Good evening!
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| Robert's steak and chips |
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| My HUGE hamburger with onion rings and chips! |
But first,
let’s finish up London! Last night, we
decided to eat in the hotel’s restaurant, and went downstairs about 8 pm. Robert ordered a sirloin steak, which came
with fat chips (fries) and I had their hamburger – ½ pound of beef, and served
with tomato and onion and lettuce, and was WAY more than I could even eat and then,
add the skinny chips (fries). The food
was excellent, and we very much enjoyed the meal. Then back upstairs to repack/reorganize, and
set the alarm for an early morning wake-up call.
Everybody
knows that we like to make sure that we don’t ever have to rush for an
airplane. We did that once in our youth,
and didn’t enjoy it then; would hate it now!
So … Boy, what a l-o-n-g day!
First of all, there have been some labor stoppages recently in London,
which affected the trains and tube severely.
Wild stories of people taking hours to get home; sometimes walking! We ordered a taxi to pick us up at 6:45 am
and take us to Victoria to pick up the Gatwick Express train. (Because of the labor unrest, the trains to
Gatwick were cut to every half an hour, from every 15 minutes. We were aiming for the 8 am train.) Taxi came right on cue at the door, and
whisked us off to Victoria in something like 15 minutes! Amazing!
So right there, we were running early.
Our tickets were good for any train, and we only had to wait on a
freezing platform for about 20 minutes for our train to come in for the 7:30 am
run. Piled in, bag and baggage and at
least the train was warm! Arrived at
Gatwick about 8:05 am – for an 11:45 am flight.
The Pegasus check-in was still closed, so we
decided to get some breakfast. Upstairs
to a restaurant called Giraffe; very
cute. I ordered their breakfast burrito,
which was scrambled eggs with a very spicy chorizo and jalapenos, and
peppers. Robert ordered sides of
mushrooms (which were HUGE!) chips and bacon (which in the U.K. more resembles
Canadian bacon).
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| R's MUSHROOMS, chips and bacon |
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| My smaller but very spicy burrito! |
Both dishes were
excellent.
Then downstairs again, and
amazingly,
Pegasus was open!
I was more than a little concerned about
their hand-baggage rules – but Robert was able to take the camera bag as his “personal
item” and the carry-on (with computer) came in at 7.4 kilos … and their max was
8 kilos, so it was close!
Cleared
security very quickly, although I did have to take off my shoes – low SAS
boot-types, which are REALLY hard to put back on … but all went well and we
settled into Gatwick’s lounge area.
Finally, about 10:40 am our flight gate was posted -- #18, so out we
went and down to #18. Checked in there,
and the plane was already in (yeah!). It
was a 737 standard set-up – 3 seats across one aisle. We both had aisle seats – me in row 2, and R
in row 3. The nicest thing was that the
center seat was clear for both of us, which was nice! Plane left right on time, and took almost 4
hours to get to Istanbul. Nice flight,
and we arrived in a light rainfall. I
actually wasn’t sure of the time change, but it is three hours, rather than the
two I had thought.
There really
wasn’t a bad line for immigration at all, (contrary to the “other” Istanbul
airport…) and I think we got through in probably 15 – 20 minutes.
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| Comfy hotel room |
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| View from our balcony back toward the airport |
(Although I
do have to admit, that there must have been more than a couple planes landing
around ours, as by the time we left, the line was really getting long!)
Wow!
Our suitcases –
BOTH of them!!
– were already on the cart, and out we went into the Istanbul night.
Found a taxi out front of the airport, and
literally – in 3-4 minutes, we were at the brand-new Hampton Inn.
We’re in room 1620 (6
th floor)
which also has a very nice covered balcony!
Nice to see the view of the airport in the background!
And, we actually can get some of the
Australian Open in German on TV!
Nice to
see some tennis, even though R tells me it all happened yesterday…
Settled in
and headed downstairs to find something for dinner. We also asked the man at the desk to call
about our rental car, which we are to pick up tomorrow. Find that they are actually in a building
off-airport, just a few minutes from our hotel, so plan to walk over there
tomorrow morning to get the car and then come back and check out of the
hotel.
Directed
around the corner to several open restaurants … although there is a Starbuck’s
directly connected to the hotel, and a Papa John’s Pizza across the
street.
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| Me at BuDonor |
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| Salad and dips with pita; excellent! |
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| R's veggie donor |
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| My Fajita donor ... I know, they look alike! |
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| Nice man cutting mystery meat! |
So much for Americana!
Went instead to
BuDoner.
Nice space, but
there was a lot of smoking on the enclosed patio – and when the door would
open, it would, of course waft in … We started with sharing a salad, some dip, pita
bread, feta cheese and a tomato tapenade.
That was followed by my fajita donor and R’s vegetable donor.
Well … traditionally I don’t do mystery meat,
but that’s what a donor sandwich is … it’s carved off a slab of cooking meat.
However, being firmly of the “don’t ask - don’t
tell” school, I am asking that
NOBODY
tell me what I had for dinner tonight!
Many thanks!
At any rate, it was
good and mine came with grilled peppers and onions; R’s with mushrooms and
onions.
As it turns out, we do have a
small amount of Turkish Lira, which came in handy when the credit card machine
wouldn’t take either of Robert’s chip cards. … Huh … but dinner all in,
including four small bottles of sparkling water was all of $14.79!
Wow!
By
this time, it was almost 9:30 pm and I wanted to get upstairs to blog and
publish and get on to tomorrow!
So! We have arrived safely and pick up the car in
the morning! More tomorrow!
Lots of
love,
m
xxx
M -- you take a nice picture. Lookin' good.
ReplyDeletesandy
You look angelic and also like you're praying! Maybe something about that mystery meat!
ReplyDelete