Friday, August 22, 2008

Yellowstone in August

There is something about animals in the wild. This week in Yellowstone we saw a few grizzlies, lots of moose, elk and other deer, and many many birds. The kids had a great time - scanning the horizon to see who would spot what first - playing a game - and rejoicing when we chanced upon the occasional beast. I recall zoos were major stops for us - in pretty much any city that we visited up through to early this year. Then there was that unfortunate accident at the SF Zoo where a tiger escaped and mauled a couple of youths. My wife promptly stopped any financial contributions to the SF Zoo and upon further reflection and deeper discussions about the state of caged animals that was prompted by this incident, we have stopped visiting zoos altogether. No wonder then, these now not common, animal encounters were all the more fun for our kids. Cant wait to take them back to Kenya and Tanzania one day....

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

The Grand Tetons

We spent a few days in the Grand Tetons this week - around Jackson Hole and north. It was fascinating. The Rockies are my favorite mountains in the world - spread out, accessible, and majestic. I love the Colorado Rockies north and south of Denver, my wife loves the Canadian Rockies - particularly around Jasper, and Banff. This was our first time in the Grand Tetons. There is a lot more water than I had expected - lakes and low gradient, winding rivers, and on this trip in August, the weather was absolutely spectacular. The photograph above is just off where the Snake River leaves Lake Jackson.

Friday, August 15, 2008

Outsourced - the Movie

Enjoyed it. Quite a laugh if you are in the subset of the population that knows India but lives far from it. First half was absolutely hilarious (particularly if you don't have great alternative options for your time). Very cleverly done, it seems to have won a ton of awards, definitely worth watching, higly recommend. I dont think its released in the US though. Probably need to order the DVD.

I watched it on a flight in the airspace close to and over Afghanistan yesterday. Ironic, the two most popular American exports around the world - military and business - nothing really to show on the cultural or historical fronts. Still if you ever end up with a headache thinking about all the foreign policy missteps from a few years ago, nothing like a light hearted comedy to get you in a better state of mind. Watch preview at http://www.outsourcedthemovie.com/videos.html

Thursday, August 14, 2008

Best address in Mumbai

So the place to stay in Mumbai is the JW Marriott. Having stumbled through the Hyatt (too pseudo-American), ITC Maratha (convenient and good, but no extra punch), and the Taj & Intercon (just too far), I finally stayed at the JW last couple of nights.

Its in Juhu, admittedly from most business engagements, but it does afford the best beach access, as the photograph above will prove (provided you can get up at 5am and make it before it gets hot and crowded). And its nice. But what really brought it out for me is that this is the center of Bollywood activity. I saw Sunil Gavaskar eating at the next table (big deal for this blogger who grew up as a young cricketer), was introduced to Farah Khan in the bar (whom I didn't know before), and saw dozens of what looked like young and old film and modeling casts. This place has a real buzz that's difficult to describe in a write-up.

If you want the quintessential Bollywood experience in a hotel in Mumbai, this is the place to be.

Monday, August 11, 2008

T5 Heathrow versus T3 Beijing

Just flew through Heathrow's brand new Terminal 5 for the first time. I couldn't help but compare the experience on my last visit through Terminal 3 at Beijing's National Capital Airport. Built and opened around the same time, and at similar total costs ($4B+), this is a valid comparison. The net is this: T5 is a major improvement over Terminals 4, 3, and god forbid 2 and 1, both in aesthetics and check-in bays - in that it makes a real statement - the British seem to have oh finally caught up. On the other hand though, Terminal 3 is a major revolution, the largest building on earth, and the friendliest staff on top - in that it makes another real statement - the Chinese have reset the bar, and well, well ahead of the line for now. I would take T3 over T5 any day - so best now to go off to tackle the real problem - how to get more business out of China.

Wednesday, August 6, 2008

Souffles in San Francisco

There aren't that many men I know that are good cooks and enjoy cooking. A good friend of ours bucks this trend. Yesterday evening he and I made it to a hands-on class on French Desserts - Soufflés ! It was a good class - baking is not one of my strengths and wasn't one of my interests. This may change it. We baked (and tried) four different soufflés from savory to sweet and frozen to baked, but the best one was clearly the classic dark chocolate soufflé. I enclose a scanned copy of the recipe, in case you are interested in a personally tested-to-work version.

Monday, July 28, 2008

AB's Tour

I saw Amitabh and the gang (Aishwarya, Preety and Madhuri to be exact) along with the B crew of Abhishek and others in Oakland last night - and had a good time. Unfortunately I was up in the peanut gallery - and this wasn't a show quite designed for large audiences. But the overall effect of being with 1000 plus other Indians that grew up seeing Big A movies and humming those songs in the shower was great. It was also interesting to see the size of the Indian-American population all in one place at one time in this part of the world. And I took my mother with me who is visiting from India, and is an avid follower of Indian movies, since my wife was traveling (and who doesn't care much for Indian movies) - and that in itself was nice since it was a great mother son outing. The takeaway is this though - need to get more plugged in - and find some smaller size more private Bollywood events next time, this could be a lot more fun in the right setting.

Sunday, July 27, 2008

Weekend in Santa Cruz

Sand. Its the ultimate sport. For my sons anyway. They can roll in it, play in it, throw it, sift it, form things with it, mix water with it that they get over hundreds of bucket runs to the crashing waves - its amazing to see just how long pure simple sand can hold their attention. Particularly given the number of sports, games, shows, computer programs and toys they get exposed to. We were in Santa Cruz this weekend - and they sure got their fill of it. I am happy they are growing up on the Coast.

Thursday, July 17, 2008

Japanese dining in Singapore

I was in Singapore this week. As if in response to the comments I had made on this very blog earlier, my colleagues took me to Cherry Garden at the Mandarin Oriental. In turn, allow me to formally retract my earlier comment about Japanese dining in Singapore being no good. The Cherry Garden was really nice. And of the four meals we did, including the grilled seafood at the outdoor Newton Circus Hawkers Market, upscale American at Desire at the Scarlet Hotel, and hip Indonesian at Indochine next to the Asian Museum, this was by far the best. If you are looking for a nice Japanese meal, sans the additional flight to Japan, this is the place to go to in SIN. Incidentally the photograph above is from our offices in Singapore - the Fullerton can be seen in the foreground close to the mouth of the Singapore river.

Monday, July 7, 2008

Hong Kong in July

Hong Kong is always the best in the post shower early mornings. The day isn't hot yet, the nights humidity just released in a downpour, the rain appears to have freshly cleaned out the streets, and the cloudy morning soothingly lures you into the noise of yet another productive day. This photograph was taken at Kai Tak on a comfortably warm but fresh July morning.