Angrypenguin
Disney n00b!
- Joined
- Apr 8, 2007
- Messages
- 797
Hi there.
Trip reports Ive written about the past here concentrate primarily on Disney. Makes sense, considering this website. However, this fall I had an opportunity to take a trip that was slightly different, and this being the first year in many years that we havent gone to Disney World (okay, its been 8 months, but thats a long time for us!), I wanted to share my experiences since this is a trip report that may be drastically different than many of us have experienced, and I wanted to share it with everyone. Mods, if Ive broken any labor laws, please feel free to move to the appropriate forum.
Lets back up a bit first. My wife and I are fortunate to live in SoCal, where we get our Disney addiction fed continuously by Walts original park. However, we have a love affair with Disney World since we first visited as adults 10 years ago, got married there, and have visited on a regular basis. Were fans of the DISunplugged, and WDW is as much a part of our lives as our dog, Jiko (see what we did there?). Heres the obligatory shot of Jiko:

One of my quirks is that Im really cheap, except when Im not. I gladly pay full price for an unlocked iPhone, chucking my open wallet at Apple and screaming gimme! but refuse to pay for new socks, waiting until my one toe hole grows into a toe(s) hole, effectively turning my sock into a handkerchief wrapped around my foot. Lately over the years, Ive come to detest purchasing plane tickets. Constantly monitoring prices, paying for a service to visit family that I may or may not particularly want to see, and being crammed in like cattle didnt particularly appeal to me. This changed somewhat last year when I flew business class to London for the first time. I got to sit in the lounge, have plenty of space, and was actually treated like a human being during the flight. Obviously I would never pay myself for a ticket that expensive, but now I was spoiled. I vowed if there was a way, Id avoid flying in economy. Like a Kardashian. But that was just wishful thinking, wasnt it?
The internet is a wonderful thing. Needless to say, there are many ways outside of actually flying to chase frequent flyer miles and points, allowing luxury for next to nothing. I wont bore you with the details, as there are plenty of websites/blogs/forums that give good advice to do what I did, but suffice it to say that during this year I accumulated a lot of miles. And I hardly flew. Not to mention that since my wife changed jobs last year, I have significantly more vacation time than she does. Now, I love my wife dearly, and I couldnt imagine going on a trip anywhere without her. Unless its somewhere shes not particularly interested in going.
Enter my friend. Last year, he took a position at his company in Abu Dhabi, U.A.E. Being so far away, not many people have visited him. My wife wasnt particularly interested in the middle east because a. its far, and b. she wasnt sure how it would be for her as a woman, and c., shed rather use her vacation for our upcoming London/Paris trip. Well, I have extra vacation, and look, all these miles! Shes the one that actually suggested I use some of my miles to go visit him.
I felt like this:
So, with her blessing, I was given the green light to go visit my friend. Not only that, I would get to fly on one of the most highly ranked airlines in the world, Etihad Airways (usually duking it out with Cathay Pacific and Emirates Airlines for the top airline rankings. Not surprisingly, the American carriers are usually scraping the bottom of international airline rankings). Its a 16+ hr flight from Los Angeles to Abu Dhabi (which is only an hour away from Dubai), so even on a nicer airline there was no way I could survive. Getting into fist fights over reclining space and scrounging for barely edible food to didnt sound appealing.
I wanted to travel like this.
Luckily, Etihad is a partner of American Airlines. Taking a look at award availability, I saw first class availability for the dates I wanted and grabbed them. 180,000 American Airlines miles and 85 bucks in taxes, and I was on my way. I know exactly what you're thinking.
Was I nervous? Sure. I had stereotypes of what it would be like in my head. Rightly or wrongly, theres a stereotype of the Middle East, where all of the Middle Eastern countries get lumped together. On the other hand, Ive heard that Dubai and the UAE are the new center of commerce and opulence, where everybody has a Rolls Royce. Or, if youre poor, a Bentley. Which would be true? Would I be targeted for harassment for being an American? (side note: Im ethnically Chinese, so as a back-up plan I figured Id just wave my arms around and start speaking Mandarin and pretend that I was a Chinese tourist in case doo-doo hit the fan)
During this report Ill cover my flight, my impressions of the culture and the sights, my impressions on the ethnic diversity of the region, and my impressions of how different (or really, not that different) the U.A.E. is different from the U.S.A.
Also, its bloody hot over there.
Also, its really far. Here was our flight path.
LAX AUH by kevinkyen, on Flickr
Oh wait, the worlds not flat. Sorry, had a Republican moment.
gcmap circle by kevinkyen, on Flickr
So if youd like to join me, Ill be sharing my experiences of a few different things:
-Visiting the tallest building in the world
-Visiting the biggest mall in the world
-Visiting the only 7-star hotel in the world
-Pretty much if its anything ____ in the world its there
-Snowboarding in 100 degree weather
-Crazy architecture
-Eating the best lambchops in the world (my humble opinion)
-Having a real holy crap moment when visiting the Abu Dhabi Grand Mosque
-Seeing the Atlantis Resort in Dubai, and comparing it to the one in the Bahamas
-Buying from the Gold Vending machine
Now, Im going to apologize for some of the pictures in this report. I take some pride in my photography, and I took a lot of photos, but often times I couldn't use my real camera and had to use my iPhone camera. People get skittish when you pull out a camera the size of large tactical ordinance (thats what she said), so many times I had to be in stealth mode and use my iPhone, like all other tourists who dont know any better.
A quick preview (all iPhone shots)
IMG_4062 by kevinkyen, on Flickr
IMG_4187 by kevinkyen, on Flickr
IMG_4145 by kevinkyen, on Flickr
Trip reports Ive written about the past here concentrate primarily on Disney. Makes sense, considering this website. However, this fall I had an opportunity to take a trip that was slightly different, and this being the first year in many years that we havent gone to Disney World (okay, its been 8 months, but thats a long time for us!), I wanted to share my experiences since this is a trip report that may be drastically different than many of us have experienced, and I wanted to share it with everyone. Mods, if Ive broken any labor laws, please feel free to move to the appropriate forum.
Lets back up a bit first. My wife and I are fortunate to live in SoCal, where we get our Disney addiction fed continuously by Walts original park. However, we have a love affair with Disney World since we first visited as adults 10 years ago, got married there, and have visited on a regular basis. Were fans of the DISunplugged, and WDW is as much a part of our lives as our dog, Jiko (see what we did there?). Heres the obligatory shot of Jiko:

One of my quirks is that Im really cheap, except when Im not. I gladly pay full price for an unlocked iPhone, chucking my open wallet at Apple and screaming gimme! but refuse to pay for new socks, waiting until my one toe hole grows into a toe(s) hole, effectively turning my sock into a handkerchief wrapped around my foot. Lately over the years, Ive come to detest purchasing plane tickets. Constantly monitoring prices, paying for a service to visit family that I may or may not particularly want to see, and being crammed in like cattle didnt particularly appeal to me. This changed somewhat last year when I flew business class to London for the first time. I got to sit in the lounge, have plenty of space, and was actually treated like a human being during the flight. Obviously I would never pay myself for a ticket that expensive, but now I was spoiled. I vowed if there was a way, Id avoid flying in economy. Like a Kardashian. But that was just wishful thinking, wasnt it?
The internet is a wonderful thing. Needless to say, there are many ways outside of actually flying to chase frequent flyer miles and points, allowing luxury for next to nothing. I wont bore you with the details, as there are plenty of websites/blogs/forums that give good advice to do what I did, but suffice it to say that during this year I accumulated a lot of miles. And I hardly flew. Not to mention that since my wife changed jobs last year, I have significantly more vacation time than she does. Now, I love my wife dearly, and I couldnt imagine going on a trip anywhere without her. Unless its somewhere shes not particularly interested in going.
Enter my friend. Last year, he took a position at his company in Abu Dhabi, U.A.E. Being so far away, not many people have visited him. My wife wasnt particularly interested in the middle east because a. its far, and b. she wasnt sure how it would be for her as a woman, and c., shed rather use her vacation for our upcoming London/Paris trip. Well, I have extra vacation, and look, all these miles! Shes the one that actually suggested I use some of my miles to go visit him.
I felt like this:

So, with her blessing, I was given the green light to go visit my friend. Not only that, I would get to fly on one of the most highly ranked airlines in the world, Etihad Airways (usually duking it out with Cathay Pacific and Emirates Airlines for the top airline rankings. Not surprisingly, the American carriers are usually scraping the bottom of international airline rankings). Its a 16+ hr flight from Los Angeles to Abu Dhabi (which is only an hour away from Dubai), so even on a nicer airline there was no way I could survive. Getting into fist fights over reclining space and scrounging for barely edible food to didnt sound appealing.

I wanted to travel like this.

Luckily, Etihad is a partner of American Airlines. Taking a look at award availability, I saw first class availability for the dates I wanted and grabbed them. 180,000 American Airlines miles and 85 bucks in taxes, and I was on my way. I know exactly what you're thinking.

Was I nervous? Sure. I had stereotypes of what it would be like in my head. Rightly or wrongly, theres a stereotype of the Middle East, where all of the Middle Eastern countries get lumped together. On the other hand, Ive heard that Dubai and the UAE are the new center of commerce and opulence, where everybody has a Rolls Royce. Or, if youre poor, a Bentley. Which would be true? Would I be targeted for harassment for being an American? (side note: Im ethnically Chinese, so as a back-up plan I figured Id just wave my arms around and start speaking Mandarin and pretend that I was a Chinese tourist in case doo-doo hit the fan)
During this report Ill cover my flight, my impressions of the culture and the sights, my impressions on the ethnic diversity of the region, and my impressions of how different (or really, not that different) the U.A.E. is different from the U.S.A.
Also, its bloody hot over there.
Also, its really far. Here was our flight path.

Oh wait, the worlds not flat. Sorry, had a Republican moment.

So if youd like to join me, Ill be sharing my experiences of a few different things:
-Visiting the tallest building in the world
-Visiting the biggest mall in the world
-Visiting the only 7-star hotel in the world
-Pretty much if its anything ____ in the world its there
-Snowboarding in 100 degree weather
-Crazy architecture
-Eating the best lambchops in the world (my humble opinion)
-Having a real holy crap moment when visiting the Abu Dhabi Grand Mosque
-Seeing the Atlantis Resort in Dubai, and comparing it to the one in the Bahamas
-Buying from the Gold Vending machine
Now, Im going to apologize for some of the pictures in this report. I take some pride in my photography, and I took a lot of photos, but often times I couldn't use my real camera and had to use my iPhone camera. People get skittish when you pull out a camera the size of large tactical ordinance (thats what she said), so many times I had to be in stealth mode and use my iPhone, like all other tourists who dont know any better.
A quick preview (all iPhone shots)


