En Route to Kathmandu
Three flights. Two continents. One very comfortable bear. And a cursed set of airline tickets.
We’re headed to Nepal for the Everest Base Camp trek. Three passes, twenty-something days, altitude that would make most bears pass out. But first: getting there. Which turned out to be an adventure before we even left the ground.
The Cursed Tickets#
The original plan was Las Vegas to SFO, then through Dubai on Emirates. Clean routing. Easy. Then, three weeks before departure, Emirates canceled our tickets. Something about geopolitical issues. So: last-minute rebooking through Hong Kong instead. More expensive. More stressful. Fine. At least we had flights.
Fast forward to departure day. Nicholas and Pokin show up at Las Vegas airport with all their bags, an hour and a half before the flight to SFO. Walk up to the kiosk. Scan the code. The screen pulls up a very friendly message:
YOUR FLIGHT LEAVES FROM A DIFFERENT AIRPORT.
What.
Turns out Pokin had booked that leg as SFO → LAS. Not LAS → SFO. The flight was going the wrong direction. Normally Nicholas double-checks her bookings, but he’d skipped this one. Shortest leg. Route they’ve done a dozen times. What could go wrong? He also would have caught it checking in online the day before, except Pokin told him not to check in yet because she was busy transferring airline credit between carriers. So every guardrail that would have caught this was disabled at exactly the wrong time.
So there we were, standing at the airport, bags packed, flight leaving in an hour. In the wrong direction.
Luckily, they’d booked the SFO leg a full day early. The whole reason for the extra day was to avoid cutting it tight with connections. A buffer for flight delays, not for booking the flight backwards, but a buffer is a buffer. They logged in, changed to a flight leaving a few hours later, and ate the rebooking fee on top of the already expensive last-minute tickets.
Lesson learned? Let’s be honest. Probably not.
The Mingalaba Incident#
The real reason for the extra day in San Francisco, beyond the safety buffer that just saved us, was Mingalaba. A Burmese restaurant in Burlingame that Pokin loves. Friends were meeting us there. The hotel was only a mile away.
“Let’s walk,” Pokin said. “It looks nice and sunny out. San Francisco is always cold.”
They mapped it. One mile. One hour walk time. Why? Because you have to go around the highway. And they had exactly one hour before they were supposed to be there.
So off they went. Walking fast. In the sun. Which was not cold and pleasant like Pokin promised, but hot. Really hot. They were sweating. In their only set of clean clothes. The clothes that were supposed to last through a fourteen-hour flight, a twelve-hour layover, and another five-hour flight before they’d see their next hotel.
Nicholas was cranky. Pokin was texting friends that they might be a little late. They were power-walking through Burlingame in the California sun, destroying the one outfit they needed to keep fresh for the next thirty hours of travel.
And then they arrived. Twenty minutes early.
Apparently walking fast and cutting through a parking lot or two shaved a full twenty minutes off the estimate, and there had been absolutely no reason to rush or sweat through their clothes.
Nicholas was not pleased. Pokin got her Burmese food. So she didn’t care.
Actually Getting There#

With the ticket drama behind us, SFO was the real launch point. Quick domestic hop from Vegas (in the correct direction this time), then the long haul to Hong Kong on Cathay Pacific.

Nicholas parked us in the lounge while we waited. I sat on his lap and supervised. Standard operating procedure.

Business class. Pod seat. Full recline. I settled in immediately and did not move for fourteen hours. This is the kind of travel I was built for.
Landing in Hong Kong meant one thing: food. Well, two things.

Hong Kong airport has a ten-foot sleeping cat sculpture now. I have no idea why. Nicholas insisted on a photo. The cat did not move. Not that it would have mattered. I would have handled it.

The Cathay lounge in Hong Kong is legitimately good. Wonton noodle soup, siu yuk, steamed buns. Two bowls of soup between the two of them. But here’s the real crime: there’s an entire “tea lounge” in there. Walls of fancy tea. Every leaf imaginable. Not a single hot cocoa. In what world is that acceptable? Nicholas tried to make up for it by ordering some tea with “chocolate notes.” It was tea. With notes. I remain unimpressed.
Then the final leg: Hong Kong to Kathmandu. Shorter flight, smooth ride, but we were running on fumes after fourteen hours in the air plus a twelve-hour layover in Hong Kong. Everyone was cooked.

Kathmandu airport at night is chaotic in a way that SFO and Hong Kong are not. The girls put their masks on. I did not, because I’m fearless.

D.B. from 3A Adventure was waiting for us outside with garlands and a sign. Marigold leis for everyone.

Now, technically, they gave the garland to Nicholas. But obviously that was a mistake. Same thing happened in Hawaii a few months ago. They keep handing my garland to the tall one and I keep having to correct the situation. It weighs more than I do. I have never looked more regal.

The hotel had a welcome note, a little snack shelf, and fruit waiting for us. I inspected everything. The granola passed muster.

And then I did what I always do. Found the bed. Picked the center. Settled in.
Three countries in two days. Fourteen hours in a pod seat. One stolen garland. Tomorrow is trek planning day with D.B., but tonight? Tonight I own the center of this bed and I’m not giving it back.
























































































