Tag Archives: Swaggers

My travels with Swaggers; a two parter featuring the lost tickets, Gorgeous George and getting all choked-up in Flores

Part Two

So on we go.

A week later, perhaps, we rolled up to the Isla de Flores, an island in the enormous Lago Peten Itza (an enormous lake), linked to the mainland by a long and very very thin causeway (two coaches meeting one another would have presented a bit of a challenge – we’d have had to joust for the right of way). First stop was Santa Elena, which we were assured was the last stop at which we could get hold of cash before crossing the causeway. This turned out to be utter bullshit, of course, but at least it led to some unexpected adventure.

I’d survived until that point without having to cash in a Traveller’s Cheque, but the time had come. This is another thing that makes me feel we must have gone there at least forty years ago; I have only used TC’s once, since, and very much feared, on cashing them in at Kiev Airport, that I was about to be ‘taken away’. These days I am a credit card man. They have a nice safe ubiquity, provided you don’t get coshed at the ATM.

The coach dropped us off and we had forty minutes until departure. Santa Elena itself was an unmitigated dump; one long dusty road with all of the facilities along it. The bank was halfway down on the left hand side. Big queue, no aircon, and a perfect storm of moustaches, sweat and big guns. Swaggers fled to get a sandwich; I queued, like a good Brit. 30 minutes later, sweating and weak with hunger, I emerged at the head of the queue and attempted to get my $200 transformed into Quetzals. Moustaches were rubbed in sweaty suspicion; if anything the process went on so long one could see them growing. The guns grew larger. My passport was taken away into some manner of back office – comments were exchanged. Who was the pasty-faced, corpulent thirty-something with the slightly plummy voice? Just as I thought I was going to come up dry, the staff re-appeared with a piece of paper on which I was to write my address. And so I did. All smiles, “here you are, Senor”, and there arrived in my greasy paw a substantial pile of ageing notes. I look back now and wonder what real security they must have felt they had gained by discovering I abided in a small, undefended railway cottage in North Norfolk, the teensy matter of 6,500 miles away, as the crow flew. If they were planning to send the boys ‘round, they are as yet to arrive. Much I cared – money stuffed into pockets I waddled back to the coach and away we went.

Flores was very pretty. Looking back it’s a shame I didn’t see more of it, but then again I am an idiot, something of a danger to myself, and as such it would be wrong to express too much surprise or disappointment. The resort in the middle of the island in which we were to stay was beautifully green. A sort of mini rainforest, with open cabins on two floors dotted ‘round it in an elongated oval, with an eatery, bar and pool at one end, at the bottom of a gentle incline.

We were assigned our quarters, during the briefing on arrival, and Swaggers and I hauled ourselves up the hill and up the steps to the cots in which we were to sleep. The ground floor was a shower block. The whole arrangement was really, really open. One was well-used, by then, for the need to keep taking the malaria medication and to keep applying repellent and so on. However, in all honesty an eagle could comfortably have flown in there. Therefore, it followed, any manner of scuttling, occasionally jumping nasty could make an entrance in the night watches. One’s mosquito net might come adrift, one might roll onto one’s back, mouth agape and….. AAAAHHH! I was unhappy about this, but resolved to keep quiet and have a nice afternoon and evening.

Too nice, it turned out. On went the shorts and the t-shirt, and down to the pool one went. Only to discover that the bar end had a set of stools poking out of it on which one could sit, legs in the water, and order these things called ‘cocktails’, for roughly £1.50 a throw.

For context, I have always had a healthy suspicion of cocktails. Not stuff like a gin and tonic; I mean the sort of 8-ingredient nonsense we holidaymakers get seduced into chucking down, only to then subsequently revisit them in a range of locations. They act on the brain in the way more familiar strains of alcohol don’t seem to, so much. In short, you know where you are with a glass of beer or a glass of wine; if you drink stupid cocktails in a swimming pool in 100 degree heat you are, by definition a bloody fool.

For a while, my nerves were conquered. White rum, umbrellas, crushed herbs, coloured fruit juices and sugar made me bold. Thoughts of an insect insurrection vanished. I was, as they say, happy in the haze of a drunken hour. At some stage in proceedings, the dinner gong got bonged and we traipsed off to the eatery for some sort of mighty flat fish, roasted with a lot of brown rice and other adornments. Very nice, I dimly remember, but filling. Rather went off the fresh nip of the cocktail at that point, and opted instead for the depth and the satisfying velvety buzz of red wine. Water ingestion to that point was a grand total of zero. Sense had clearly left me – and I had been so sensible since our arrival from the US.

I talked crap at people for a while. Lucky them. However the tide had turn on my ability to stay conscious and coherent. I was given the loan of a flashlight and headed off into the jet black night. First to a sort of Portaloo. That was easy enough to find. A night time tiddle was had, under nervous illumination. Off up the way I went. The wrong way. Stumbled and fell twice, lost internal compass totally. Arrived back at bar, rather than casa Suggzy. Thundered off into the dark again, rather than have folks laugh at me. Hither and thither I went, and finally crashed back up the steps of the cabin.

At which point, fearfulness and wakefulness added themselves to drunkenness. A heady mix, for the night. I hauled myself under every imaginable covering I could lay my hands on, and sweated my way through the small hours, scarcely sleeping so much as a wink. Imaginary beasties circled my cot. All was not well. No water did I drink. As was mentioned, I am an idiot.

Eventually, it was morning, and, unsurprisingly, hungover and dehydrated as I found myself to be, I was in far from good order. The heat started to enter the day and I stumbled, scarecrow-like in the direction of breakfast. I promptly drank about 2357607 pints of water and had some cereal and felt twice as bad. I declared myself unfit to go on the boat ride scheduled for the next couple of hours, and returned, biliously, to my quarters, cursing my stupidity. The resort fell silent, and I fell asleep, exhaustion conquering the fear of the tug of something nasty at my shorts or shirt.

I came to at the end of the morning with a thunderous headache. Hangover in full swing. Confirming once again that I am an idiot, I decided I could not be fagged to get some water to swallow a couple of ameliorative paracetamol (always been a bit of a pills man at the onset of a headache). I took them down dry. Except I didn’t, of course. They got stuck. And I came unstuck very, very quickly.

I choked once very badly on holiday with my family, as a boy of about 15 or so. 15 years later, the rapidly remembered rise of panic through the chest bubbled up in no time. There was no bugger there, and I could barely raise a noise, on making two or three attempts to swallow the pills. Just sort of honked a half “help”. I’m typing this another ten years on and I can remember the taste in my mouth and I feel sick all over again.

The light started to go an oddly pale blue-y, yellow. I had the notion, and I think I can say dying notion, that smacking my back on the edge of something might cause the blockage to shift. I did. To no avail. I was going to pass out of life, aged 30, by dint of cocktails and paracetamol, but rather without the glamorous showbiz gloss.

But, obviously, I didn’t. That Swaggers has his uses. Not administrative ones, as discussed. Chocolate fireguard on that front, the lad. But, those mighty ears have the sensitivity of a bat. Just as I was starting to drop to my knees at the railing looking out over the rainforest (cool view to peg it to), there was the thunder of Swaggerly hooves, and my still-foaming-from-the-shower friend and saviour, having registered my call for help a minute earlier, encircled me and did that Heimlich Thing. Which hurt, but worked instantly. The analgesic little specks flew out in arc across the greenery. Air tore back into my lungs and my heart slowed, gradually, back to a normal drumbeat.

We found little to say, as I remember – we laughed and joked quite quickly, after a spot of breathless reflection. It doesn’t take long to register that one friend has quite genuinely saved the life of the other, and it isn’t something we have felt the need to discuss that often since. A piece of bloody good luck, one has to say. Ten minutes earlier and that would have been the gig over with. No reason to declare it God’s will, or anything, either. Just part of the rich pageant of life. A weird part, spawned by misadventure on the part of the idiotic, but just a part.

I made a mental decision to decide to put a line through the whole airline tickets thing. Call it a draw. And I maintain a healthy – healthier, in fact, suspicion of cocktails.

Back soon, for: ‘Into Belarus, with vodka, guns, dogs and sleeping on a bench. With too much disco.’

By all means add any comments you have, here or on facebook – happy to take readers’ notes, as I am new to all this. Cheers!

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My travels with Swaggers; a two parter featuring the lost tickets, Gorgeous George and getting all choked-up in Flores

Part One

Time for some more reminiscences. This time we’re going back to the Summer of 2004. And some actual travel features; rather than simply some ghastly antics in not-so-far-off Buckinghamshire.

I had recently moved house for the third time. This was, of course, still the era in which one sat on a house and it magically accrued additional value and you made a few quid every time you moved. I had just completed this process, and siphoned off some of that money into a touring holiday with my best friend Swaggers. His ex-girlfriend (at the time) had been working at a travel agency and had cut us a good deal on a fortnight of being bussed ‘round some of the highlights of Central America. Principally Guatemala, but with some nice big sploshes of Honduras, Belize and Mexico into the bargain. One day I will tell tales of Twisted Tania’s, in Copan Ruinas, where we got drunk with the Honduran army.

We were a long, long way from all of these excitements, the day we met Gorgeous George.

We’d mustered in Harlesden the night before (in the never-ending corridor of a flat that Swaggers shared at that time – much like a lighthouse that had fallen on its side), and made our way out to Heathrow for an initial flight to Atlanta. First time in the US of A, for me, and only an overnight job before we were to fly onwards to the City of Antigua, in the West of Guatemala, to meet up with a parade of teachers, librarians, and other largely ‘right thinking’ middle class professionals (although there was a lad who looked like Prince William and behaved like a complete lunatic throughout, but he was something of an outlier – we’ll gloss over him – his shorts were filthy by the end of the holiday – oh, yes, there was also the Swedish couple who tried to get out of paying for a group meal in Cancun; we had to chase those devils down the street ‘or ‘strip’ as it’s called there).

I digress, as ever. Sorry. To Heathrow and to our plane we went, bedecked with all we would need. I had the dossier, considering Swaggers to be quite the loose cannon when it came to the preservation of significant paperwork. Ask SWK, ask my ex-wife (who’ll feature later in this re-telling of my travels past), ask my family members – hell, ask anyone, I love a good dossier when it comes to holidaymaking. That feeling of a seamless sequence of documents and maps, set out in an order to chime with the coming events, growing gradually thinner as one discards the unnecessary, before arriving at the final boarding card and so the return to Blighty. So lovely, so warming, somehow? I think it’s just me, but I don’t really care. I’m not getting on a plane again until January 2015, and I already have a couple of pieces of paperwork squirreled away for when I can legitimately start work on a plastic folder for the trip.

Wine and beer was served on the flight. Freely, and in seemingly bottomless vessels; you can see how these celeb types finish up being led away down the steps in irons, can’t you? And so we took our first missteps. Films were watched. Curious plastic trays of food were eaten. Time passed, as the libations went down. Eventually the Georgian tarmac was reached, but not before I had passed Swaggers his folder of tickets, so as to make use of the stub from the outward leg, to complete his Green Card (even through a fug of airline Merlot, I remember licking my lips at the prospect of a spot of form-filling).

He dutifully did as he was bade, and we began to queue to enter the United States. A process that was as unfriendly, circuitous and irritating as anything I can remember. Bearing in mind I am someone who seems to find almost everything irritating, don’t please underestimate that statement. It took the small matter of three hours, in total, and was more or less continuously undertaken at gunpoint. The country was, like the UK, at WAR, and seemed to be quite prickly about the fact that anyone wanted to go there. After an aeon, I finally passed muster for entry, and may, I think, have made the sort of glib comment to the sidearm-toting woman on the desk that can tend to get me in a spot of bother, but not on this occasion, thankfully. I look back now and think of that lost afternoon, and how little fun it would have been for any poor souls who didn’t have much English and had to go through translators and be asked searching questions about their motivation for crossing the border. It would not have been a cakewalk.

Into the bowels of Hartsfield-Jackson Atlanta International Airport we did go. A little dusty, and very much in need of fresh air. Consultation of the dossier revealed that transit to our hotel would be a matter of simplicity; a local train/subway from under the airport. First we had to collect our bags. As I had the dossier to hand, I asked the fateful question, “Swaggers, can I have those tickets back? I’ll hold on to them with mine, shall I?” Time slowed down, fellow travellers moved at a snail’s pace across the concourse, as the words came back.. “What tickets?” God love the fellow, he’d assumed the book of tickets, all of them we would need, was just a stub, and he’d unthinkingly binned the lot, together with his beer cans, back on the plane. I told you he was a loose cannon, didn’t I? Suddenly my dossier-world looks rather more of a cosy place to be, doesn’t it?

We were on our way across interminable transit tubes to Concourse B. A nasal auto-announcer just said the word CAAAN-CORRRS again and again and again. I had visions of us being late for the carousel and losing our luggage, as well as the fucking tickets. I bit my lip. Hard. Cruelly, we arrived at a better-lit station of the airport. Outside the sunshine and vitality of the open air mocked us, and our ticketless funk. Inside, unable to oblige my best and oldest friend with an argument, for it would have been a fruitless endeavour, I silently pondered just abandoning the bastard. He’d not have had a clue where we were meant to be staying. I could forge on, free, in a private bubble of pleasant order and calm. Yes..

Nope, abandon such thoughts, I told myself. Friendship means more than that, and you never know, he might be a good match for a kidney one day. As much as airline tickets even only ten years ago appeared to be one-offs, and irreplaceable, I concluded that Delta would somehow have magic machines and records and printers and all would, in the end, be well.

Against the prevailingly tragic tide, our bags arrived without incident, and we began our next three laps of the airport in pursuit of the Delta Desk. Helpfully, its presence was marked by another enormous queue. In which I left Swaggers, very much sans dossier, mostly in case he accidentally made paper planes out of it, or used it as a sketch pad, and went off to ponder life on the porcelain.

Which was my next error. I had imagined America to be, down to every corner and crevice, a land of sparkle and pizazz. Surfaces would be white and shiny like the teeth of their film stars. No – this was the rough stateside equivalent of that scene in Trainspotting. The bog was bogging. There was no roster of signatures on the back of the cubicle door. I’ve never been in an abattoir, but I imagine the smell would not be dissimilar to that which I experienced that sorry and woe begotten afternoon. As motions go, I have only known worse on St. Stephen’s Green in Dublin, where my trousers puddled in a carpet of torn-out pages of pornographic magazines and used hypodermics.

I scuttled back to Swaggers, yearning for deodorant, soap and a glass of water. He had gained access to a member of staff. To George. Gorgeous George. And, somehow, even without my dossier, Swaggers was winning. The paperless, passport-less, greenback-less, jug-eared administrative Black Hole was talking his way into a set of replacement tickets, without me. I hated him all the more for this, of course (I can be a right sour old git) but somehow had never loved him more either. All of those years of him regularly being three hours late when vising me as a student. The time he stayed in my room with an infected in-growing toenail that smelled so bad it would actually wrest one from sleep. The chaos and disorder and Olympic Class levels of mess he would poor down upon me. All of it, all of it would be forgiven forever, and certainly never blogged about once they invented blogging, if he could get replacement tickets.

Mine was a bit part, in honesty. Barely a credit at the end of the final scene. I think I probably called Gorgeous George (and he was a modern Saint, people – I recall we offered to buy him some beers that evening – he didn’t show, but he was probably pulling children out of burning buildings downtown – I bet he has a statue up somewhere by now) ‘old boy’ a couple of times, to add a bit of British Colour and Eccentricity, in the vague imagining that Americans (all 292 million of them at the time) lapped that sort of stuff up. He just smiled beatifically, made more phone calls, and called ladies on the other end of the line ‘doll’ and gradually, things were taking shape. Stuff got printed. In the final reckoning, $60 changed hands and we walked away smiling, to the train. The theme to The Great Escape formed an earworm I would be humming in the back of my mind until the end of that day.

I thanked Swaggers for his hard work and his charm in rectifying the situation, and getting us back on track. And plucked the tickets from his grotesquely hairy paw and put them back in the bloody dossier.

Come back soon, for more of the Good Deeds of Swaggers, as he saves my life in the jungle. Sort of.

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