The Guy delivers

The Guy

Pictured here is the giant floating head known simply as “the guy” to his friends, and “Guy Favreau” to everyone else which in French means “protector of Canadian government employees, keeper of the gates and ports and polisher of shiny things“.

The Guy is responsible for greeting visitors, and startling small children, at the main offices for Passport Canada in the city.  After doing the dance of respectability, going through the 6 forms of contortion and making a small offering of CAD, we returned today to find all our wishes granted: the shiny new passports were ready!

The question now is whether we’ll be able to actually use them.  SCL completed their first phase of repairs two days early and resumed 24 hour operations, for both national and international flights.  After a few attempts at enduring the incessant chatter of the on hold recording guy, I managed to get through to our carrier and their latest news is that we’ll be good to go on the seventh.

It’s starting to look as if even an earthquake won’t stop this ball from rolling down to south america.  Huzzah 🙂

Thank you, guy!
New passport and ode to Chile by L

Aftermath

In the aftermath of last saturday’s earthquake, the news from Chile has been getting worse.  It seems the arrival of aid to affected areas has been slowed by looting and the beginning of a slide into chaos.

Residents of Talcahuano, Monday.

President Bachelet, facing the crisis with only a couple of weeks left in her last term, was appalled by the scenes of anarchy coming out of the most badly hit areas in the south, such as Concepcion.

“We have seen images that are, frankly, intolerable,” Bachelet said. “We want to make it clear that it won’t be accepted.”

More than 13,000 soldiers are being sent to re-establish order, and curfews are in place in some areas.  The news isn’t all bad, though.

All emergency measures are now in place, aid is reaching all regions and the flow is becoming constant.  SCL, the Santiago airport,  has begun the first phase in their plan to return to operations and is splitting the day between national and international flights, at an alternate terminal.  The segunda fase, scheduled to begin on March 5th, should see a return to full operational capability.

Though I still haven’t managed to get through to our carrier, I am hopeful this means that our flight on the 7th will be departing as planned!  Time will tell.

Pain and opportunities

After years, now, of discussion, months of planning and only two weeks after finally purchasing the plane tickets, the trip that was supposed to be our escape and a chance to bond in a little bubble of adventure of our own is in shambles.  It looks as though it will be a solitary adventure after all.  I am disheartened… well heartbroken in fact.  But still committed to the voyage… I think it’s good to get out of our comfort zones, just feels like this is a bit too far out right now.

Anyhow, since L has family and friends in the area, we were rather cavalier in terms of planning accommodations.  She looks and sounds local, knows the ins and outs, so we could just drift freely and fallback on someone should the need arise.  Won’t work for me, so I’m scrambling to avoid being eaten alive on unknown streets…  Even if Santiago is a very safe and friendly city, a life of hotels would make it a lonely trip anyway.

However, I’ve been a member of CouchSurfing since 2006.  If you don’t know it, CouchSurfing envisions “a world where everyone can explore and create meaningful connections with the people and places they encounter” and it’s mission is to create Inspiring Experiences in order to build global community that is inspired to seek harmony.  And how does the CS community hope to reach these goals?  One connection at a time 🙂


In fact, CouchSurfing is at its base a means of connecting people who are out exploring the world with those who are willing to share experiences, knowledge and often hospitality.  It’s more about the exchange and potential for creating bonds than about surfing couches.  But just being invited into someone’s home, rather than some anonymous hotel room, can provide insight into worlds and possibilities you’d never have thought of.  In addition to all the great tips you can get from a hip local!

That’s the theory, at least.  My CS experiences are still rather limited, and I’ve hosted more than surfed.  It’s funny for someone as protective of his intimacy as myself (at least, in the physical sense) to allow people I hardly know to stay at my place.  But since, as a host, you get to choose when and what you make available, it’s a lot like taking a mini-trip of your own, getting the inside scoop on other places, and other ways of thinking and living.

This time I’ll be the one surfing. I’m excited and a bit anxious.  It’s fascinating to get to know people, and can be quite a blast, but it’s also tiring and I need solitary recuperation at regular intervals… So I’m thinking of splitting my time between friendly couches and hotels or hostels, maybe evenly but I’ll leave that decision for the field.

For the moment, I’ve already contacted a few potential guides/hosts and the community is as friendly as ever.  I think that’s the neatest thing about CouchSurfing… there are all kinds of people, living diverse lives in every corner of the globe on CS, but it takes a special kind of openness, an abandonment to the joys of life, to be part of it.  Pretty much everyone I’ve talked with, met and hosted has been amazing and I’m certain this will be no exception.

Year of the Tiger

Today is an important date!

2010/02/14: Year of the Tiger begins

Feb 14th 2010 marks the arrival of the Year of the Tiger, according to the Chinese calendar.

It’s not that this, or any other Zodiac system, really has any relevance or explanatory powers in the universe… but the mind can’t help but find patterns and meaning in even the most inane coincidences.  According to the Chinese zodiac, 2010 (as represented by the tiger) has the attributes: courageous, emotional, unpredictable.

And that’s exactly how I’m feeling today, since this weekend also marks a milestone in the evolution of this website and the projects it aspires to relate: we’ve finally got plane tickets and a firm date for lift off!  In less than one month, the harsh winter (ok… actually, not so harsh this year, but it sounds so much better) will be left behind and L and I will be off to Santiago, Chile for three whole weeks!

If you need to get in touch today, please leave a message as I’ll be busy doing the dance of joy 🙂

Portable IT Kit

My work, and an inordinate amount of my play, involves the use of computers and internets so I’ve been preparing what I think will be a safe and adequate kit for computing on the move.

I got a transparent hardshell for the eee netbook, completed the installation and configuration for dual booting as a Linux (Ubuntu Netbook Remix)/hackintosh (OSX on a PC).

My IT travel kit

In terms of internal hardening, in case I should be so clumsy or unlucky that I lose the thing, I’ve enabled FileVault on my home directory under Mac OSX to encrypt the contents of the entire home on the fly.

For the Linux partition I’ve setup a finer-grained system to encrypt only sensitive contents, using eCryptfs, that stores all my work and projects, ssh, gnupg, firefox and thunderbird settings/caches, and Palm sync directory in a single encrypted directory, with softlinks pointing to the encrypted data from their standard locations.  This means that, unless the encrypted dir is decrypted and mounted, all my private data is safely hidden away and most of these programs just won’t work.

The only caveat on the above is that using the netbook’s sleep or hibernate modes is proscribed at all times… I guess it’s worth a little extra booting to bask in the knowledge that, worst case, I may loose the hardware but at least the data will be safeguarded.

Finally, I’ve acquired a second battery and power supply, a small (400G! … but physically small) USB-powered drive, that I hope to be able to leave in a safe place with periodically refreshed backups of everything and 2 USB-sticks with UNR running as “Live CD”s that I can, theoretically, use to transform any computer into a safe haven for emergency use, containing encrypted scans of important documents like passports, insurance and such.

Thanks to the wonders of miniaturisation, all of the above can easily be carried on my person or within my decidedly nondescript backpack!

I’m certain I’ve forgotten some things, but believe that with the above I should have most bases covered.

Choosing a flight

Ah, the mysteries of airline pricing…

Even a little flexibility can go a long way in stretching your dollars, when it comes to plane tickets.  I did a few comparisons for possible departure/arrival combinations from our local big airline:

Depart Return $ Fare
2 weeks
Thu 25/Feb Sat 13/Mar 840
Thu 25/Feb Sun 14/Mar 890
Sun 28/Feb Sat 13/Mar 1024
3 weeks
Thu 25/Feb Mon 17/Mar 860
Thu 25/Feb Fri 19/Mar 840
Thu 25/Feb Fri 19/Mar 840
Fri 26/Feb Web 17/Mar 1145
Fri 26/Feb Fri 19/Mar 1125
Sun 28/Feb Mon 22/Mar 994
Sun 28/Feb Web 17/Mar 1044
Tue 02/Mar Wed 24/Mar 810
Thu 25/Feb Sun 21/Mar 840
4 weeks
Thu 25/Feb Sun 21/Mar 840
Thu 25/Feb Wed 24/Mar 810
Fri 26/Feb Sun 21/Mar 1125
Tue 02/Mar Sun 28/Mar 840
Tue 02/Mar Sat 03/Apr 890
Fri 26/Feb Sat 03/Apr 1175

Preliminary results indicate that leaving on a Friday is a bad idea, whereas return dates have an influence but less so.  Length of the trip doesn’t seem to be of great impact, it’s just a matter of choosing days regarded as less desirable by our winged-friends.  Huzzah!