Home is Where we Hook-up

November 14, 2007

Coming soon…Greek Goodies in the mail!

Filed under: Travel,Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 11:52 am

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These are some of our favorite little “goodies” from Greece. For those of you who played along with us in August, and left comments to our One Year Anniversary post, as promised you have a little something coming your way.

In the collection are olive oil soaps, pistachios from the island of Aegina, ouzo, honey/sesame bars, loukums, mastic gum and mastic aperitif.

For the recipients of either mastic soap, mastic gum or mastic loukums -this is a really unique and wonderful concoction. Mastic sap comes ONLY from trees grown on the Southern portion of the Island of Chios – nowhere else in the world….not even on the Northern part of the island! From this sap (which little Greek women shrouded in black chip out of the tree trunk with a sharp tool) all sorts of things are made – lotion, liquor, candy, soap….you name it, I’ll bet they make it with mastic. I’m facinated with the stuff…let me know what you think!

I hope you enjoy your little taste of Greece. We had a most wonderful summer – and there’s talk of going back next summer. Save your pennies and come see us!

October 3, 2007

Here and Now

Filed under: Travel in the U.S. — Heligypsy @ 6:15 am

happy-guy.jpgPaula once asked me if I ever just sit back and enjoy a moment without thinking about the downside. The answer is that I do,but not for long.I suppose you may construe that as a character defect but it is not exclusive to me. In fact after flying heliopters for 33 years I find that most of my pilot friends think the same.

I recall a story,it may be a biblical one ,of a leader who was selecting soldiers . He marched the soldiers,weapons drawn through a hostile area on a hot sunny day. When the soldiers came upon a water hole,they were allowed to drink. The soldiers that drank from the water with their weapons in hand were selected,those that cast their weapons aside to drink were not.

When I think back on this summer I remember the good times as is ,thankfully, generally our nature. When I sleep my subconscious takes over. For every scene of floating in a warm sea just off a beautiful tree shaded beach I have other recollections or reenactments.

It’s just the way I live. I can appreciate a beautiful mountain setting with a village perched on the rocky hillside. When a fire is whipping up the hillside into the village the scene disappears and another takes its place.You are low over the village,houses are starting to burn on the perimeter and you spot the horse.He is tethered in a pasture on the edge of the town and he is going doing all he can to break loose. To no avail. Drop and drop more water around the pasture while a home starts to burn. You are out of water and its time to go and get more water. When I get back to the village with another load of water Ihave a choice to make.

Days later,its a day off and we are hiking through a mountain side village. The houses are so close ,neighbors could reach out the window and shake hands with each other. Its a beautiful place to visit. I look around at the 6 foot wide streets. not a hydrant or water source in site.Good luck ,if a fire ever gets going in here. Its just the way I think

Beautiful sights,wonderful perfect days enjoying the sights and culture of Greece interspersed with tragedy and more frightening events than anyone needs in a lifetime.

I really make every effort to enjoy the moment. Like Jimmy Buffet wrote, “its 24 hours and maybe 60 good years,its really not that long a stay”

I was talking to a friend this Spring via today’s medium of choice, the email. He was on the fires in Florida and things were settling down and he was going to do some local touring. Why not, enjoy the local area and have some fun.We had been mostly forwarding each other stories through the summer.Two days ago he wrote to tell me he was in full hospice care at home and the prognosis was not good. I’ll miss him. I hope he had a good run. I think he did. I do enjoy those moments when the world is just perfect. I wish they were longer.

September 28, 2007

What you make it

Filed under: Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 10:23 pm

My time is almost up. My assignment is coming to an end in Greece . It has been a good tour and we have tried to live each day here to the fullest. Thats the only way to try and live period,in my opinion.

I was talking to a friend the other day and he told me how lucky I was to be living and working in Greece. Yes,lucky,but its not just something that happened to me I told him .Its something I made happen when the opportunity presented itself. The same goes for our free time in Greece.Paula, her Mother,friends Debbe and Linze all visited our place in Athens this summer. We had great adventures and its a pleasure to see familiar or new places through the perspective of another.

Where do our next travels take us? It looks like I get back to LAX on the 4th of October.Paula is home as of September 27th in Bishop California. I think we will visit Colin, my youngest son in Santa Barbara when we get clear of L.A.Once back to Bishop we will pack the truck, visit with Paula’s Mom say hello and goodbye to some friends perhaps,grab Zoe and hit the road going North through the mountains to Canada.

No moss growing on these stones. Lots more Flyinadventures to come I hope.

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September 13, 2007

Billy is Dying

Filed under: Travel in the U.S. — Heligypsy @ 9:43 am

I was up 12 feet in the air in the dark when I heard the news. Climbing down the gear leg of the SkyCrane with my flash light I walked over to our interpreter/ pilot Kostas and asked him for a little more information.

Yes, he said, it is a critical rescue mission that will begin tomorrow at first light . I always enjoy Kostas’s sense of humor and get his jokes right away so I waited to hear just how a critical rescue could wait 24 hours. The goats of Anti Milos Island are out of water and we will be flying fresh water to their water hole he said.

So it takes a day to plan this mission ? No, but the press need to be notified so that they can send a film crew. The Mayor of Siros has organized this and SKED ( our controlling agency) needs to approve the plan

So at least we have a plan, I said. Maybe,said Kostas.
During that day our “plan” was fine tuned.We would launch at first light.I never hear the phrase “first light” without thinking about my friend Wade Green ,a helicopter pilot for 40 years and countless early morning missions.When I retire, I never want t hear anybody tell me to be going anywhere at first light. How many times Wade continued, have you preflighted in the dark launched at first light and got to where you needed to be only to sit on your butt for the next couple of hours . Too many times I thought and this would be ,plus one.

Since the mission would be based from the Island of Mikonos a mechanic would be on the flight crew, making it four for breakfast at the airport cafe on Mikonos.Dreaming. The mechanic, in this case our crew chief Mark would finish his night maintenance get a short nap in the early hours and jump aboard.The only time mechanics get any real sleep is when one of us hero pilots is telling another fascinating tale of brilliant airmanship.the-crew-up-front.jpg

The flights off on time with the back light of another sunrise casting an angelic glow over my fellow goat rescuers. We pick up water at Marathonas Lake and head offshore south of Athens , Frank Sinatra is singing “somewhere beyond the sea” on the ipod and life is good.

Its going to be a costly mission. Marathon Lake to the goat water hole shows about a 100 miles on the G.P.S. another 65 miles further to Mikonos Island for fuel and hopefully a suitable water source. About a 6 to 8 hour mission to get 5 to 7 thousand gallons of water to some goats.Well, who am I to place a price on saving Billy and the rest.

The water drops go well and breakfast never happens. Big surprise! Our fourth load is to be our last according to SKED. We speculate that perhaps since the media has failed to show and document the current governments sincere concern for the suffering goats ,that will be enough water. I compute the cost on the ferry trip back to our airport. Forty two thousand pus fuel for 5000 gallons of water, runs about 11 bucks a gallon.

Sip that water Billy and say a goats prayer for rain .anti-milos.jpg


September 9, 2007

Vacation’s Over

Filed under: Travel,Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 4:17 am

August is the month that Greeks take vacation – they head out of the city and suburbs and move to the islands. A few weeks back I was going to write about this pleasant oddity as I headed to the metro early one morning and realized that if I had one – I could have shot off a canon and not hit anyone. Deserted was the only way to describe it. I thought how August would have been a good time for my mom to visit…no dodging of traffic, that alone is worth it! The trade off in our little neighborhood was that the pharmacist, fresh produce store, hair salon, and dairy were all closed for the month. Small price for empty streets, if you ask me!

The other day, Sept. 7th, Keith and I headed to the beach – by way of the main toll highway (Attiki Odos).  Not 100 yards onto the road, the realization struck of just how spoiled we had become in August – and that those days of hassle free driving were over for another year. All three lanes and the shoulder were jam packed, giant trucks, speedy racers, and the worst of all – the motorcycles and scooters…they are very dangerous. Everyone crams in, honking, swerving, no regard for rules of the road. In fact, I think we’ve mentioned that the “rules” are regarded as “merely suggestions” anyway.

Yep, vacation’s over and the Greeks are back and as crazy as ever.

Keith and I will be making a trip to the airport tomorrow to pick up the blogs new “Special Guest Writers”, my friends Debbe & Lindsey are coming for a vacation of their own. Should be several good adventures to tell about in the coming weeks.

Stay tuned….

September 4, 2007

The last 10 days…

Filed under: Firefighting,Travel,Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 3:12 am

Sunday Morning on CBS, has long been one of my favorite shows on television. It has held onto its faithful followers and its early morning time slot means that it competes with cartoons, evangelists (same thing) and infomercials. The show has nothing to sell and whats even better, it tells a personal story that helps us relate to the event and the people involved. Like many of you, I grow numb from television news and its in your face look at the days tragic events.

The past two weeks have been like a constant news loop of the fires in Greece. Wake up to the alarm at dark thirty and I feel like Bill Murray in the movie, Ground Hog Day. The same scenes of fires overrunning villages, our desperate attempts to get enough water drops before the village to slow the assault. The inevitable fire in the houses on the edge of the village, which ones to try and save which ones to leave. And worse, which buildings to drop on or into to stop the fire from spreading to the others. Screaming fire fighters on the radio arguing over which part of town has the priority.

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“Drop here! Drop here” they shout in Greek. I’ll drop where I can do the most good, but if one more person runs out under the drop with a garden hose and an olive branch I’ll have to work another area. Like physicians, “First do no harm” is our motto as well. Knocking someone to their knees with 1200 gallons of water as they run towards the the flames in their yard makes my stomach turn. Its smoky, we are the only air asset that can get into and under the smoke on these mountain villages. Sometimes we are the only asset period when we arrive. A village of two or three hundred houses has only a handful of die hards with tractors and water pumps. The power lines burned down hours ago and no power, no water. No radio screaming, just a silence as we drop into the village from the nearby reservoir.

“Where do you want to start?” asks the other pilot.

“Lets save the houses that are not active and then work on any burning buildings that look like they will get others involved.” Ok. Triage for a village.

We have been working near Kalamata (the olive city) for some days. The fire has run through several villages in the mountains above Kalamata. I don’t know the village names, the village we are on now we call “Village One” because its the first one of the day. “Second Village” is under control, we will likely lose the battle for Village One. Its a six mile run to the sea for water and we pass the two Russian Mil 26’s working just above the City of Kalamata on our way down to the sea. They are losing too and the fire is getting down the mountainside into Kalamata. We make two more series of drops into Village One and the last drop is down the edge of the main perimeter street surrounding town. I don’t know what a SkyCrane 40′ off the ground at 50 mph looks like when it drops just in front of 200 people, but this one knocks all the cliff side shrubbery off the hill and takes with it about 15′ of mud and sends it down the hill towards the flame front. Instant fire break folks – the bad news is, that is all we have for your town. The radio is going wild. The fire has got down into Kalamata and firefighters are trapped, surrounded, on a hill top near a house and they have no water and no vehicles can get to them.

Well at least the sea is closer for water to the fire in Kalamata. There are about 2000 structures between the fire and the sea, but first we need to take this water to the house on the hill. Through the smoke as directed to the hill on fire and drop just in front of three firemen pointing at the flames. Good. You’ll live.

The fire is ripping down a hillside orchard and into a green area of the city but we get it stopped in about 40 minutes. Its the last drop before fuel and we are feeling better about Kalamata as we wonder aloud to ourselves about what we will see when we get back to Village One. Its my usual low pass over the buildings to the beach and in the clearing air I can see hundreds of people on the roofs of houses and apartment buildings. As we approach we see them applauding with hands held above their heads.

“Look at that,” I say to the other pilots as they look down. “Your welcome.” says the second pilot, snorkels coming down, speed 50 knots and 120 feet,40 knots and 80 feet, a boat on your right and we are past that buoy,looking good at 30 knots and 16 feet with water coming in and 200 gallons,300,500,……

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August 28, 2007

Hell on Earth

Filed under: Firefighting,Travel,Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 11:23 pm

The phone call Keith took on Saturday during lunch was eerily familiar. Just two years ago his phone rang during our lunch out, and by that afternoon he was off flying to Louisiana to help rescue efforts after Katrina. Last Saturdays call had him on the road in an hour to begin helping to fight the fires in Greece.

Most of you who’ve seen footage of the current fires in Greece have heard the analogy likening these blazes to Hell. The first time I heard Keith say it was after he’d driven through three roadblocks and walls of fire to get to Kalamata to relieve the other pilots.

“It was like driving through Hell.” he told me. With a very sad heart I could visualize the once olive tree covered hills now black as night, smoldering, dead. The destruction and devastation and death is just sickening.

I am getting my news about the catastrophe from some of the same sources as you – MSNBC, CNN, AP, Yahoo! News, and I thank those of you who have sent me links to stories. I appreciate your support while we are here. There is a young Greek who has befriended me (she likes to practice her English) who came over the other evening strictly to watch the news and translate for me. She was irritated about all the news on the four Super Pumas the Swiss had sent over, and exclaimed to the t.v. “There is Erickson AirCrane here too!” She is new with the company and her loyalties made me smile.

One minute she tells me the Archaeological Museum in Olympia is in danger. The next she says, “No, it is safe”, five minutes later she thinks it has been lost to the fire. Frankly, to this second I am still not 100% sure of the status of the museum. Then she reports there are 50 people trapped by fire, there is no way to rescue them. I’m sure she is interpreting this wrong – FIFTY human beings and no resources to help them. Uuuughh, there is no comprehending what is going on over here. I read a news story later about a heroic helicopter rescue of 5 trapped individuals. Were these the same people Anna Maria translated about? If not, what happened to them?

Keith is safe and might even be returning home tonight, that’s good news, it’s the only good news I can think of. I have stopped watching the news footage, I can no longer sit and watch the soot and sweat covered people, terrified and in danger, run for their lives just yards ahead of angry flames. Or worse yet, to see them not running, but standing with garden hoses and olive branches, they seem to think they can fight this. Its real and I can’t believe my eyes. This is one of those times I mentioned before, I will hear stories of the fight weeks and months down the road – I’m ok with that.

There is something to understand about what’s happening. These people have worked their whole lives to build what little they have in these villages. If they lose what they have built to fire, there is no one going to swoop in and help them rebuild anything. It’s gone. They risk their lives because it’s all they have, and this time that risk has been catastrophically fatal.

August 26, 2007

One Year Anniversary

Filed under: Travel — Heligypsy @ 3:43 am

One year ago, we officially started our blog. Yeah! I’ve really enjoyed being part of the blogging community. Originally the purpose was designed around eliminating the mass emails to our friends and family as we attempted to keep in touch during our travels. We aren’t quite there yet as there are people who will not read this unless we notify them of new content…we’ll work on that next.

I was hoping to post some very clever, possibly interactive post to celebrate this milestone, possibly urging non-bloggers to start their own sites – but that seems like a gigantic undertaking 🙂

We know how many people read our blog – and in some cases we even know who you are (depending on your isp). What I would like is for everyone who reads our One Year Anniversary blog to please post a comment here. Comments can be absolutely anything you want – maybe tell us what your favorite post has been, or just say “hi”. Every 10th comment will get a little something from Greece (sent once we get back in the U.S.)

We’ve had a fun journey with the blog, and look forward to continuing to share our journeys with you – thanks for reading 🙂

August 23, 2007

Menu Translations

Filed under: Travel,Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 1:10 am

Looking at the daily specials at a nice little Taverna in the heart of Athens, I curiously asked the waiter

“What is Lump in Lemon Sauce?”

“You don’t know lump?” He replied, visibly confused.

Keith assured him that no one, not where we are from anyway, knows ‘lump’. This seriously bothered the waiter. He took a pen from his pocket, leaned over the table and began to write on the paper table cover. Ah Ha! I figured it out! With all the excitement of winning the round of charades, I shouted “Lamb”!!!!

The next time I patronized that Taverna, “Lamp in Lemon Sauce” was on the daily special. This is like one of those emails that goes around, change one letter make a new word.

Another example of interesting menu choices is eating at a fish restaurant. Choosing fish off any menu can be a challenge. Most often there is a glass case of available fresh fish of the day…point to choose works fine for us. One afternoon we chose a kilo of Beetle fish. This does not translate, as far as I know. Beetle is a delicious white fish with gnarly sharp teeth like that of a piranha. With the exception of Swordfish (isn’t that endangered?) and calamari, we almost never recognize the fish on the menu. **click to see picture**

We really enjoy a good chuckle as we sit down for refreshments after a long days adventures. Enough funnies on this menu to warrant a photo for sure 🙂

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August 16, 2007

Another Day on the Job

Filed under: Firefighting,Travel,Travel in Europe — Heligypsy @ 6:48 am

Its not often that I get to see Keith at work. I see him on the news, and I hear the stories of the days event in firefighting…sometimes I hear stories weeks or months later, depending on the amount of drama involved.

Today there was a gigantic fire in an upscale neighborhood very near our own. From the roof of our building I captured a few photos

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I am always so sorry for the victims of fire, my heart aches for the terrible sense of loss that must be. Watching this fire rage from the hilltop to the valley in minutes was awful.

My thoughts were random at best. I thought about Keith running late this morning, something that NEVER happens, and so now he was out on duty having missed breakfast. There’s little chance he’d get much of a break for lunch, so my thoughts turned to what to make for his dinner. I’ve settled on pasta.
I’d had to call him at 6:30am, well before the fire, to find out why I was having to wake myself up this morning, meaning I’d had no early goodbye kiss – and thus I did not get to tell him to “fly safe”. I watched him fly the perimeter of the fire, and put the “fly safe” vibe out into the air. They’ve got every air asset they have on this fire, there’s a lot of traffic up in that gnarly smoke. I was suddenly quite glad that I don’t often get the chance to see him work, its nerve wracking on so many levels.

And above all, I continued to think of how proud I am of the hard work Keith puts in, and what it means to so many people.

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