Europe trip day 6: Nollendorfkiez, Bonvivant Cocktail Bistro

Today was sunny. At breakfast we sat outside again, choosing a nice shady spot. But I noticed that everyone else sitting outside had chosen seats in direct sunlight. And what’s more, they were all facing the same direction, into the sun, with the sun shining straight into their face and eyes. And none of them had hats on. Europeans are very weird…

I checked for some local markets within walking distance and found that there was a market at Wittenbergplatz on Thursdays, just a block from our hotel. This gave my wife her plan for the day, although she also had the option of walking half an hour to the art museums in the Kulturforum museum district.

The ISO meeting today began with a technical session on machine vision, a relatively new project to standardise industry methods for applications in robotic vision applications. After that we began the winding-down administrative sections of the Working Group, going over action items, future work, future meetings, and so on. I had a break of a couple of hours in the afternoon, before the Chair Advisory Group meeting in the evening from 17:00-18:30.

The break began just after 14:30 and I went back to the hotel to meet up with M. It was very warm outside, but we used the time to go on a walk to explore more of the surrounding areas of Berlin. We walked east along Kleiststraße to Nollendorfplatz, then southwest through the Nollendorfkiez district of Schöneberg to Viktoria-Luise-Platz. Nollendorfkiez was clearly a gay neighbourhood, with plenty of colourful establishments and eye-catching sights. Viktoria-Luise-Platz was a nice plaza with a fountain and grassy areas cut by paths. A group of people were filming something in one corner. As we left to cosine a helpful man asked us if we needed any help navigating, but we said we were fine, happy to explore at random. From here we continued west through a very nice looking neighbourhood, with well-kept old apartment buildings with nice gardens. We eventually turned north to head back to our hotel.

Once near the hotel, we stopped in at a cafe for my wife to get an iced latte. It had been a very warm walk. After this we went back to the hotel, where I picked up my meeting bag and headed back to the DIN office for the Chair Advisory Group meeting. My wife waited in the hotel until I was done. During the meeting, Dietmar warned everyone that there would be a thunderstorm hitting Berlin soon. I kept an eye on the weather radar on my laptop and thought it might interrupt our walk to our dinner booking tonight, and possibly my walk back from the meeting to the hotel.

The meeting ended a bit early, with the storm bearing down on Berlin and the skies going pitch black. I rushed out and ran the two blocks back to the hotel, with skaters of rain beginning. Partway there the wind picked up tremendously and I had to lean right into it to make headway. I managed to get back to the hotel with only a few fat drops of rain on my clothes. By the time I got upstairs to our room and looked out the window, it was raining heavily. So I was very lucky to have made it.

And then within ten or fifteen minutes it was over. I knew it wouldn’t last long and suggested we wait it out before walking out to dinner. Fortunately we had some extra time because of the early finish to the meeting. We headed out with a very light sprinkle still in effect, but it stopped after a few minutes and the clouds blew away as fast as they arrived. The storm had cooled down the temperature considerably, which was good as it was a hot day.

We walked east back towards Nollendorfplatz and then turned south down a different street until we found Bonvivant Cocktail Bistro. This is a high end vegan restaurant and bar, which does a five or six course tasting menu, with optional cocktail pairings for each course. We chose the five course meal, but added the extra chef’s specialty dish, and just had separate drinks rather than the full pairing set.

The meal was amazing. Each course had incredible flavours and textures combined in unusual ways to make something that was a delight to the senses. And our waiter was extremely friendly and gave us just the right amount of attention, and was very patient with our questions about the food, the drinks, the restaurant in general.

The whole meal took almost three hours, and we left just after 22:00 for the walk back to our hotel. The weather had cooled down and was a bit breezy, but I found it pleasant and refreshing after the heat of the day. We got back to our hotel and had showers to freshen up before bed. (No photos today because I don’t want to stay up even later uploading and labelling them…)

Europe trip day 5: meeting social dinner, Kurfürstendamm

We got up with the alarm at 07:00 today, although I was awake before it went off. M. slept through the whole night, but I haven’t quite got there yet. The day began rainy and we had to have breakfast inside rather than out on the patio. Showers were intermittent during the morning. I managed to walk to the DIN office without any rain, but it began again as the meeting got started.

Today we had a full program of technical ad hoc group discussions. Topics included measuring angle-dependent lens flare, low light performance with image stabilisation, depth measurement, and image resolution. In the first topic we had a guest from ISO TC 172 Optics and Photonics to talk to us about their standard for measuring veiling glare, which is a similar technical issue, and we planned to align our standards to be consistent with one another.

During a mid-morning break in the meeting I sketched the Brandenburg Gate, using a photo I took last night as a reference.

Brandenburg Gate sketch

I went for another walk during the lunch break, exploring some of the neighbourhood nearby. It was mostly residential areas with blocks of flats, but I walked along a canal for a bit as well, which was nice as it was lined with large, leafy chestnut trees. I only identified them because of all of the fallen chestnuts on the ground!

Lützowufer

After the meeting this evening was the social function. This was held on the 10th floor roof terrace of the DIN building, which had a decent view across Berlin. We could see the expanse of the Tiergarten and the surrounding buildings, though I think the Reichstag and Brandenburg Gate were hidden from view. The food was a cold buffet of dishes including a pasta with chicken, a quinoa salad with mini strips of schnitzel, falafels, and some cheese and vegetable pastries, with stewed rhubarb with yoghurt as a sweet. Not fancy, but pretty good. We chatted with some of the other meeting participants who had brought their wives as well, then did a big group photo, which the partners sat out of, and M ended up taking the photos so that all the meeting attendees could be in it.

We didn’t stay too long, leaving to take advantage of the long twilight and go for a bit of a walk down Kurfürstendamm, Berlin’s famous shopping boulevarde. We went as far as the Hard Rock Cafe, which we went into to look at the music memorabilia. Then we returned back to our hotel, stopping along the way to get a salted caramel cinnamon roll from a fancy cinnamon roll shop. They looked so god I couldn’t resist. I ate it in our room, and it was delicious.

Also at the hotel we got help from a guy at reception to print out some tickets for Prague Castle which I bought online today. I thought we should go see the castle when we’re in Prague on Saturday, and not waste any time queueing up to buy tickets there. They online tickets had to be physically printed though, so I had to find a way and thankfully the hotel could do it for us. The backup was getting someone at the DIN offices to print it, but now I won’t have to do that.

Europe trip day 4: Tiergarten, Brandenburg Gate

We woke up about 05:00 today, slowly adjusting to the time zone, but feeling less tired than yesterday. The weather had changed to become overcast and chilly, which was a welcome change compared to the heat of the past two days. We went down to have breakfast and sat outside in the cool morning air again, this time with jackets against the chill. I’d downloaded a German bird pack for eBird after seeing several birds at breakfast yesterday, and this time I did a bird count, recording dozens of common swifts, some house sparrows, hooded crows, common ravens, a herring gull, and what I think (based on Merlin ID and a recording of the calls) a Eurasian blackcap. Oh and some pigeons.

Just before 09:00 we left the hotel; me for my ISO meeting and my wife for the Berlin Zoo and Aquarium, where she was planning to spend the day. It was good to have a cooler day for that.

At my meeting we got stuck into the technical sessions. We looked at image stabilisation, which finished early because there were not many comments on the current draft. In the free time people brought up proposals to revise two old standards, for updating methods for measuring camera lens distortion and modifying the test chart for measuring onto-electronic conversion functions to reduce problems with lens flare. After a break we got stuck into several new standards regarding various aspects of HDR images: best practices for file handling, editing, display, etc.; extensions to the recent HDR image file format standard; and new work on live photos (photos with short video clips embedded).

On a break I went out the back door of the DIN building and saw that one of the plane trees lining the street had its upper half torn off by yesterday’s wind. About half the tree had fallen off and was lying on the footpath adjacent to the road. The wind continued today, but not as strong as yesterday.

At lunch I went for a walk over to the Tiergarten. There is a path that runs along a canal and passes a tall fence. I saw two people who had gotten off their bicycles, standing close to the fence and looking through, and then taking photos. I realised this was part of the zoo and they must have been seeing some animals inside. I went over to get a look… and saw kangaroos. The two people seemed really excited, but of course for me this was possibly the dullest possible animal in the entire zoo, so I quickly resumed walking. A bit later on I did manage to see some scimitar oryxes as well. I didn’t get too far before having to turn back for the afternoon meeting session. It rained a bit on the way back.

Or meeting finished early this afternoon, before 16:00. I met up with my wife at the hotel after her day at the zoo and we left soon after to go walking through the Tiergarten before dinner. We entered this amazing park and walked east towards the Brandenburg Gate. The Tiergarten is amazing, with some parts like walking through a forest, with dense trees all around.

Tiergarten, Berlin

We stopped off at the Siegessäule victory column in the middle of the park to have a look at this, but we didn’t bother paying to climb it.

We continued east to the rose garden, which was very nice with a lot of flowers out, although the central area was fallow with a barrier around it.

Tiergarten, Berlin

Continuing on, we arrived at the Brandenburg Gate, where we stopped for some photos and then a drink at the bar of the Hotel Adlon Kempinski, just east of Pariser Platz. This is a very fancy hotel with lots of marble everywhere and plush stuffed chairs in the bar area where we sampled a German Riesling while we rested our feet a bit before heading back to the far side of the Tiergarten for dinner.

A long walk later we arrived at the Tiergarten-Quelle, a German restaurant with a beer garden. We initially went inside, but they told us to go out and sit in the beer garden, presumably because the inside tables were all booked. We found a table in the beer garden, which was across the street, and ordered some food: semmelknödel with mushroom sauce for my wife and a schweinshaxe with sauerkraut and pumpernickel bread for me. The food took a while to arrive as a lot of people were ordering, so I took the time to draw a sketch of the beer garden.

Tiergarten-Quelle beer garden

Tiergarten-Quelle beer garden

The schweinshaxe was very good, and my wife said she liked the dumplings too.

Tiergarten-Quelle beer garden

After this we had a bit of a walk back to our hotel again, which we needed to walk off some of the dinner! We got back and retired for the evening.

Europe trip day 3: ISO meeting, schnitzel

I slept solidly for a few hours but then woke up and was dozing lightly. But I was pleasantly surprised when it turned out to be almost 06:00. We got up and went down to the hotel restaurant for breakfast when it opened at 06:30. The buffet was well stocked with plenty of hot food choices, cold meats and cheeses, different types of bread and pastries, cereals, yoghurt, fruit, and so on. I had a couple of bowls of muesli with yoghurt and some small pastries and a bread roll. We ate outside in the fresh cool air of the morning on a pleasant patio area bordered by shrubs and facing an interesting old building which I looked up and found to be a high school.

After breakfast I had time to do some stretches and exercises before showering and getting ready to head to the DIN office for the ISO meeting. It’s only a few minutes walk away. We had a nice meeting room with modern equipment, but it seemed the room didn’t have air conditioning. The windows were wide open with a warm wind blowing in. The wind grew stronger over the day, and when I checked Berlin weather it said there was a gale warning current for this area of Germany. It got really strong by the late afternoon, with wind whistling through the ajar windows we had in the meeting room.

The morning was a plenary session devoted to the entire Technical Committee 42 Photography, which is a lot of administrative stuff. Then we got into the Working Group 18 meetings on Digital Photography, while the print photography experts split off for their own working group discussions. We also had administrative work to begin, before the first technical session in the afternoon, on image information capacity.

ISO Standards meeting

Lunch was supplied in the foyer right outside our meeting room, with a selection of sandwiches, small bites such as meatballs and some sort of cheesy nuggets, a selection of German cakes, and also churros for some reason. Also on food, I searched for some places for eat dinners this week, looking for German restaurants with vegetarian options, and also good places for vegetarian food. The vegetarian options at German style restaurants tend to be a bit underwhelming, so I wanted to also find something with good vegetarian food. I found a very nice looking place and made a booking for Thursday night as a surprise for my wife.

After the technical session I had to attend the Chair Advisory Group meeting as the head of delegation for Australia. This is an administrative group dealing with overall matters for the entire technical committee. We had a report on work done since the last plenary meeting two years ago on defining more diverse skin tones for photographic testing, discussion of the next plenary meeting in two years to be held in the USA, and some other topics.

After that I returned to the hotel and met up with my wife, who had been busy sketching things while exploring the neighbourhood today. We went out for dinner to a nearby place called Faustus Schnitzelhaus, which I’d found while searching during the meeting. On the way we stopped briefly to loo at the bakery right next door to the hotel, which my wife had told me I needed to see. They had a big range of delicious looking breads and cakes, and I bought a streuselschnecke for dessert later. My wife had a vegetarian flammkuchen, while I tried a veal schnitzel with fried potatoes and mushroom sauce.

Dinner at Faustus Schnitzelhaus

Dinner at Faustus Schnitzelhaus

The food was really good and the atmosphere was nicely wood-panelled and traditionally German. The place was also busy with customers, both tourists and locals, which was a good sign. The schnitzel was excellent and very filling.

We returned again to our hotel for the night. Hopefully to sleep a little better and get fully adjusted to the time zone.

Europe trip day 2: Arrival in Berlin

While waiting for our connecting flight from Singapore to Frankfurt, I checked the departures and found that it had been delayed by 35 minutes. I hoped that this didn’t presage another 25-hour delay like when we travelled to Frankfurt three years ago! An announcement came over the PA system, that our flight was delayed because they changed the plane, presumably for mechanical reasons. So with the early arrival into Singapore and the late departure, we had about an hour more time here than we expected.

There were no further delays, and at the appointed time we left for the departure gate, cleared through another security screening, and boarded the plane.

Our flight from Singapore was half an hour longer than the scheduled flight time, because of having to route around various conflict zones such as Iran and Ukraine. Apparently Donald Trump decided to bomb Iran while we were flying right past it, so that might have complicated matters. Added to the half hour late departure, we arrived in Frankfurt almost an hour later than scheduled, touching down at exactly 08:00.

We got off the plane very quickly, and it looked like everyone ahead of us was either continuing on the same flight to New York or transiting elsewhere, as we were the first ones to go up the escalators to the customs and exit areas. However we weren’t the only flight to arrive at this time and there was a long queue for the border control checks for non-EU citizens. The EU passport holders whizzed through automated gates while we had to wait with everyone else in a long queue to be manually processed. The border officers took their time with some people so the queue moved very slowly.

While we were waiting a few passengers came through behind us, desperately waving boarding passes for connecting international flights, which meant they had to clear immigration and get to their gates for flights leaving very soon. Staff ushered them through, jumping the queue ahead of the res of us, meaning even more waiting time. Eventually we got to the front and the official didn’t even ask us anything, but merely stamped our passports and waved us through. We’d seen them ask previous people detailed questions about there they were travelling and staying and so on, and having to show them things on their phones – presumably hotel bookings or something. Once through there was more walking. Frankfurt Airport is huge and there’s a lot of distance to be covered. We went through customs and ignored the badge claim area, heading to the train station.

There I used a machine to buy tickets to Berlin. It was 09:15 by this time. There was a departure available quite soon, but I selected a later one, departing at 09:45, to give us time to buy some food and drinks. I also made sure to book seat reservations, so we wouldn’t have to stand up for over four hours to Berlin. The machine printed four dockets: a fare ticket from Frankfurt Airport to Berlin Hauptbahnhof, a credit card receipt for my payment, and two sets of seat reservations, one for a train from Frankfurt to Erfurt, and one for a connecting train from Erfurt to Berlin. I looked at the seat reservations and they seemed to say that the train leaving Frankfurt departed at 10:14, not 09:45 as I’d expected. I thought that was weird, but it seemed like we had more time than I thought.

We relaxed a bit and went to go get some food, going to a chain bakery that we’ve used before at Frankfurt Airport station. We sat down and ate some sandwiches, and also got some extra food in paper bags to take with us. While we were eating, I puzzled over the tickets. I decided to check the route on the Deutsche Bahn app. I searched for trips from Frankfurt Airport to Berlin and found our journey… and discovered that it did indeed leave Frankfurt Airport at 09:45, catching a regional train service to Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof, to connect there to the ICE service departing for Erfurt at 10:14!

So all of a sudden we realised that we only had 15 minutes to get from the Frankfurt Airport long distance train station to the Frankfurt Airport regional train station to make the regional train in time to get our express train! I realised this while my wife was buying drinks, and waved her over hurriedly so we could race over to the other train station. She’d only bought a bottle of water and hadn’t had time to get some coffee like she wanted. We ruched across to the regional train station, which fortunately is only a few minutes walk away, but we wanted to make sure we didn’t miss the train as then we’d also miss our express train. We had just enough time for my wife to grab a cup of coffee at a place adjacent to the platform before we went down to get the train.

We caught the regional train, which took 15 minutes to get to Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof, giving us an easy 14 minutes to find the long distance platforms and where we needed to be. Along the way, on older Chinese couple asked us in English if they were on the right platform for the train to Leipzig. I looked at the ticket the woman was holding and saw it was the same train as ours, and in the adjacent carriage, so I assured them they were on the right platform and showed them how to find where their car would stop. It turned out our train was a few minutes late, and departed about 10 minutes late.

Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof

This was a problem, because our connection in Erfurt gave us only 6 minutes to change trains before the other one departed. So there was a chance we’d miss our connection. But strangely, the train we were on was also going to Berlin! Just by a different route. I’m not sure why the ticket machine decided to have us change trains in Erfurt if the first train was going to Berlin anyway. The only thing I can think of is that beyond Erfurt it didn’t have any seat reservations free, so had to switch us to another train.

As we passed through the other stops, Fulda and Eisenach, the train began making up time. It was a close run thing, and by the time we left Eisenach, the projected arrival time in Erfurt was just 4 minutes late, giving us 2 minutes to make our connection. We were arriving on platform 10 and our connecting train was departing from platform 9, so we were hoping that they would be opposite sides of the same platform and we could dash across and hop on. If we had to race down the length of platform 10 to the end to move across to 9, we might not have had time – assuming they didn’t hold the train for us. As it happened, we pulled in and could see ICE 800, our train, waiting across the platform with doors open. When we stopped, we jumped off and dashed over and into the nearest door. We had to walk down one car to find ours and our seats, and the train had begun moving before we got there. Phew!

While on the trains we I did some sketching, using photos we’d taken on our phones as references. We both drew scenes at Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof, and my wife added in some drawings of pretzels and the bread rolls we’d bought for lunch. Here’s my sketch:

Frankfurt Hauptbahnhof

This train stopped at Halle, Bitterfeld, and Berlin Sudkreuz, before reaching Berlin Hauptbahnhof on time at 14:22. From here we went up I think four flights of escalators to the S-bahn tracks, where we bought short trip tickets (good for trips of 3 stations or fewer) and hopped on the next train heading west, to Zoologischer Garten station. There we finally left our transport and resorted to good old foot power for the final few minutes of our long journey. We walked the few blocks to the Crowne Plaza Berlin City Centre Ku’damm, our hotel for the week.

After checking in we had showers and cleaned up after the long journey. All told it took us just over 32 hours from the time our flight left Sydney to reach our hotel. Reception gave us a voucher for a free drink in the hotel bar, so we went down there and sat for a bit to think about what to do with the remainder of the day while we had our drinks, a rosé wine for my wife and a Bitburger beer for me. We also got some corn chips and salsa as a snack, since we were a little hungry and it was a while before dinner time.

While sitting, she did some sketching and I did some researching to find any sort of tourist attractions within a short walk, and also any restaurants with decent vegetarian options. It seemed that everything that Happy Cow listed was either Indian, East Asian, or Middle Eastern – nothing like a place with traditional German food with vegetarian options. In the end we selected a mid-range looking Italian place, something classier than a cheap pizza or pasta bar, called Il Sorriso (“the smile” in Italian).

Before then we decided to go and get my camera and take a short walk around the block to go past the entrance gates of the Berlin Zoo, which has a couple of photo-worthy sights: a fountain made of fossil-bearing shale, and concrete elephant statues supporting the main gates of the zoo. We also went past the Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche, or Kaiser Wilhelm Memorial Church, originally built in the 1890s but partially destroyed by Allied bombing in 1943. The damaged shell of the foyer of the original church still stands, with a truncated part of the spire above it, but the main body of the church is gone. A new church was built in front of the old one from 1959, with a bell tower around the back, in the space formerly occupied by the old church. The new church is a striking modernist design, with an almost brutalist concrete exterior made of small square panels. It’s only when you go inside that you realise the panels are a brilliant deep blue stained glass, which flood the interior with blue light, contrasting a giant almost-Art-Deco gold statue of Christ above the altar and multi-coloured, multi-sized circular floor tiles. We went into the new and old churches to look around, before heading back to the hotel.

Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche

We had a brief rest, during which we both drew sketches of the church. I finished mine:

Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche

Then we emerged again for dinner at Il Sorriso. It looked like a very nice place, and we were hoping to have dinner inside a nicely air conditioned restaurant, as the day was very hot and we’d had enough of the heat. But like last time we were in Germany on a very hot day, we were frustrated by the fact that restaurants here just don’t seem to have air conditioning. We were offered a table outside, but chose one under the roof, although the windows were wide open and it was just as hot as outside.

The food was excellent though. My wife had tagliatelle pesto, and I had ravioli filled with salmon in a lobster sauce with salmon roe. The pasta and sauces were all obviously hand made and were delicious. For dessert I asked with the flavours of the “selection of sorbets of the day” were, and the waiter answered just “lemon”. But that was fine with me and I chose that, while my wife had a caffe latte.

After this we went back to our hotel to turn in for the night and hopefully get a solid sleep and wake up just before breakfast. My wife finished off her sketch with some watercolour. Hers was done from a reference photo from a different angle to mine.

Kaiser-Wilhelm-Gedächtniskirche

On the way to Europe

Saturday is a travel day. My wife and I got up and packed our bags for our trip to Europe. Our flight was at 3pm, so we planned to leave around 11 o’clock to get there with plenty of time. We had breakfast and cleaned up the house a bit as well as packing, then headed out to get a train to the airport.

We were there with plenty of time after getting through security and the passport check. Our flight left on time and we had some favourable winds so we made good time to Singapore, landing just before 21:30 local time (23:30 Sydney time), so about 10 hours flying time.

Now we have a two hour wait before our flight to Frankfurt, which I think lasts just over 12 hours. Feeling tired since it’s late in Sydney, but hopefully we’ll be able to get some sleep on the next flight.

Europe trip eve

It’s the last day before I fly out to Europe tomorrow. I had a busy day with five ethics classes. I started a new time slot and had one student in a new class. Today’s were my last classes for three weeks, paused halfway through the “Old-Fashioned” topic. I’ve been showing the kids a photo of some telephone directories and asking if they know what they are. So far only one kid had any idea what they were. Most of them guessed things like dictionaries or encyclopaedias. And then when I explained what a phone directory was, they were astonished that such things existed, where you could just look up anybody’s phone number and address if you knew their name.

In between classes I did some travel prep, such as printing out train tickets for our various overland journeys between cities, and checking in online for our flights. Our flight departs at 3pm tomorrow, so we’ll have time in the morning to pack before heading to the airport. We have just over 24 hours of travel time from Sydney to Frankfurt, and then we need to get train tickets to Berlin and travel another 5 hours or so to get there. By the time we get t our hotel we’ll be lucky if it’s under 30 hours of travelling time.

Tonight I’m playing online board games with friends. My wife is out having dinner with her friends, and handing Scully over to one of them to take home, to look after her for the time we’ll be away. I cooked myself some scrambled eggs for dinner, which used up the last of our perishable food, apart from half a carton of milk which we’ll use up for breakfast tomorrow.

This time tomorrow I’ll be most of the way to Singapore!

Drinks at the hairdresser?!

My wife went for a haircut this evening. It was also her last day at work before our trip to Europe on Saturday. I humorously suggested that she could begin celebrating her holiday time by asking the hairdresser for a glass of wine while she was having her hair cut. I mentioned those places that have been popping up all over that offer casual painting classes while you drink wine, thinking that the idea of a hairdresser that offers wine would be amusing.

My wife said, “They don’t have normal wine, but they do have champagne.”

I couldn’t tell if she was joking or not. I thought she must have been joking, but she was extremely deadpan. I said, “You’re not serious. That was a joke, right?”

And she said, “No, all the hairdressers do it.”

Okay, so she was doubling down on the joke and making the story even more implausible. Not just her hairdresser was unusual in offering champagne to clients, but lots of hairdressers do this.

I said, “Okay. Now I know you’re joking.”

But she said, “No! I’m not! They have tea and coffee too, but yeah, they have champagne for while you’re having your hair done. There’ll be a lot of women there tonight and in the evening some will definitely be having it.”

I mentioned this to my friends in our Discord chat, and they were all, “Yeah, didn’t you know about this? Some barbers offer beers too.”

🤯

I have never ever heard of such a thing: hairdressers or barbers offering alcoholic drinks to customers. It actually kinda makes sense if I think about it: stuck there for 30 minutes, and hour, or more, with nothing to do, and you’re paying quite a bit of money. May as well turn it into a pleasurable experience to keep the customers happy. But yeah, this is totally new to me, and so surprising that I genuinely dismissed it as a joke at first.

Today I had my regular online classes, both in the morning and evening. In between I went to pick up Scully from my wife’s work again. She hadn’t planned to take Scully in today, but her boss said he was bringing in his won dog and wanted the two to meet and play together at the office. So Scully got another half day at work before I picked her up and walked her home.

We used our last fresh vegetable for dinner tonight, a zucchini, and some eggs to make a frittata, topped with the last bits of pizza cheese. Running out of perishable food just before a long trip always means some creative and unusual dishes the last couple of days. We don’t have to cook tomorrow, because my wife is going out for dinner with some of her friends, and I can do my own thing before online board games night.

The time zone shuffle

One thing I’ve had to deal with a lot more than I expected on Outschool is parents signing up for classes in the wrong time zones. I do most of my classes in the evenings, which corresponds to the period between about midnight and 6am in American time zones. I also do a few classes in the mornings, which are good for American time zones, as they correspond to late afternoon or early evening over there.

So my morning classes are mostly enrolled with American students (with a couple in Canada and currently one in Colombia). The evening classes are good for East Asian time zones (corresponding to afternoon or early evening there) or Europe (mid-morning there), but obviously terrible for America.

However, many times I’ve had parents in the USA enrol students into my evening classes. I keep having to communicate with them and point out that they’ve enrolled their kid in a class that begins at 2am or 3am in their time zone, explaining that I’m in Australia and so most of my classes are in the middle of the night for them. The usual response is that they just assumed it was 2 or 3pm. Outschool does time zone calculations and displays quite clearly when classes start in the parents’ local time (they have to set their time zone when opening an account). I have to assume that either they’re not paying attention to the obvious am/pm indicator, or that they are seeing the “am” and then assuming it must be wrong and must actually be pm.

As I said, I’ve had to deal with several cases of this, but I felt compelled to write about it today because I had one last week, and then this morning I had someone else (in the Arizona time zone) enrol their kid in a class with a suitable time (4pm), but then write to me, having changed their mind, and request a transfer into a class beginning at midnight.

This is a good example of a situation where using a 24-hour clock would be immensely useful, to avoid people making the 12-hour mistake. (I myself was guilty of this once many years ago, showing up at San Francisco Airport for a flight home 12 hours early. Thankfully it wasn’t 12 hours late!)

In other activity today, I did a run, for the first time since tripping and injuring myself on Sunday. I was aiming for 5k, but stopped at the halfway mark as I was feeling a bit sore and didn’t want to cause any additional issues.

I also worked on Darths & Droids a bit, starting to get a buffer ahead for after I get back from my Europe trip. I looked up the weather in Berlin, and it looks like being 32°C on Monday, when my meetings start. And my immediate thought was how lovely that will be compared to the cold weather we’re having here at the moment.

Contemplating old-fashioned things

Today I worked on my next critical/ethical thinking topic: Old-Fashioned. I’m going to be talking to the kids about the way we did things back when I was their age, and how things have changed in various ways. And get them to think about the advantages and disadvantages of old-fashioned ways of doing things. Such as buying your music on physical media. Watching broadcast TV and seeing the same shows as your friends at the same time. Kids playing outdoors unsupervised for hours as long as they were home before sunset. Taking photos on film. Stuff like that. Hopefully the topic should be fun!

I took Scully for a couple of walks today. I had to go up to a pharmacy to get some things for my impending trip to Europe, and also some more bandages to use on my hands and knees after my fall on Sunday. I’m changing them daily and going through a fair few. But the wounds look to be healing.

I worked on comics today, writing enough Irregular Webcomic! rerun annotations to buffer over my entire trip. I also did some other trip preparation stuff related to my Photography Standards work, downloading a bunch of documents for the meeting in Berlin next week.

For dinner my wife made pizza dough, since I couldn’t really knead the dough with my bandaged hands, then I finished it off with the toppings and put it in the oven.