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    July 8, 2012

    Arrival In Tirana! I Am In Albania!

    My long awaited trip to Albania is finally happening!

    After scrambling at work up until the time I left, I packed rather quickly.

    I was dropped off in Santa Monica, and partied with Professional Debriefer Paul until the bartender at TRiP threw us out.

    Paul and I at TRiP.

    Paul dropped me off at the airport at 3:30 AM and I was off to Washington D.C. for a four hour layover.

    Paul told me, “If you want to make friends, bring cigarettes.”

    The guy at the Duty Free shop asked me, “Where are you going?”

    “Albania.”

    “Sorry Sir, this is only for international flights.”

    “I’m going to fucking Albania, how much more international to you want to get?”

    He got pissed and asked to see my boarding pass.

    I handed him the pass to my next flight.

    He responded, “Oh, you are going to Munich, that is okay.”

    I asked, “So, why is Germany okay, and Albania is not?”

    He said, “I am sorry Sir, I thought you meant Alabama.”

    So, the flight from Dulles to Munich was long – over eight fucking hours long.

    I traded a row seat for a row seat, so some elderly woman could sit next to her husband.

    I had loaded my MP3 player with free downloads of the radio shows “Dragnet” and “Amos & Andy.”

    I must have listened to about six episodes of each, before falling asleep, only to wake up and watch “21 Jump Street” on the airline’s movie channel.

    The last two hours, my back started to hurt and I was getting claustrophobic.

    The reason?

    United Airlines is communist and no longer takes American money!

    United Airlines only takes credit cards, and when they refused me a beer because I wanted to pay with American money, the sky waitress told me, “You are an American and don’t have a credit card? You are weird.”

    We landed in Munich without issues and I was able to chug down two real West German beers before the flight to Tirana.

    It was a 9:25 AM departure time – I thought that’s what time the flight was going to take off.

    Nope – I walked through the terminal, past the airplane that was at the gate, to be taken to a bus…

    Bus to plane

    … that drove us to the other side of the airport, to where the airplane was.

    Plane to Albania

    In under two hours, We landed at the airport in Tirana, Albania.

    There was a really hot chick sitting next to me the whole time.

    She spoke fluent English and Albanian, but lived in Germany; I’m not sure what her story is.

    Then it dawned on me – Holy shit! I’m in Albania!

    Another bus took us from the airplane to the terminal.

    I handed my passport to the lady at the entrance – she looked at me, looked at my passport, stamped it, and handed me the address to the U.S. Embassy.

    I grabbed my check in bag from the conveyor belt and walked to the end of the terminal.

    A big sign read “Customs.”

    One door was painted red, and lettered on it, it said, “Customs, things to declare.”

    The other door was painted green and said, “Customs, nothing to declare.”

    I went through the green door, following everyone else, and all of a sudden, I get mobbed by dozens of taxi drivers.. “Taxi?” “Taxi?” “Taxi?”

    That was Customs?

    I started walking to the bus stop, per my instructions.

    It was hot as hell, and the next bus wasn’t for another 40 minutes.

    The most determined of the taxi drivers got my business to drive me to my hotel.

    I was shocked as shit to see two cars – one with a New York and the other one with a New Jersey license plate on them, driving around in traffic, in Albania!

    The cab driver told me, “A lot of Albanians live abroad to work, but send their cars home to their families.”

    More on that later.

    After a short rest, I met my guide Idit.

    Albanian food.

    We dined on traditional Albanian food – Beer, salad, “meat balls shaped like sausages” and bread.

    The spread for the bread was some concoction of olive oil, ricotta cheese, tomatoes and liver.

    It was really good!

    In Albania, the farmers are so poor, that they can’t afford pesticides; so by default, everything is organic.

    Idit showed me around downtown Tirana, and gave me careful instructions on how to cross streets.

    Basically, you wait for the green man to tell you to walk, but jump out of the way of any car that ignores this.

    Seriously, if there is a small gap in pedestrian traffic, a car will squeeze through.

    I only saw one beggar, but people selling roasted corn on mini grills or selling cigarettes or exchanging currency is common.

    Cigarette Vendor

    Idit had to explain to this man that I am an American “tourist” after taking this picture, and not a cop.

    Apparently, all this street activity is illegal.

    Me with the Albanian flag and the statue of their national hero.

    Me with the Albanian flag and the statue of their national hero; notice that I’m trying to look like a European.

    There is so much more to write, but it must wait.

    We are headed to Porto Palermo by car today.

    Internet availability will be spotty.

    Thank God for Idit though, I would be clueless here without him.

    June 30, 2012

    Second Dive at Lula, off The Cee Ray

    After a spectacular lunch of chicken and broccoli, rice and Italian bread, the next dive spot was undetermined.

    I went to the top deck of the boat and fell asleep.

    The boat never started, but I was awakened by people jumping off the side.

    I climbed down on to the main deck and asked one of the deck hands, “I guess this is our next spot, too?”

    “Yep.”

    I geared up and went over.

    Logged SCUBA Dive #412

    Solo Diving

    “Lula” , Catalina, CA

    In With: 2900 psi
    Out With: 600 psi
    Max depth: 72 feet
    Waves: Pretty flat
    Visibility: Up to 20 feet, but more like 15 feet
    Water Temperature: 65 degrees, colder at depth
    Air Temperature: 84 degrees
    Total Bottom Time: 40 minutes or so

    I went a little more North than before, and ran into the reef that I was suppose to last time.

    Stuck anchor

    I came across an anchor that was wedged between two rocks.

    Ha! Ha! Money!

    Chain stuck between rocks.

    There was a chain attached to it, so I decided to see how much of a chain – I followed it, and followed it and the chain went right up to the Cee Ray.

    I surfaced and told Jensen, one of the deck hands, “You know that the anchor is wedged between two rocks?”

    “Yeah, we’ll get it out, we anchor here all the time.”

    I continued my dive, sticking shallower.

    I lost my way back to the boat, but as I was surfacing, I saw divers on the surface – more than a couple.

    Students swimming back to Cee Ray.

    I assumed it was students making their way back to the boat, so I stalked them at depth, making my way back to underneath the swim step, where I waited my turn – hoping to loot any gear that may be dropped in the water upon boarding.

    I wasn’t fortunate enough to get any more gear, but did make it back with no issues.

    Review of the Cee Ray:

    I really like the way the boat is run.

    They don’t rush the gate, the boat goes some places that no other boats go to, and the food is really good – breakfast, several snacks and a gourmet lunch.

    The Cee Ray’s swim step was a little awkward for me; I am used to just taking my fins off and either walking to shore or climbing up a ladder.

    Cee Ray swim step.

    Their swim step rests about a foot or two underwater; so, you sort of have to flail onto the step and then climb up the ladder.

    However, it’s good for students who aren’t used to the weight of SCUBA gear.

    The Cee Ray Galley

    After a great day of diving, the galley sells Pacifico and New Castle – no Budweiser!

    I am partially responsible for drinking their beer supply dry.

    Also, I have to say, even though I don’t agree with a lot of Sports Chalet’s business practices, their Divemasters and Instructors have great personalities and are very professional.

    Captain Mike of The Cee Ray

    Captain Mike runs a great dive boat – I hope to be back soon.

    Speaking of coming soon…

    Coming Soon!

    A great video of today’s dives, plus Rescue at Sea!

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