the players rooms and all the cool suites was a cool place to check out. after that we went out to some old school Texas looking place and demolished some bbq ribs before al getting dropped off at this arcade pub with heaps of old school games and karaoke rooms which I had a fair crack at ha. it was an interesting walk home no one really knew the way we just knew we had to walk towards a big building cause we were near by it.Read more

    • Day 39

      Making Pomegranate Juice

      January 12, 2022 in the United States ⋅ ☀️ 55 °F

      Odin loves pomegranates. After dinner one night he decided to make pomegranate juice by squeezing the individual kernels by hand into a glass. It progressed to using a mortal and pestle and a strainer. He declared that he enjoyed it so much that he might want to do it for a living. I was amazed at how much juice he made (about a half a cup) and how much he loved it.

      It was such a fun spontaneous activity.

      When I was putting him to bed he said he wanted Heather to go buy all the Pomegranates at all the grocery stores. And he would make bottles of juice and sell them for $50 a bottle.
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    You might also know this place by the following names:

    Dallas, ዳላስ, دالاس, Горад Далас, Далас, ডালাস, Даллас, داڵاس, Ντάλας, 達拉斯, ડલ્લાસ, דאלאס, डैलस, Dalas, Դալաս, DFW, ダラス, დალასი, 댈러스, Даллас шаары, Dallasium, Dalasas, Dalasa, ഡാളസ്, डॅलस, ဒါးလတ်စ်မြို့, ਡਾਲਸ, ڈیلاس, 75201, டாலஸ், డల్లాస్, แดลลัส, داللاس

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